Can Sex Improve Nasal Function? — 2021 Ig Nobel Medicine Winner

OV Digital Desk
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Can Sex Improve Nasal Function?

Can Sex Improve Nasal Function? | Image Source:  Diana Polekhina on Unsplash

The 2021 Ig Nobel Medicine  Prize is awarded to a team of researchers (Olcay Cem Bulut, Dare Oladokun, Burkard Lippert, and Ralph Hohenberger) for demonstrating that sexual orgasms can be as effective as decongestant medicines at improving nasal breathing.

This study was conducted to examine the impact of sexual activity on nasal breathing and compare such effects to that of a nasal decongestant. The study analyzed nasal breathing at 5 different times: (1) before sexual activity (baseline), (2) immediately after sexual activity, (3) 30 minutes, (4) 1 hour (5), and 3 hours after sexual climax. Similar measurements were taken on the second day following the application of the nasal decongestant spray.

In order to ensure consistency in the measurement, the study used visual analogue scale (VAS) and a portable rhinometric device to measure resistance and nasal flow. The study concludes that nasal breathing improved significantly after sexual intercourse with the climax to the same degree as after application of nasal decongestant for up to 60 minutes.

The 2021 Ig Nobel Prizes were awarded at the 31st First Annual Ig Nobel Prize ceremony, on Thursday, September 9, 2021. The event honors the achievements that make people laugh, then think. The prizes are intended to celebrate the unusual, honor the imaginative — and spur people’s interest in science, medicine, and technology.

Most of the new winners will give free public talks to explain if they can, what they did, and why they did it. These talks, the Ig Informal Lectures, will be presented one at a time, over the coming weeks. Because of the Covid-19 pandemic, this year’s lectures will be presented online, here at www.improbable.com, rather than in a lecture hall in their usual home, MIT (the Massachusetts Institute of Technology).

Why has same-sex sexual behaviour persisted during evolution?

The 2021 Ig Nobel Prize winners

Biology Prize: Susanne Schötz for analyzing variations in purring, chirping, chattering, trilling, tweedling, murmuring, meowing, moaning, squeaking, hissing, yowling, howling, growling, and other modes of cat-human communication. Study reference: A Comparative Acoustic Analysis of Purring in Four Cats

Ecology Prize: Leila Satari, Alba Guillén, Àngela Vidal-Verdú, and Manuel Porcar, for using genetic analysis to identify the different species of bacteria that reside in wads of discarded chewing gum stuck on pavements in various countries. Study reference: The Wasted Chewing Gum Bacteriome

Chemistry Prize: Jörg Wicker, Nicolas Krauter, Bettina Derstroff, Christof Stönner, Efstratios Bourtsoukidis, Achim Edtbauer, Jochen Wulf, Thomas Klüpfel, Stefan Kramer, and Jonathan Williams, for chemically analyzing the air inside movie theatres, to test whether the odors produced by an audience reliably indicate the levels of violence, sex, antisocial behavior, drug use, and bad language in the movie the audience is watching.
Study reference: Proof of Concept Study: Testing Human Volatile Organic Compounds as Tools for Age Classification of Films

Economics Prize: Pavlo Blavatskyy, for discovering that the obesity of a country’s politicians may be a good indicator of that country’s corruption.
Study reference: Obesity of Politicians and Corruption in Post‐Soviet Countries

Peace Prize:  Ethan Beseris, Steven Naleway, and David Carrier, for testing the hypothesis that humans evolved beards to protect themselves from punches to the face.
REFERENCE: Impact Protection Potential of Mammalian Hair: Testing the Pugilism Hypothesis for the Evolution of Human Facial Hai

Physics Prize:  Alessandro Corbetta, Jasper Meeusen, Chung-min Lee, Roberto Benzi, and Federico Toschi, for conducting experiments to learn why pedestrians do not constantly collide with other pedestrians.
Study reference: Physics-based modeling and data representation of pairwise interactions among pedestrians

Kinetics Prize: Hisashi Murakami, Claudio Feliciani, Yuta Nishiyama, and Katsuhiro Nishinari, for conducting experiments to learn why pedestrians do sometimes collide with other pedestrians.
Study reference: Mutual Anticipation Can Contribute to Self-Organization in Human Crowds

Entomology Prize: John Mulrennan, Jr., Roger Grothaus, Charles Hammond, and Jay Lamdin, for their research study “A New Method of Cockroach Control on Submarines”. Study reference: A New Method of Cockroach Control on Submarines

Transportation Prize: Robin Radcliffe, Mark Jago, Peter Morkel, Estelle Morkel, Pierre du Preez, Piet Beytell, Birgit Kotting, Bakker Manuel, Jan Hendrik du Preez, Michele Miller, Julia Felippe, Stephen Parry, and Robin Gleed, for determining by experiment whether it is safer to transport an airborne rhinoceros upside-down. Study reference: The Pulmonary and Metabolic Effects of Suspension by the Feet Compared with Lateral Recumbency in Immobilized Black Rhinoceroses (Diceros bicornis) Captured by Aerial Darting

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