Sunday, August 19, 2012

People-watch-porn-winter-early-summer


Americans are most likely to search online for pornography in winter or early summer, according to a new study that claims sex and mating behaviours are seasonal.
Researchers at Villanova University in Pennsylvania plugged 'porn', 'xxx' and x-rated' into Google Trends as well as a range of more specific naughty words and phrases.
Interestingly, they found keyword searches over the past five years relating to dirty images and movies had clear peaks and troughs, recurring at six-month cycles.
Trends: Researchers found Americans search for porn in six-month cycles in winter or early summer, shown the above graph
Trends: Researchers found Americans search for porn in six-month cycles in winter or early summer, shown the above graph
The same was found for internet searches relating to prostitution, according to The Atlantic.
However, it is not just shady or illicit activities that receive a boost at certain seasons - mainstream dating websites experience the same spike in search traffic as pornographic sites.
 
But there was no such pattern for non-sexual words, which were tested as a control group.
The results, published in the Archives of Sexual Behaviour, fit with previous studies showing seasonal trends of births, sexually transmitted infections, condom sales and abortions.
Patterns: The same pattern was found for searches relating to prostitution and dating websites (stock photo)
Patterns: The same pattern was found for searches relating to prostitution and dating websites (stock photo)
It is unclear why people appear to become more sexually active in the midwinter and early summer.
One theory is that it is because these times coincide with the main holiday season in most western countries, when people's minds turn to leisure activities rather than work.
However, it may instead be linked to a more biological explanation, with certain seasons being a time when we are pre-programmed to seek to reproduce.
The Villanova research, which was led by Dr Patrick Markey, also showed another interesting quirk in the pattern of searching for online smut.
The number of people Googling porn appears to have crashed in late 2009, before soaring again in early 2010.
If the data are accurate, they may be linked to the financial crisis, which caused a recession in 2009, disrupting nearly every indicator of economic activity.

Thursday, June 7, 2012

British men prefer breasts, Argentinians butts: Study

LONDON: Gentlemen may prefer blondes but Argentinian men prefer buttocks and British prefer breasts, a new study has revealed. Two separate studies watched the responses of male undergraduates to the female form, using eye-tracking and questionnaires, and concluded that Argentinian men tended to ogle downwards, whereas British men's eyes went up.
"There is little empirical research that has examined individual differences in male preferences for specific traits - favouring breasts over buttocks," the Daily Mail quoted the Argentinian study as sayingreported.
Hard-looking men sacrifice more: Men with a more aggressive appearance, typically those with wider faces, are more likely to sacrifice themselves to help friends or colleagues, a new study has revealed. The study has been published in the journal Psychological Science.

Where Arranged Marriages Are Customary, Suicides Grow More Common

Ayman Oghanna for The New York Times
Some deaths are not suicides but honor killings. Abdella Hassan said his daughter, recently married to a cousin, had stabbed herself, but his sons are accused of her murder.


SINJAR, Iraq — With her father sitting nearby, 16-year-old Jenan Merza struggled to explain why she was lying in bed recovering from a gunshot wound. 
“I didn’t know the gun was loaded,” she said, resting under a red-and-gold blanket in a stark room with a bare concrete floor.
A couple of moments later, after her father left the room to fix tea and coffee, she cried softly and admitted what really happened, how she had shot herself in the abdomen with her brother’s Glock pistol after first trying with a Kalashnikov rifle — a weapon too long to point at herself and pull the trigger.
“I tried to kill myself,” she said. “I didn’t want to get married. I was forced to get engaged.”
In this desolate and tradition-bound community in the northwest corner of Iraq, at the foot of a mountain range bordering Syria, Ms. Merza’s reaction to the ancient custom of arranged marriage is becoming more common. Officials are alarmed by what they describe as a worsening epidemic of suicides, particularly among young women tormented by being forced to marry too young, to someone they do not love.
While reliable statistics on anything are hard to come by in Iraq, officials say there have been as many as 50 suicides this year in this city of 350,000 — at least double the rate in the United States — compared with 80 all of last year. The most common methods among women are self-immolation and gunshots.
Among the many explanations given, like poverty and madness, one is offered most frequently: access to the Internet and to satellite television, which came after the start of the war. This has given young women glimpses of a better life, unencumbered by the traditions that have constricted women for centuries to a life of obedience and child-rearing, one devoid of romance.
“The society had been closed, and now it is open to the rest of the world,” said Kheri Shingli, an official in a local political party and a writer and journalist. “They feel they are not living their life well compared to the rest of the world.”
Last year the International Organization for Migration conducted a study on the growing suicide problem in Sinjar, where mental health services do not exist, and concluded that “the marginalization of women and the view of the woman’s role as peripheral contributed to the recent suicides.” A report compiled this year by a researcher at a local health center concluded, “The way to solve this is to put an end to forced marriages.”
That will probably not happen soon. In assigning blame for the rise in suicides, many people here mentioned the Turkish soap opera “Forbidden Love.” A romantic drama of the upper class, it is a favorite program of women here, and some people say it provides an unrealistic example of the lives that could be available outside Sinjar.
Ms. Merza said she watched the show, and she admitted, “I wish I had that life,” but her anguish seems more basic. At 16, she wants to remain a child.
“I want to stay with my mom and not go back to my husband,” she said.
Ms. Merza’s father, Barkat Hussein, interviewed later in private, said he was aware that the shooting was not an accident.
“We gave her to her cousin less than 20 days ago,” he said. “She accepted him. Like anyone who gets married, she should be happy.”
He said he would not force her to return to her husband, who lives next door. But, he said: “I hope she will go back to him. His father is my brother.”
He, too, blamed the Turkish soap opera for his daughter’s unhappiness, and he nodded toward the room where his wife was working. “I got married to my cousin,” he said. “I wasn’t in love with her, but we are here, living together. That’s what happens here, we marry our relatives.”
Like Ms. Merza’s family, a majority of the inhabitants here are Yazidis, who speak Kurdish but adhere to a religion that combines elements of Islam and strains of ancient Persian religions. Among their beliefs is a special reverence for a figure called Melek Taus, whom Muslims regard as Satan. For this, they have often been branded as devil worshipers, which has justified historical oppression of the sect by extremist Muslims.
In 2007, Sinjar suffered the deadliest coordinated terrorist attack of the war years, when several trucks packed with explosives and driven by suicide bombers exploded, killing nearly 500 people and destroying the same number of homes, most of which were made of mud.
The town’s economy has historically relied on tobacco and figs, but neglect and war have rendered the agriculture industry dormant, and many men seek work as day laborers in the Kurdish cities of Erbil and Sulaimaniya. Its proximity to Syria means that refugees come from the west, and smugglers of cigarettes and weapons for the Syrian rebels trace their path back.
The area is a cordoned-off no man’s land, where neither the central government nor the Kurdish regional government seems to have much control.
A visitor here might notice a big blue sign on the outskirts that reads, almost mockingly, “Happy Land,” the name for a dilapidated amusement park. In the early 1970s, the opening scenes of “The Exorcist” were filmed here among the ancient Yazidi shrines.
Officials here say that some cases that are judged as suicides are actually honor killings, in which family members kill women who commit adultery or seek to marry outside their religion or class and then cover it up by claiming suicide.
“This happens, too,” said Dr. Majia Khalaf, who runs a government health center.
In one recent case, a father tried to claim that his 19-year-old daughter had stabbed herself to death, but her brothers were being held on suspicion of murder.
The father, Abdella Hassan, said that he had recently married his daughter to her cousin, and that shortly after the wedding she began “talking nonsense” and having hallucinations.
He took her to a Yazidi sheik, who said the devil had overtaken her and who advised an exorcism rite that involved covering herself in dust from a Yazidi shrine. Before the rite could be performed, the father said, he found her dead.
“I saw her happy in her marriage,” he said. “It wasn’t that.”
Duraid Adnan contributed reporting from Sinjar and Baghdad.

Marriage may make people happier in long run

Marriage may make people happier in long run
Married people may be happier in the long run than those who aren't married, a new research has suggested. The study by Michigan State University scientists found that although matrimony does not make people happier than they were when they were single, it appears to protect against normal declines in happiness during adulthood. "Our study suggests that people on average are happier than they would have been if they didn't get married," said Stevie C.Y. Yap, a researcher in MSU's Department of Psychology. Yap, Ivana Anusic and Richard Lucas studied the data of thousands of participants in a long-running, national British survey. They set out to find whether personality helps people adapt to major life events including marriage.The answer, essentially, was no: Personality traits such as conscientiousness or neuroticism do not help people deal with losing a job or having a baby.
"Past research has suggested that personality is important in how people react to important life events. But we found that there were no consistent effects of personality in how people react and adapt to these major events," Yap said. In general, similar-aged participants who did not get married showed a gradual decline in happiness as the years passed. Those who were married, however, largely bucked this trend. It's not that marriage caused their satisfaction level to spike, Yap noted, but instead kept it, at least, stable. Their study appeared online in the Journal of Research in Personality.

‘Shedding tears at work boosts women’s career’

LONDON: Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg has suggested that it is okay for women to cry at work. Sandberg asserted that she attributes her tears to part of her success.
During a speech to Harvard Business School, the 42-year-old doled out career advice to graduating students, revealing details of how she paved her way to success in Silicon Valley, and addressed gender issues at work.

"I've cried at work. I've told people I've cried at work... I try to be myself," the Daily Mail quoted Sandberg as saying. "I talk about my hopes and fears and ask people about theirs... [I am] honest about my strengths and weaknesses and I encourage others to do the same."
A study shows, workplace tears do not seem to have the same career suicide stigma they used to, with 41% of women claiming they have cried at work, compared with 9% of men. In majority of these cases, it does not impact workplace performance, and in some instances, ability to show emotion can be viewed as an asset, says Anne Kreamer's new book, 'It's Always Personal: Emotion In The New Workplace'.
However, Sandberg made the distinction between authentic tears, and manipulative waterworks, cautioning against dishonest weeping. "As we strive to be more authentic in our communication , we should also strive to be more authentic in a broader sense. I talk a lot about bringing your whole self to work," she added.

Suspect in grisly Canadian murder Luka Rocco Magnott arrested in Berlin

(File picture of Luka Rocco…)
BERLIN: A Canadian man suspected of murdering and dismembering a Chinese student, then posting a video of the grisly crime online, was arrested in an internet cafe in Berlin on Monday after an international manhunt.
Interpol had issued a "red notice," its highest type of warning, for Luka Rocco Magnotta, 29, who faces first degree murder charges in the death of 32-year-old Jun Lin.

Magnotta, who used at least three identities and was an avid Internet user, is believed to have killed Lin with a pick axe, dismembered and defiled his body and then mailed some of the body parts to political parties in the Canadian capital Ottawa.
The gruesome murder prompted the largest manhunt in the history of Montreal, a city of 1.7 million in the predominantly French-speaking province of Quebec.
"He used the web to glorify himself, and it was the web that got him arrested," Montreal police spokesman Ian Lafreiniere told reporters in the Canadian city where the murder took place.
"There was great relief among investigators when we heard this news," Lafreiniere said of the arrest.
German police picked up the trail after a tip-off from French authorities, who realized Magnotta - dubbed by European media as the "Canadian psycho" - had caught a bus to Berlin from France.
"He should have known that there are identity checks when you travel by coach," a French police source said.
The owner of the Berlin Internet cafe, Kadir Anlayisli, said he recognized Magnotta and stepped out of the cafe, on Berlin's busy Karl Marx Strasse in the multi-cultural neighborhood of Neukoelln, stopped a passing police van and told them, "I have someone here you might be looking for."
"Our policemen went inside and asked the person for his identification. He gave them a false name but he got very nervous so they insisted on seeing his passport. After a while he gave up and said 'You've got me,'" said Berlin police spokesman Stefan Redlich.
Most of the police in the van were young trainees, Redlich said.
ALLEGED KITTEN KILLER AND PORN STAR
Magnotta left a bizarre Internet trail as an alleged kitten-killer and bisexual porn star, and Lafreniere said police had not ruled out the possibility that he was involved in other crimes.
The suspect is being held at a Berlin police station and is scheduled to make his first court appearance on Tuesday.
It is unclear when Magnotta might be returned to Canada. A spokeswoman for Canadian justice minister Rob Nicholson said ministry officials were working quickly with Quebec's attorney general to submit a formal extradition request.
Magnotta is believed to have entered France on May 26, and French police had investigated thousands of reported sightings.
Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper said he wanted to congratulate German and French police for their good work.
Montreal police say they found a bloody mattress and pools of blood on the floor and in the refrigerator of Magnotta's apartment.
A janitor found a torso with no head or limbs in a suitcase in an alley behind the building, while a decomposing foot mailed to the headquarters of the governing Conservative Party and a hand found inside a package at a postal depot were from the same body.
China on Monday urged its nationals in Canada to take increased safety precautions.
"The methods used in the crime were brutal. The nature and impact of this crime were utterly horrible and we feel deeply shocked," Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Liu Weimin said.

Fantasies may lead to biased decision making: Study

Fantasies may influence people to make biased decisions by prompting them to overlook the negative aspects that often arise down the road, a new study has found.
Researchers at New York University made participants to fantasise about one of three things: a dream vacation, wearing glamorous high heels or making huge money in stock market.
They found that the participants were more prone to focus on the positive aspects than the negative aspects of such an event actually happening. For example, fantasising makes one more likely to focus on how fabulous her calves would look when wearing stilettos, rather than the calluses and bunions that might follow, the researchers said.
The findings, published in journal Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, have implications for how people get information when they are in the early stages of planning an event, the researchers said, pointing out that this bias may ultimately affect decision making later on. 
"Our work suggests that before getting to this point, positive fantasies might lead people to acquire biased information -- to learn more about the pros rather than the cons," study author Heather Barry Kappes said.
"Thus, even if people deliberate very carefully on the information they've acquired, they could still make poor decisions," Kappes was quoted as saying by LiveScience.
After being asked to think about the three scenarios, the participants were given a chance to learn more on the topic, for example, by reading a website describing the positive and negative health consequences of wearing high heels.
The team than compared the subjects' preference for pros versus the cons by, for example, monitoring the amounts of time they spent reading about each. It was found that those who had been given an idealised fantasy scenario, rather than one that included the potential problems, focused more on the positive information about the shoes, the trip or the stock market earnings, than on the negative.
This bias toward the positive was most notable for those who were not serious about pursuing the opportunities, the researchers said.
"Turning away from contradictory information allows idealised fantasies to be enjoyed untarnished, but may lead to shunning potentially helpful resources for decision making," the researchers concluded.