Author Archives: chloebocker

Trust Your Instincts? Not So Much

Think you know your own mind inside out? Think again. A recent study done by an international collection of scientists has revealed that evolutionary survival techniques are partly responsible for the decisions that gamblers make when placing bets. The scientists, from McMaster University, the University of Lethbridge, and Liverpool John Moores University, looked at how gamblers made decisions during a series of random events. In accordance with our ancestors’ behaviours pertaining to survival, it was found that the gamblers relied on their past experiences to predict what could happen next.

Courtesy of Antoinetav via Flickr Creative Commons

The researchers conducted two experiments. In the first test, subjects observed two targets being illuminated in random sequence. The researchers then gave them money to bet on which target would become illuminated first. The subjects maintained steady bets regardless of whether they won or lost. But, for each “win”, subjects were more likely to move their bets to the other target for their next wager.

In the second experiment, the same procedure was followed as the first experiment, except that the subjects placed their bets based on a partner’s result. Once again, if the partner correctly guessed a target, the subject was more likely to move on to the next target on their next turn.

These results demonstrate a phenomenon called the Gambler’s Fallacy. Even though there were exactly equal odds between targets for each new trial, a string or pattern of “left targets” illuminating first gives people a strong feeling that a “right target” is long overdue, and is more likely to occur. Many of us have probably fallen victim to the fallacy ourselves; three coin tosses landing on heads, and we are sure that the fourth will be tails! Yet it’s always 50/50.

A coin flip begins the 113th Annual Army-Navy Game. Courtesy of the U.S Army via Wikimedia Creative Commons

This is nothing new. But, the researchers found a relation between the tendency to bet along with the Gambler’s Fallacy, and personal scores of IOR: attentional processes associated with inhibition of return. Simply put, the participants who fell subject to the Gambler’s Fallacy more often were also more quick to respond to the targets in general. This means that evolutionary human traits could be at work when people aren’t even aware of their own betting patterns. Humans have literally evolved to adjust their behavior based on what they experience in the context of their location. But, these automatic processes are still used in artificial environments in which the brain is “tricked” into reacting a certain way, even if the circumstances don’t call for it.

So, before you act, think! You can’t always trust your instincts.

-Chloe Bocker

Earth’s Long-term Climate Mystery: Solved?

A recent study at Rice University provides a possible explanation for the Earth’s long-term back-and-forth between greenhouse and icehouse states over the past 500 million years. Cin-Ty Lee, Professor of Earth Science at Rice, led the just-released four-year study which draws on a new cause for the longest climate cycle.

Currently, we are in an icehouse state, and have been for the last 50 million years. Ice is present at the poles, and we experience periodic glacial activity, on a timescale of thousands of years. When the Earth is in the warmer greenhouse state, there is no ice at the poles, and much more carbon dioxide present in the atmosphere.

What causes this oscillation between hot and cold? The 10 to 100 million year timescale far surpasses any influence from solar or orbital patterns. The standard theory is that greenhouse states come about from carbon dioxide releases caused by volcanic activity along mid-ocean ridges. However, the massive amounts of atmospheric CO2 found in the fossil record from past greenhouse states are suspiciously high for this type of tectonic activity alone.               Lee found that the planet’s long-term climate cycle comes naturally from plate tectonics. The research suggested that tectonic activity drives a periodic flare-up of continental-arc volcanoes, especially during periods when oceans are forming and continents are breaking apart. The continental-arc volcanoes that arise during these periods are located on the edges of continents, and the magma that rises through the volcanoes releases large quantities of carbon dioxide as it passes through layers of carbonates in the continental crust.

While only a theory, the findings explain how the Earth can remain in a greenhouse or icehouse state for so many millions of years. The number of arc volcanoes doesn’t change, but it is in the continental-arc stage rather than the oceanic stage that CO2 is released from a deep bank of continental carbonates.

An Arbitrary Anniversary of Science

We always seem to be looking forward in science. The fact that everyone is excited about the next robot venture on mars or breakthrough in medicine is what drives research and innovation in the first place. However, I think it a pleasant idea to look back at some of the memorable moments in science that have shaped our world and brought us here to these exact circumstances. So, here is a little retrospective of science on January 28th, going back as long as four centuries ago.

And what’s so special about January 28th, you ask? Nothing! That’s what makes it fun to look back. So, enjoy!

  • 1613:Galileo records observing a “star” which is actually (most likely) the first viewing of planet Neptune.

    via Wikimedia Creative Commons


  • 1807: Pall Mall, London, England, is the first street in any city to be lit by gaslight, courtesy of entrepreneur Frederick Albert Windsor.
  • 1903: Birthdate of Kathleen Yardley Lonsdale, a crystallographer who proved the flatness of the benzene ring.
  • 1922: Birthdate of Robert W. Holley, joint recipient of the 1968 Nobel Prize in Medicine for describing the structure of alanine tRNA.
  • 1958: Buchanan, New York sees construction begin of the first private thorium-uranium atomic reactor to supply power.
  • 1960: the U.S. Navy bounces the first wire photograph transmitted by radio waves off of the moon at a 400-MHz frequency.
  • 1986:The tragic Challenger space shuttle explosion kills seven astronauts after a mere 73 seconds after liftoff.                                     

    Space Shuttle Challenger via Wikimedia Creative Commons


  • 1999: Element 114, Flerovium, is reported by Russian scientists at Dubna (Joint Institute for Nuclear Research).
With these events and discoveries, we can celebrate January 28th as an arbitrary anniversary of science.
-Chloe Bocker