Archive for the ‘RADIO’ Category

Boredom – It really is a killer!


The boredom of this Moscow street seller could be very bad for her health [Credit: Wikipedia]

The boredom of this Moscow street seller could be very bad for her health [Credit: Wikipedia]

Boredom in work, or at home, is quite literally a killer, according to a growing body of evidence linking it with serious health effects.

The science of boredom is proving very interesting indeed to many researchers around the world, including at least one here in Ireland.

Dr Wijnand van Tilburg, a psychology lecturer in the University of Limerick is interested in how boredom affects aggression and memory.

There are serious consequences for people’s health if they are bored, with studies linking boredom to a greater vulnerability to heart disease, depression, overeating, alcohol and drug abuse, and gambling.

The definition of boredom is different to different people, but it is widely induced in people that must do repetitive tasks, and suffer time delays, such as tedious factory work, or waiting at an airport for a long delayed airplane.

Researchers set up boredom experiments, but inducing the condition in subjects – typically university students. One team showed students a video of people hanging laundry washing, and this worked very well.

Given the range of ill health effect caused by boredom it is important to avoid it as much as possible. This might involve seeing the big picture of boring tasks, and linking them to a great good, or achievement, such as a teacher that is bored correcting homework, but sees it as good for pupils.

It is also possible to reduce boredom by taking exercise, such as walking or going for a job. It is important too, to try, when possible, to work in a job that its well suited to a person’s interests and abilities.

Click below to hear more:

Science of Boredom: Discussed on the Morning Show with Declan Meehan on East Coast FM. [Broadcast 14th March 2013]

Chemical differences when men and women argue


Men and women react differently – chemically – during an argument and during the aftermath ‘cooling down’ period. [Credit: Forbes.com]

A body of scientific evidence shows that men and women differ – chemically – when it comes to arguments between couples.

For example, a Pennsylvania State University  study, which measured the level of stress hormone, cortisol, found significant differences between arguing men and women.

The levels of cortisol in men were linked with the level of hostility in an argument, while in women, the stress levels were often the result of  a perceived ‘lack of engagement’ by men in the issue at hand.

The scientists asked the couples to discuss disputed issues between them, such as finances, or housecare, and them took saliva samples before and after they argued.

Men took longer to recover chemically and get back to normal cortisol levels than women after a particularly hostile argument.

The scientists theorised that women recovered quicker from such hostile arguments because they at least felt that issues had been aired and weren’t being ignored.

Another study by the University of Minnesota found a link between how good people are at ‘cooling down’ from an argument, and early childhood experience.

The Minnesota researchers found that individuals with a strong bond with their caregiver aged 12 to 18 months were better able to recover following an argument, move on, and not be left ruminating and angry – whether they were men or women.

When it comes to stress, and coping with it; it seems the blueprint is laid down early.

LISTEN: Interview with Declan Meehan 1 Nov ’12  on East Coast FM

NUIG & ‘Intelligent Cars’, Mapping Ireland’s Mammals


The National Biodiversity Data Centre wants the public to help with the identification of native mammals such as this feral goal (Credit: Liam Lysaght)

Science Spinning: ‘The Show with an Irish Spin on Science’, Presented and Produced by Seán Duke

Intelligent Cars & Mapping Ireland’s Mammals

Broadcast on Dublin City FM, 14/04/2011

To contact the show email: sciencespinning@dublincityfm.ie

‘If Maps Could Speak’; Preventing Seizures in Newborns; Can Probiotics Prevent Obesity?


Broadcast 6th January 2011 on Dublin City FM

Ethical Animal Testing; Geo-spatial data; Stem Cells & Arthritis [Dublin City FM: Episode 49]


Quantum Computers; Wave Energy; Innovation Academy [Dublin City FM: Episode50]


SPECIAL: Why Ireland’s ‘space sector’ is thriving [Dublin City FM]


Science Week 2010 & ‘Ireland’s place in space’[WLR FM]


Ernest Walton, Ireland’s greatest scientist?; DNA typing & disease; detecing AMD [Dublin City FM]


Origins of life; Cancer Vaccine; Making Bone in the Lab [Dublin City FM]


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