This is awesome! I never liked dolls, but my friends sure did when we were little. The fact that this behaviour might be biologically explained and even seen in closely related organisms means a lot of interesting research for those with sociology and anthropology degrees, and maybe some new items in the curriculum! I'm personally super excited to see if this is true, and how it's going to affect how we think about gender roles.
I've worked at an A&W for three years, and while I managed to resist the food for about 6 months, I gave in. I weigh the same as I did when I started by making sure not to go overboard with my eating, but I can relate to the temptation. If I stay there a whole lot longer I will balloon.
This explains why my flip flopping study sessions resulted in higher grades than my friend's focused ones. Same class, teacher, study hours, intelligence level and homework habits. Only difference is my study style is ridiculously ADD compared to hers, and my grades were consistently (and confusingly) one letter higher. If this study is right, that makes sense.
These sound awesome! I'm still in college and I take all my notes in pencil (to practice my archaic cursive handwriting ability), but this would be great for that aforementioned smudge factor. I am super excited about these and I hope they work.
Totally agreed with both of the above. As soon as I saw the plastic separating the plug and outlet, the project went from "neat" to "potentially dangerous".
And make me wonder why I never liked dolls.
Couldn't you take the shirt off?