Friday, July 31, 2009

Play Hard - Sleep Well

Sophie Ramsey, Consumer Reports:

It makes sense, after all, that kids will be more tired and ready for sleep if they've been physically active during the day. Now researchers have done a large study published in the medical journal Archives of Disease in Children to put these parental observations to the test.

The study included 519 healthy 7-year-olds from New Zealand, who each wore a device called an actigraph for 24 hours. An actigraph records movement, providing an objective measure of a child's activity level and sleep time. Parents also noted when their child went to bed, which allowed researchers to calculate how long after bedtime children actually fell asleep.

The researchers found a wide variation in how quickly children fell asleep, with some taking as little as 13 minutes and others needing more than 40 minutes after going to bed. Within this range, there was a close relationship between the onset of sleep and daytime activity. On average, children took an extra three minutes to fall asleep for every hour they weren't moving about. Also, the children who fell asleep faster slept longer overall.

Thank heavens ours runs around like a nut all the live-long day.


Via Boing Boing, Via Consumer Reports, via Archives of Disease In Children.

Txting Dth


Sometimes these things just hit the mark so well any commentary is superfluous.


Via AJC by way of Dirty Russia.

Doctor Hizouse



By the Washing Tones.


c/o Dirty Russia.

Wednesday, July 8, 2009

Tower of Goats


Via BoingBoing:

Jim Leftwich says:

"I'm thinking the next step beyond raising chickens in the backyard is to have your own Goat Tower!

"Currently there are only three Goat Towers in the world (which I think you'll agree is not nearly enough!). The original Goat Tower was built in 1981 by Charles Back at the Fairview Wine and Cheese Estate in Paarl, South Africa. The estate has 750 Saanen goats and some of these are allowed access to the tower."

See also Wikipedia.

Monday, July 6, 2009

Going in with Gunns a Blazing

Tim Gunn to be a character in Marvel Comics:


More details in the New York Times article.


Tip o' the (yellow) hat to my sister for pointing it out.

Or the Ballhawk's Baleful Cry

Click image for original (ie. legible) version.

Saturday, July 4, 2009

Skin Deep: Beauty's dangerous price.

Via Boing Boing:

James sez, "The web site Skin Deep covers the issues related to the lack of oversight regarding the safety of cosmetics:"

Skin Deep is a safety guide to cosmetics and personal care products brought to you by researchers at the Environmental Working Group.

Skin Deep pairs ingredients in more than 42,000 products against 50 definitive toxicity and regulatory databases, making it the largest integrated data resource of its kind. Why did a small nonprofit take on such a big project? Because the FDA doesn't require companies to test their own products for safety.



More at Skin Deep's own website.

Bibliophile's Dream / Nightmare



. . . depending on your perspective.

CSI: Mathnet

Life after Square One.

Thursday, July 2, 2009

The Incompressable John Hodgman: On Lying Artfully

From Hodgman's interview with Psychology Today*:

In both of my books, I have struggled against plain absurdity. Pure non-sequiturs (such as: "Thomas Jefferson was secretly a VIKING!") have a certain flighty charm to them. But I like some factness with my fakery.

Better to say that Thomas Jefferson was thought by his wealthy neighbors to be a witch. For really, how else to explain how this prosperous Virginian slave owner would suddenly become a radical revolutionary--other than Satanic possession?

. . .

Ideally, fake facts help to jostle our imaginations. They remind us how much of actual history is so strange, and novelistic, and practically unbelievable.

But I am not a lunatic. Obviously I know that it wasn't Satan who had taken over Jefferson's mind, but the Mole-Men.


More of the story here.


* - Note: Actual date was not "today", but in reality about a week ago.

White Collar Squid

Sven's less-hip, cephalopod counterpart.


Etc.


Via Boing Boing.