Posts Tagged ‘spots’
“Nature uses only the longest threads to weave her patterns, so that each small piece of her fabric reveals the organization of the entire tapestry”*…
More than 70 years ago, mathematician Alan Turing proposed a mechanism that explained how patterns could emerge from bland uniformity. As Amber Dance explains, scientists are still using his model — and adding new twists — to gain a deeper understanding of animal markings…
There’s a reason fashion designers look to animal prints for inspiration. Creatures have evolved a dizzying array of patterns: stripes, spots, diamonds, chevrons, hexagons and even mazelike designs. Some, like peacocks, want to be seen, to attract a mate or scare off a rival or predator. Others, like tigers or female ducks, need to blend in, either to sneak up on prey or to avoid becoming lunch themselves.
Some patterns arise simply or randomly, but others develop via complex, precise interactions of pattern-generating systems. Their beauty aside, the intricacies of these systems are inspiring the scientists who aim to elucidate how the tiger got its stripes, the cheetah its spots and more besides.
Mammals like cats and dogs can have white tummies. They get them in a straightforward way: As the embryo develops, pigment-making cells originate along the site of the future spine and migrate down and around toward the belly. But sometimes they don’t make it all the way. Where the pigment cells run out of steam, the white begins.
The black dots on Dalmatians are generated randomly. So are the black-and-orange splotches on calico cats.
But the stripes of chipmunks and tigers, the speckles on fishes and chickens, and many other glorious animal features are laid down with exquisite precision. In a remarkable feat of self-organization, a uniform surface becomes patterned.
The person who figured out how this happens was Alan Turing [here]. You may know him as the 20th century mathematician who broke Nazi codes during World War II and developed early concepts in artificial intelligence.Turing also turned his math skills to understanding how regular features could emerge on the developing embryo. Scientists since then have applied his equations to the development of such patterns as fingerprint ridges, the places where hairs will sprout, and color patterns like stripes and spots.And it turns out he was really onto something: Today, scientists studying animal patterns still find Turing’s ideas to be remarkably effective — especially when combined with other factors that elaborate the patterns further….
A colorful tour of what scientists are learning today, starting with Turing’s theory: “Spots, stripes and more: Working out the logic of animal patterns,” from @amberldance in @KnowableMag.
* Richard Feynman
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As we contemplate coloring, we might spare a thought for Emanuel Mendes da Costa; he died on this date in 1791. A naturalist, he published A Natural History of Fossils in 1757 and served as clerk (from 1763) to the Royal Society– from which he embezzled membership funds to indulge his reckless penchant for collecting. When caught in 1767, the treasury was short by £1500—a substantial amount in those years. He confessed; his collections were auctioned to make restitution; but he was still sentenced for five years to debtor’s prison. After release he scraped by, with lecturing about fossils, translating, and trading in mineral, fossil and shell specimens. He wrote two books on shells and was perhaps the first to coin the word conchology. Still impoverished, he died in penury.
“Commercials are about products in the same sense that the story of Jonah is about the anatomy of whales”*…
The Superbowl has, since its inception been… well, the superbowl of broadcasting; this year’s expected audience is over 100 million. Even in this pandemic-challenged economy, 30-second spots on today’s sold-out Superbowl telecast listed for $5.6 million each (though in Scott’s Miracle-Gro reportedly scored a steal at $5.5 million); there’s an extra $300,000 fee to be included in the livestream.
With that kind of investment at stake, and their sights set on the gargantuan audience who will see their commercials, the companies that advertise take their ads very seriously. And as for viewers, many report that the commercials are their favorite part of the show…
Like millions of viewers who tune into the big game year after year, we at FiveThirtyEight LOVE Super Bowl commercials. We love them so much, in fact, that we wanted to know everything about them … by analyzing and categorizing them, of course. We dug into the defining characteristics of a Super Bowl ad, then grouped commercials based on which criteria they shared — and let me tell you, we found some really weird clusters of commercials.
We watched 233 ads from the 10 brands that aired the most spots in all 21 Super Bowls this century, according to superbowl-ads.com. While we watched, we evaluated ads using seven specific criteria…
Superbowl commercials, as only FiveThirtyEight could analyze them: “According To Super Bowl Ads, Americans Love America, Animals And Sex“… sometimes even all at the same time. (Videos included!)
* Neil Postman
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As we contemplate our culture, we might recall that the first organized Mardi Gras celebration in (what is now) the United States was held by French settlers in Mobile, Alabama on this date in 1703.
The first Mardi Gras parade in New Orleans processed on this date in 1827 when masked and costumed students danced through the streets.




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