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Curiosity Weekly

Why Birds Wore Funny Hats for Science

Curiosity Weekly

Warner Bros. Discovery

Science

4.6964 Ratings

🗓️ 14 December 2020

⏱️ 14 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Learn about how curiosity gives your memory a boost; what happened when researchers put feathered hats on birds to see if other birds found them sexy; and how we trick bacteria into making insulin for us.

How Curiosity Gives Your Memory A Boost by Cody Gough

Researchers Once Put Feathered Hats on Birds to See if Other Birds Found Them Sexy by Cameron Duke

We Trick Bacteria Into Making Insulin For Us by Cameron Duke

Subscribe to Curiosity Daily to learn something new every day with Cody Gough and Ashley Hamer. You can also listen to our podcast as part of your Alexa Flash Briefing; Amazon smart speakers users, click/tap “enable” here: https://www.amazon.com/Curiosity-com-Curiosity-Daily-from/dp/B07CP17DJY

 

Find episode transcript here: https://curiosity-daily-4e53644e.simplecast.com/episodes/why-birds-wore-funny-hats-for-science


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Transcript

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0:00.0

Hi, you're about to get smarter in just a few minutes with Curiosity Daily from Curiosity.com.

0:06.0

I'm Cody Goff. And I'm Ashley Hamer.

0:08.0

Today you'll learn about how Curiosity gives your memory a boost,

0:11.5

how researchers once put feathered hats on birds

0:14.3

to see if other birds found them sexy, and how we trick bacteria into making

0:19.7

insulin for us. Let's satisfy some curiosity.

0:26.0

Here's something that'll make you feel good about listening to this podcast.

0:29.0

Curiosity can improve your memory. It turns out that the more curious you are about something,

0:32.0

the easier it is to remember what you

0:34.1

learn about it. In fact you'll also be able to better remember unrelated

0:38.8

information that you learn along the way. Just take it from a 2014 study led by researchers from UC Davis.

0:47.4

For that study, researchers had volunteers read more than 100 trivia questions.

0:52.0

They were displayed on a screen, one after the other.

0:54.9

But instead of trying to answer the questions, the volunteers just had to rate how curious

0:59.8

they were about the answer.

1:02.1

After each question, the screen would go black for a few seconds,

1:05.0

then flash a picture of a face before it displayed the answer. And then the

1:09.6

volunteers went home, and 24 hours later they went back to the lab for a memory test.

1:15.0

It turned out that when people were curious about the answer to a trivia question,

1:19.0

they remembered it better 24 hours later.

1:22.0

But that's not all. The volunteers were also better at

1:25.4

remembering the faces associated with the questions that piqued their curiosity,

...

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