Sunday 3 December 2017

Funding for Research Required

2 weeks ago, Cambridge University Researchers announced that sheep are able to recognise human faces.
To prove this point, eight female Welsh Mountain sheep were trained to distinguish 4 celebrity faces from pictures of non-celebrity people, using food pellets as a reward.
The researchers say it “might be interesting in the future to investigate whether sheep can identify different expressions on human faces” and that this work “might even have implications for learning about neurodegenerative diseases, such as Huntington’s and Parkinson’s”. I have to confess that I was so bored at this point that I didn’t even bother to research as to why this study would have any bearing on Huntington’s and Parkinson’s disease.
How on earth did Cambridge University get funding for this research?
I could have told them that sheep can tell one human from another with a bit of practice. In fact, if you were to send someone into their field with a feed bag, they would come running without even checking to see if they recognised the face or not.
A few years ago in Horse and hound magazine there was an article about an equine research project in America. A group of persons obviously had access to some kind of funding and had 12 pure bred Arab horses in their yard. They exercised all 12 in exactly the same way, for the same length of time each day. And every day after the horses had been exercised, 6 of them went through a set of stretching exercises.
You will never believe what they discovered after 4 weeks of this regime.
They discovered that the 6 horses that had been doing the stretching after their work had only gone and built up more muscle that their non-stretching counterparts.
If I asked Britney (Not her real name) what she thought the outcome would be after this 4 week long bonkers study, I’m 105% certain that even she would have guessed the end result.
When I go outside to my stable at stupid o’ clock in the morning and am wearing my high visibility jacket that I ride in, my horse stands still and looks at me. If I venture outside into the gloom wearing my other scruffy coat that is dark in colour and smells faintly horsey, my horse begins to chew and moves across the stable to his feed manger. And why is this? Is Wet Dishcloth Horse super intelligent? No. Wet Dishcloth horse knows that if I don’t have my riding jacket on, he is going to get his breakfast as we are not going to cavort around the countryside in the dark.
This made me wonder what kind of research I could get funding for. What about some form of remuneration to discover if clothing fades and goes bobbly the more times you wash it? Or I could research how fat I will get if I lie on the sofa every day for a month, eating chocolates and watching daytime television.
The possibilities are endless. I could see how full of rubbish my car becomes if I don’t ever clean it out, how full of ash the log burner gets if I burn 2 baskets of logs every day and how many strange looks I get from my Mummy friends if I do the school run in my pyjamas.
I could check how effective Northumbria Police are by seeing how many times I get arrested for shoplifting and if I drive my car without a valid MOT I would find out if the DVLA are keeping their databases up to date.
I could park on double yellow lines to see if the bastard Traffic Warden is still the Son of Satan and I could check if Britney’s school is dealing with truanting children correctly by keeping her off school for 2 days every week.
How do I apply for funding for my research? Who do I write to?
The article about the celebrity-recognising-Sheep was on the BBC website and handily there was a link to the Royal Society for Open Science.
I actually started to read about how chickens can hear better if they open their beaks. I was a bit horrified to hear that they had been frozen prior to this experiment and then I realised that they were already dead. But as they had been supplied for the trial by a chicken farm down the road, they hadn’t been killed just for the sake of the experiment, but their plump bodies had already been turned into chicken nuggets ensuring that there was no waste. I also read about the long term effects of outdoor aesthetic lights had on bats in churches. Yes, you’ll never believe it, but enormous spotlights illuminating the outside of a church have a detrimental effect on bats. Who would have thought it? A creature that comes out at dusk being put off by bright lights. Truly unbelievable.
I also read about whether dogs are red-green colour blind. The scientists in this research showed them pictures of cats in different colours to reach a conclusion. What if several of the dog guinea pigs in question liked cats? They might have a completely false reading and the whole thing should be null and void.
One study that was total and utter bollocks was Why do horseflies need polarization vision for host detection? Polarization helps tabanid flies to select sunlit dark host animals from the dark patches of the visual environment
Despite the fact that I didn’t even understand the title, I know this to be rubbish because horseflies are evil and will bite absolutely anything. I once got bitten on the back of my hand when I was sitting on a dark brown horse and the next day my hand looked as though it had been inflated with a bicycle pump.
Another study that caught my eye was Living with own or husband's mother in the household is associated with lower number of children: a cross-cultural analysis.
I could have told them that. Surely living with your Mother of Mother in Law could be classed as the best contraceptive known to man. (Or woman.)
So after trawling the website of the Royal Society for Open Science I lost all hope that I would secure funding for any of my studies.
Clearly, every single mad and crazy type of research has already been undertaken.
Darn it.

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