You're reading: News

Not mentioned on the Aperiodical, 3/4/15

Here’s a round-up of some mathematical news from last month.

Abel Prize Awarded

On 25th March, the awards ceremony for the Abel Prize took place in Oslo, Norway. The prize, given by the Norwegian Academy of Sciences and Letters, is given for outstanding scientific work in the field of mathematics, and includes a cash prize of 6 million Norwegian Krone (about £500,000). This year the award went to American mathematicians John F Nash, Jr (yes, that John Nash) and Louis Nirenberg, “for striking and seminal contributions to the theory of nonlinear partial differential equations and its applications to geometric analysis”.

Abel Prize website
2015 Prize announcement

Probabilistic reasoning does not depend on formal education

This is slightly old, but we found it in the news pile – a study conducted in rural Guatemala found that humans, even without formal training in probability, were able to predict which of two events were more likely, even when complicated conditional probability was involved.

Humans have innate grasp of probability, at Nature

Flatland: An Adventure in Many Dimensions

You may be familiar with the 1884 satirical novella by Edwin A Abbott, set in a two-dimensional universe and providing both social commentary and a wonderful analogy for thinking about three and four-dimensional space. Earlier this month, a team of visually impaired performance artists created an interactive experience, in which the 2D universe was simulated by removing visual information.

The installation took place entirely in the dark, and haptic feedback via robotic devices allowed visitors to explore the space, using radio signals and wifi to control a vibrating cube held by participants. An invited audience of 100 took part in the exhibit, and in groups of four, wearing special suits and interacting with live actors and recorded sounds, were told the story of the book.

The previews, described by one attendee as ‘truly disorienting’, took place over a week in March, with a view to a full public performance in 2018.

Flatland: An Adventure in Many Dimensions website
London theatre company develops cube that helps blind feel magic of the stage, at the Evening Standard

via Tarim on Twitter

Seriously Though, Eugenia

In an ongoing ‘at it again’-based saga, Dr Eugenia Cheng has come up with yet another mathematical media formula, this time for the perfect aeroplane flight. Travel website Skyscanner has hired Cheng to produce the formula, which takes into account time of day, leg room, and punctuality of the flight (and nothing else) to give a score out of 20. Legroom is measured in inches, and punctuality is (of course) out of 100.

How to book the perfect flight: Maths professor invents formula to ensure the best journey, at the Irish Mirror

One Response to “Not mentioned on the Aperiodical, 3/4/15”

(will not be published)

$\LaTeX$: You can use LaTeX in your comments. e.g. $ e^{\pi i} $ for inline maths; \[ e^{\pi i} \] for display-mode (on its own line) maths.

XHTML: You can use these tags: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <s> <strike> <strong>