Six Degrees of Kevin Bacon

posted by The Exchange

Back in the 1990s, it was all the rage to play a game dubbed "Six Degrees of Kevin Bacon." It all started when three college students in Pennsylvania were watching the actor's performance in The Air Up There, and started competing to name all the movies in which Bacon had appeared, and other actors who performed with him. They realized that it takes remarkably few indirect relationships to tie Bacon to just about any actor in Hollywood -- 2.95 steps on average, to be exact.

The game spread like wildfire, with a book, talk show appearances, and an online Oracle of Bacon where users can type in the name of any actor and find out his/her connection to Bacon. The actor himself had some fun with the concept in this classic VISA commercial:



The game is an example of the so-called "small world" phenomenon, or social network theory. Bacon -- and, it must be said, more than 1000 other actors in Hollywood -- is what's termed a "hub" in social network theory. While most nodes in a network are connected only to a few other nodes, a certain small number of nodes are linked to many, many others. You know how major airlines pick certain airports as a home base, funneling their connecting flights through those hubs? Bacon would be Chicago's O'Hare Airport.

The World Wide Web, the stock market, even the anatomy of the human brain are all organized according to the rules of small world network theory. And now science writer Carl Zimmer reports that scientists are applying this approach to map out and study the complicated connections between species in an ecosystem, for example, sharks' relation to their prey in the Caribbean.

In the past few years, ecologists have begun to apply network theory to nature. By mapping the connections between species, they are discovering some of the rules by which all ecological networks are organized, and how these rules help foster biodiversity. They’re also studying how biological invasions, overfishing, and other threats are reorganizing these networks, and possibly putting them at risk of collapse. By discovering early warning signs of networks in trouble, scientists hope to be able to predict these collapses and prevent them from occurring.

That's one more quirky accomplishment Bacon can add to his resume. Maybe one day, ecologists will be able to consult their own online oracle wherein they can type in the names of select species and find out instantly where they fit into the vast interconnected web of their ecosystem.

Creating a Conversation through Creation

posted by The Exchange

A brand new film, CREATION, opens in theaters this Friday, January 22nd, in major cities across the country (New York, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Boston, and Washington DC) and will certainly stir pundits on both sides of the creation "debate" in the US. The film, starring Paul Bettany and Jennifer Connolly, follows the story of Charles Darwin and is based on the book by Randal Keynes, Darwin’s great-great-grandson.

Last week, honored guests of the NAS were treated to an advance screening of the film along with a panel discussion with Director Jon Amiel, Writer Randal Keynes, Biologist Sean B. Carroll, Geneticist Maxine Singer, and Science Historian Richard Milner.

The film depicts Darwin in a way we may not be used to seeing him - not the very serious, scholarly, old man, but as a young scientist grappling with the implications of his work. When he wrote origin of species, Darwin was a relatively young man. CREATION gives us Darwin thinking about and enjoying his scientific endeavors, which was a vital part of his life. It's an honest depiction of a man of science.

If you'd like to know more about the movie -

You can become a fan of CREATION on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/pages/CREATION-The-Movie/39212784860

You can follow CREATION on Twitter: http://twitter.com/Creation_Movie

For theater information: http://creationthemovie.com/

“His love for his wife, his observations of his children, his friendships with gardeners, schoolteachers and pigeon fanciers, his fears about death, revolution, bankruptcy, inbreeding...all these things found their way into his theory. He was the most inclusive of thinkers.” Randal Keynes, ANNIE’S BOX

"Rift" Sets Its Hero Adrift

posted by The Exchange

Just when you thought the world was safe from universe-destroying black holes, comes a nifty short film from L Studio called Rift that explores just such a scenario. It's described as "a surreal interpretation of Pandora's Box about a scientist whose failed experiment results in the formation of a black hole that alters time and space, creating a chaotic Twilight-Zonesque nightmare."

Our scientist/protagonist is actually correct when he says we have nothing to fear from these sorts of proton-proton collisions -- even if the fictional film events contradict that assertion. But Rift offers a creative visualization of what the end of the world might look like -- you know, on the off-chance the scientists might be wrong.


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