above is the Nicholas Ward interpretation of Missionary being eaten by Jaguar originally by Noé León (1907)
Source: artstation.com
...Researchers at Heidelberg University in Germany decided to look into the common practice of playing music in operating rooms and see if evidence could be found that certain genres actually increase a surgeon’s efficacy. Their findings, published late last month, showed that music does have an effect on performance—and that loud AC/DC works best...
Source: The A.V. Club
Gustav Klimt - all things amazing
Source: mudwerks
drink up until they bring out the next study
mudwerks reblogged
Aimery J. Joëssel
Nude Study for Oil Painting
Source: aimeryjoessel
We all know a certain someone who claims to be educated in almost everything. That new band? They’ve heard of them. A new breakthrough in medicine?
They’ve not only heard of it, but they know all the pros and cons.
While the bullshit is evident (and tiresome), the act continues, and it seems as though it will never stop.
Researchers from the Department of Psychology at Cornell University and the Department of Marketing at Tulane University must have been equally fed up, because a study was conducted to discover why these know-it-alls, well, know it all.
The revelation: people who consider themselves experts in something stop learning about the topic altogether. Because you have a degree or two doesn’t mean you’ve learned everything there is to know, and if you truly do not know something, own up to it.
To reach this conclusion, Cornell and Tulane researchers held five separate studies. In studies 1a and 1b, 100 subjects were polled in finance terms – real and fake. The subjects who believed they had a solid grasp on finances claimed to have overall knowledge in the fake terms (pre-rated stocks, fixed-rate deduction, annualized credit).
Study 2 followed the same guidelines as the aforementioned, but focused on separate domains like biology. The outcome was the same as 1a and 1b.
In study 3, subjects were warned about fake terms but this “did not reduce the relationships between self-perceived knowledge and overclaiming,” according to the study’s abstract.
Finally, in study 4, the subjects were split into three groups and given different experiments. The first group took an easy geography quiz to boost their confidence, the second group did not take a quiz, and the third group took a difficult quiz in order to bring their confidence down. As predicted, the subjects who took the easy quiz felt they knew most about geography, claiming to have heard of the made-up towns.
And if you can’t think of who this person is, it’s probably you. Before you embarrass yourself in the future, maybe do some research to back what you say.
Source: bust.com
mudwerks reblogged
Paul Bergon (1863-1912)
Étude, Photogravure, 1896
Source: photoseed.com
Source: Flickr / x-ray_delta_one
mudwerks reblogged
Manassé
Study, circa 1936
From Divas and Lovers: The Erotic Art of Studio Manassé
August 1942. "Interlochen, Michigan. National music camp where 300 or more young musicians study symphonic music for eight weeks each summer. A student eating an ice cream cone." Photo by Arthur Siegel. View full size.
Source: shorpy.com
mudwerks reblogged
It’s not your imagination, or a bad trip: Your couch could be trying to kill you.
Says science. (via motherjones)
fuckin couch...
mudwerks reblogged
John Singer Sargent, Sketch for the Sphinx and the Chimaera (Rotunda), 1917-21. Charcoal on paper, 62 x 45.5 cm (24 7/16 x 17 15/16 in). Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.