Rabbit Hole of Research

Jotham Austin, II PhD, Georgia Geis and Nick Elizalde

Our goal is to have fun learning science through the lens of science fiction, fantasy, and pop-culture. We will start in one place and let the conversation lead us down the winding scenic road exploring the science in science fiction, separating the facts from the Handwavium. We’ll have a little fun and you’ll learn a few facts you can use to impress your friends at a party or use as a conversation starter to go down your own rabbit holes.

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Episodes

Episode 3: Villains ain't that bad!
Feb 21 2024
Episode 3: Villains ain't that bad!
Episode 3: Hello Fam! Hope y’all are doing well. So, here is Episode Three (we talk Villains with our first guest: Chris Reid), and I want to thank you for tuning in. Special thanks for the folks that listened to the first two episodes and came back for more. And if this is your first episode, we hope you enjoy. Our goal is to have a little fun exploring science through the lens of science fiction, fantasy and pop culture. This episode we explore the science behind loving a villain. We hope you enjoy. Leave a comment, review, and tell a friend!What we are drinking:Joe: Hazy Beer Hug IPA: Goose IslandNick: Phantom Knight: Flutter Nutter: Wildrose BreweryChris: Domaine DuPage French Style Country Ale | Two BrothersLet us know:Favorite villain?Worse villain ?Any questions we didn’t cover?What did we get wrong (Check the show notes)?Previously on RHR:Check out previous episodes: 1 (Gaba’s Girl) and 2 (Al take over)Show notes:This has no particular format (yet), just correcting or updating anything in the show we didn’t get a chance to fully talk about or things we had on the tips of our tongues and couldn’t get out as we recorded. As always feel free to comment and we will address stuff in future shows! Enjoy:Show Art by Georgia GeisStory grid: Thriller Genre is a mash-up of Horror, Action, and Crime Sea of Rust: C. Robert CargillTerminator 2: Actor who played the scientist: Joe Morton “Dr. Miles” Predator[https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Predator\_(franchise)]Superman I (1978); and Superman II (1980) Short Story about wealthy people hunting poor people:1924 short story "The Most Dangerous Game" by Richard Connell“Surviving the Game” (1994) staring Ice-T[https://m.imdb.com/title/tt0111323/plotsummary/]Fritz Haber-German scientist 1908 for synthesis of ammonia (Nobel prize in chemistry 1918)—dual edge sword—also know as father of chemical warfare.Back to Future (1985): Cultural insensitivityWhat is a villain?Random House Unabridged Dictionary defines such a character as "a cruelly malicious person who is involved in or devoted to wickedness or crime; scoundrel; or a character in a play, novel, or the like, who constitutes an important evil agency in the plot.”The opposite of a villain is a hero. The villain's structural purpose is to serve as the opposition of the hero character and their motives or evil actions drive a plot along. In contrast to the hero, who is defined by feats of ingenuity and bravery and the pursuit of justice and the greater good, a villain is often defined by their acts of selfishness, evilness, arrogance, cruelty, and cunning, displaying immoral behavior that can oppose or pervert justicePeople like to love villains they relate withResearch suggests that you like villains who remind us of ourselves. https://www.psychologicalscience.org/news/releases/fictional-villains-allure.htmlStudy published in 2020 Psychological Science, Rebecca Krause, at Northwestern University: Krause, R. J., & Rucker, D. D. (2020). Can bad be good? The attraction of a darker self. Psychological Science.Humans hardwired to find goodness in villainsA recent study from Aarhus University found those who prefer fictional villains to heroes are more likely to be villainous themselves.Valerie A. Umscheid, Craig E. Smith, Felix Warneken, Susan A. Gelman, Henry M. Wellman, What makes Voldemort tick? Children's and adults' reasoning about the nature of villains. Cognition,Volume 233, 2023The results revealed that, overall, both children and adults believed that villains' true selves were 'overwhelmingly evil and much more negative than heroes'.However, researchers also detected an asymmetry in the views, as villains were much more likely than heroes to have a true self that differed to their outer personna.The research found that those who prefer villains such as Cruella de Vil and Darth Vader, are more likely to display the ‘dark triad' (Machiavellianism, narcissism and psychopathy) personality traits.Dark Triad:'Narcissism describes a grandiose and entitled interpersonal style whereby one feels superior to others and craves validation ('ego-reinforcement'),' the researchers write.'Machiavellianism describes a manipulative interpersonal style characterized by duplicity, cynicism, and selfish ambition.'Psychopathy describes low self-control and a callous interpersonal style aimed at immediate gratification.Thanks for spending time with us. You can always email (I do answer back), click the comment link below, or follow me online for real time tracking. Until next time… Get full access to Jotham’s Substack at jothamaustin.substack.com/subscribe
Episode 1: Take Me Down to Electric Avenue
Feb 7 2024
Episode 1: Take Me Down to Electric Avenue
In this Episode Georgia and Joe talk about Gaba’s Girl, the strange history and science of reanimation, and trying to remember the plot of 80’s movies. Have Fun!Welcome to Episode 1 Show Notes:This is a collection of stuff that we didn’t get to in the show or talked about in the show briefly. We try to include links when possible and connecting our research paths. Maybe in future we will have a better organization system, but for now enjoy the Rabbit Hole of Show Notes!Let us know:What do you think about Gaba and the history of reanimation?Any questions we didn’t cover?What did we get wrong (read the show note first)?The Show Notes:Lester Gaba:Who is Lester GabaLester the first mannequin influencerSome Terms:Robotsexuality-term for falling in love with robot. Lovotics refers to the research of human-to-robot relationship. (Lando and L3-37)Books/Movies reanimation rabbit hole:Mannequin-Kim CattrallFrankenstein- 1818Weird ScienceEx MachinaReal life reanimation experimenters :* Luigi Galvani-1780* First to show that electrical signals could move freshly dissected frog legs. * During a dissection a metal look touched the muscle and the frog twitches like it would hop away. Galvani said this was caused by a special muscle viral fluid—animal electricity. * Alessandro Volta (credited with inventing the battery and field of electrochemistry), 1782, disagreed and said any electricity could produce a similar effect. And Volta started testing this on all sorts of dead things. * Giovanni Aldini* Galvani was at the end of his career, so his nephew took up the charge against Volta. After the hanging of a man named George Foster (drowned his wife and kid in a canal), the body went to the lab of Giovanni. * During a demonstration he soaped and salted the man’s ears and connected him to electrodes. As he passed a current through the man his face and mouth started to twitch. * A reporter noted, “ On the first application of the process to the face, the jaws of the deceased criminal began to quiver, and the adjoining muscles were horribly contorted, and one eye was actually opened. In the subsequent part of the process the right hand was raised and clenched, and the legs and thighs were set in motion.”* It was decided by the government that if George did come back to life he should be hung again. * Andrew Ure* Experimented on hanged convicts—up to 300* He would draw a crowd and shock different body part to make them twitch and please the crowd. Not really answering any scientific questions. * “Every muscle of the body was immediately agitated with convulsive movements resembling a violent shuddering from cold. . . On moving the second rod from hip to heel, the knee being previously bent, the leg was thrown out with such violence as nearly to overturn one of the assistants, who in vain tried to prevent its extension. The body was also made to perform the movements of breathing by stimulating the phrenic nerve and the diaphragm.”* “When the supraorbital nerve was excited ‘every muscle in his countenance was simultaneously thrown into fearful action; rage, horror, despair, anguish, and ghastly smiles, united their hideous expressions in the murderer’s face, surpassing far the wildest representations of Fuseli or a Kean. At this period several of the spectators were forced to leave the apartment from terror or sickness, and one gentleman fainted.”* Eventually things got boring and the church was threading to shut him down afraid that he was summoning devils. * In time, he gave up the reanimation efforts, correctly concluding it was a waste of his time, and then turned his attention to more productive pursuits, such as revolutionizing the way volumes are measured and with being the first to describe a bi-metallic thermostat.Early 1920’s Russian experiments* Sergei Bryukhonenko was a scientist living in Russia during the Revolution who invented what he called an “autojektor,” or the heart-lung machine. These exist today, and Bryukhonenko’s design was fundamentally sound, but it’s the way he tested it that’s creepy.* During his early experiments, Bryukhonenko decapitated a dog and immediately connected it to his machine, which drew out blood from the veins and circulated it through a filter for oxygenation. According to his paper, Bryukhonenko kept the dog’s severed head alive and responsive for over an hour and a half, before blood clots built up and killed the dog on the table.* According to the Soviet Congress of Science, Bryukhonenko actually managed reanimating of a human in 1930. * Given the hours-dead corpse of a man who had committed suicide, the team plugged his body up to the autojektor and pushed a witches’ brew of odd chemicals into his bloodstream.* They opened his chest cavity, administered a mix of chemicals and got a steady rhythm. The man then started to groan and move, this freaked everyone out and they shut down the experiment letting the man did for good. * Today: Luigi Galvani initial work is the basis for Electrical muscle stimulation (EMS), also known as neuromuscular electrical stimulation (NMES) or electromyostimulation, is the elicitation of muscle contraction using electric impulsesSHOW ADVICE:Please don’t try to reanimate things in your living room. OTHER STUFFgalvanism — the idea that electricity could reanimate dead tissuein honour of his pioneering work his name was given to the unit of electrical potential, the Volt.In 1751, England passed the Murder Act, which allowed the bodies of executed murderers to be used for experimentation and scientific study. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Murder\_Act\_1751Andrew Ure was Scottish and performed his experiment on a hanged convict (Matthew Clydesdale) in 1818. After experiment did describe a device that would later be the basis for the defibrillator. Mary Shelley was surrounded and influenced by science demonstrations (Galvani, Volta and Aldini were friends of Mary’s father), but some speculate that Mary Shelley used Ure as a model for her main character in the book, Frankenstein (1818).Operating theater or operating room, is a facility where surgical procedures are performed . Historically, operating theaters where actually an amphitheater and a source of education and entertainment, often with “music and festive atmosphere…” https://daily.jstor.org/inside-the-operating-theater-surgery-as-spectacle/Research on using electrodes to give amputees Restoring the sense of touch in amputees - Today's Medical DevelopmentsMore reanimating attempts not mentioned:Another scientists in the field of reanimation i failed to mention was Robert E. Cornish, an American biologist who studied at the University of California Berkeley. Cornish who reportedly managed to revive two dogs by rocking them back and forth to move blood around while injecting the animals with a mixture of anticoagulants and steroids. When Cornish announced he was ready to perform his experiment on humans, a California death-row inmate, Thomas McMonigle, volunteered his body post-execution, but the State of California denied his request.Zvonimir Vrseljal et al, April 2019 Nature. Revive pig brain 4-hours post-mortemOrgan X maintains life and raises questions about what it means to be dead. Other Rabbit Holes:And you may be wondering about cryonics (I wrote a newsletter about this Hey baby it’s cold outside. Let’s stay in and talk Cryonics!), and we still have no idea how to revive a frozen body, but research is ongoing. You can always email (I do answer back), click the comment link below, or follow me online for real time tracking. Get full access to Jotham’s Substack at jothamaustin.substack.com/subscribe
Welcome to the Rabbit Hole of Research Podcast
Feb 4 2024
Welcome to the Rabbit Hole of Research Podcast
First, thanks for signing-up. Maybe you signed up because of reading my novel, novella, or short stories. Maybe, we met at a con or book signing, or because of a newsletter giveaway, or you enjoy learning about new creators (Music, Books, Comics, etc). Maybe you signed-up because you enjoy going down the Rabbit Hole of Research and learning about the science in fiction. Or you’re a friend or family member. However you got here, I am grateful that you have taken time to read my newsletter, listen to the podcast, and thanks for hanging in there with me over these last couple years as my writing career takes off. And if you are not signed up, or want to tell someone else to sign up here is a handy subscribe and share buttons (so go tell all your friends; sharing is caring):And Now a Podcast!Welcome! The Rabbit Hole of Research Podcast will be dropping soon! So excited to share science and pop culture with you. You can listen to the Podcast on most providers (Apple, Spotify, YouTube, Amazon, etc), the Substack app, in a browser or from this email!Substack, Apple, Spotify, YouTube, Amazon Who Are We?We are Jotham (Joe), a research mad scientist and author; Nick, roaster of the coffee bean, entrepreneur and pop culture guru; and sometimes Georgia, librarian, storyteller, and print maker. So, What is this Rabbit Hole of Research Podcast? It’s like playing a game of Telephone, where we will start in one place and let the conversation lead us down the winding scenic road exploring the science in science fiction, separating the facts from the Handwavium. We’ll have a little fun and you’ll learn a few facts you can use to impress your friends at a party or use as a conversation starter to go down your own rabbit holes. It will not just be us rambling, fumbling and tumbling down the rabbit hole, but we will invite creators, thinkers and innovators on to talk about their research, creative process and join the lively conversation exploring the quirky science in fiction. We know you have many choices of entertainment, so we will keep the episodes short, about the time it takes to drink a tasty beverage. So, please join us on this journey down the rabbit hole.When Can I Expect The First Episodes?NOW!Episode 1 (Gaba Girl and Reanimation) and Episode 2 (We Talking about AI) will drop together. We should publish an episode every two weeks or so at first, but as we get a routine we will get to weekly. And we are planning a little launch party on February 28th, 2024 5:30-7pm at Bean Me Up Roastery in Munster, IN!When Will The First Guests be on? And Can I Be a Guest?So, the first guest will make an appearance in Episode 3. And sure if you want to be a guest, just drop me an email!What About the Newsletter?Even though I’ve been on a little Rabbit Hole of Research Newsletter vacation, don’t worry the newsletter will return this month (Feb 10th) with writing updates (like what now that my publisher closed), when will my new book go on submission to publishers, and what I’m reading, listening, watching, etc.As always, thanks for the support! I couldn’t do this without you!Cheers!You can always email (I do answer back), click the comment link below, or follow me online for real time tracking. Get full access to Jotham’s Substack at jothamaustin.substack.com/subscribe