快猫短视频

Dare you enter the dark and disturbing world of morbid curiosity?

Feedback looks into the consequences of ranking high on the Morbid Curiosity Scale, while also exploring the power of swearing

Curiously Meta

Coltan Scrivner鈥檚 curiosity about morbid curiosity is ushering him to higher and higher realms. He wrote his PhD thesis on the subject and joined the at Aarhus University, Denmark. Scrivner defines morbid curiosity as 鈥渁 motivation to seek out information about dangerous phenomena鈥. You will find that definition in his 2021 study called .

The Morbid Curiosity Scale weighs up how much a person agrees or disagrees with 24 more or less morbid statements. Some of the statements are broad (鈥淚 think the supernatural is an interesting topic鈥). Some are narrow (鈥淚f a head transplant was possible, I would want to watch the procedure鈥). Scrivner concluded that 鈥渕orbidly curious individuals were rebellious, socially curious, and low in animal reminder disgust鈥. Depending on your own levels of morbid curiosity, do Google the last term.

Reader Minna Lyons alerted Feedback to Scrivner鈥檚 scrivenings. In a study called , Scrivner explains that 鈥渕orbidly curious participants were also more interested specifically [than other people] in morbid information about Coronavirus鈥.

Scrivner also teamed up with colleagues for a related 2020 study that 快猫短视频 readers may recall: 鈥淧andemic practice: Horror fans and morbidly curious individuals are more psychologically resilient during the covid-19 pandemic鈥. The study includes this nugget: 鈥淎s predicted, fans of prepper genres (zombie, apocalyptic/post-apocalyptic, and alien-invasion) were significantly more prepared for the pandemic鈥 However, being a fan of prepper genres was unrelated to positive resilience.鈥

And now, morbid curiosity has led Scrivner to go above it all, in a way. To go meta. A few months ago, he became .

What the $%&#!?

鈥淩esearchers do not know how parents respond to children鈥檚 cursing or what effect parents鈥 responses have on children later in life.鈥 Morbid curiosity, and maybe other flavours of curiosity, drew Timothy Jay, Krista King and Tim Duncan to write those words in their study called . Appearing in the journal Sex Roles in 2006, the report examined the beliefs of 211 students at the Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts.

The study caught most of those students at a moment poised between childhood and potential parenthood. Jay, King and Duncan say the findings confirm three widespread beliefs. First, that swearing is a common childhood problem. Second, that mothers play a more prominent curse-disciplinary role than fathers do (鈥渕others were remembered as more responsive than fathers to their children鈥檚 cursing鈥).

And third, though some parents physically smack their swearing offspring, most often parents hit kids with a verbal response. The study reports at least two notable discoveries about punishment: 鈥淥ur data are the first to document the prevalence of washing children鈥檚 mouths with soap. College students have vivid memories of punishment; however 94% reported that they continue to curse.鈥

Swearing has many impacts. Some are admirable and desirable, as one discovers (or is reminded of) in reading the recent study , published in the journal Lingua. In the paper鈥檚 summary, these items read like advertising bullet points from Mother Nature, which perhaps they are:

鈥 鈥淪wearing produces a hypoalgesic effect, increasing pain tolerance and pain threshold, while reducing pain perception.鈥

鈥 鈥淪wearing increases power and strength in physical activity tasks.鈥

鈥 鈥淚t provides a uniquely powerful means of emotional expression, and of achieving both positive and negative interpersonal relations. It also potentially shapes persuasiveness/credibility of messages.鈥

Like paper, like city

Reader Martin Whittle had a flatly brilliant insight on paper. He noted that, while length and width hog most of the public鈥檚 attention, paper鈥檚 third dimension 鈥 thickness 鈥 gets slighted. Heeding Feedback鈥檚 call about the Neom ratio, Martin investigated.

This ratio is, of course, derived from the proportions of Neom, a planned Saudi Arabian city that is designed to be 170,000 metres long, but only 200 metres wide. We invited you to tell us about physical objects with that same ratio (1 October).

Martin writes: 鈥淚 thought that maybe the long side of a sheet of paper divided by its thickness might be close to the Neom ratio. So I measured the thickness of my printer paper at 110 microns (0.11 mm) which agrees with a typical value given on . A4 paper has a , which is considerably in excess of the Neom value of 850. The length needed is 93.5 mm, so that the short side of a piece of B7 at 88.0 mm (aspect ratio 800) is the closest.鈥

As previously reported, reader Jason Bradbury identified a Neomish guitar string (22 October). What else awaits discovery?

Got a story for Feedback?

You can send stories to Feedback by email at feedback@newscientist.com. Please include your home address. This week鈥檚 and past Feedbacks can be seen on our website.

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