Tech | March 17, 2011 | 8 comments

And You Think Science Education In The US Is Bad…

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Perhaps inspired by TV favourites such as Doctor Who and Ashes to Ashes, nearly a third of Britons (30%) believe that time travel is actually possible. The results were revealed in a survey, launched at the start of National Science and Engineering Week (11-20 March) by Birmingham Science City (www.birminghamsciencecity.co.uk), which aimed to see just how blurred the lines between science and fiction really are.

Other findings included:
1. Over a fifth of adults incorrectly believe light sabres exist.
2. Nearly a quarter (24%) of people are wrong in their belief that humans can be teleported.
3. Nearly 50% of adults wrongly believe that memory-erasing technology exists.
4. More than 40% of people incorrectly believe that hover boards exist.
5. Nearly one fifth (18%) of adults have the incorrect view that they can see gravity.

However, when you consider some of the scientific advances being made across the world today, it is not surprising that sometimes people get their science fiction and science fact confused.

For example, over three quarters (78%) of Britons believe that invisibility cloaks exist only in the realms of fiction, and yet a team at the University of Birmingham, led by Prof Shuang Zhang, has developed a method for making objects appear invisible.

Almost 90% of people think it would be impossible to grow an extra pair of eyes, even though scientists, led by Professors Nick Dale and Elizabeth Jones, at the University of Warwick have found this is possible in frogs. The team believes they will be able to use the technology to explore eye development in humans and grow an ‘eye in a dish’.

Seven out of ten adults questioned thought it was impossible to move objects with their mind, yet researchers at Coventry University’s Serious Games Institute have collaborated with California-based company, NeuroSky, to develop a headset which can read analogue electrical brainwaves and turn them into digital signals. This allows the user to manipulate images on a screen and power user-interfaces in games, education and medical applications using only their minds.

Dr Pam Waddell, Director of Birmingham Science City comments: “We commissioned the survey to see how blurred the lines between science fact and fiction have become. While films and TV can be acknowledged as creating confusion, it is also worth highlighting how advanced science has now become and many things deemed only possible in fiction have now become reality or are nearing creation due to the advancements of science.”

“What’s clear from this research is that science captures everyone’s imagination, so we must continue to invest in it and strive to develop the latest ‘stranger than fiction’ creations!”

The survey also asked people what inventions they would most like to see created. Men opted for time machines or teleportation, each receiving 19% and 21% of the male votes respectively, whereas over a quarter (26%) of women instead favoured a universal cure for all diseases.

http://www.birminghamsciencecity.co.uk/news/time-to-turn-on-the-tardis/


Follow this link to take our quick quiz and test your own knowledge of science fiction and fact. I got them all right I am so samrt
http://www.birminghamsciencecity.co.uk/get-involved/test-your-fact-or-fiction/
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8 comments // And You Think Science Education In The US Is Bad…

  • EmperorThan
  • Edgars_Anspoks
    • 0
      Edgars_Anspoks  
    • The survey isn't included here, so you can't really tell what the questions were like.
      People might as well could have understood them as a general question - is it possible to ever create a hover board, erase someones memory or create an ''invisibility cloak'', coating or whatever you call it. Sure the tech isn't available now but it might be available in the future so that might be the reason people answered positively.

    • 1 year ago
  • NiceN
    • 0
      NiceN  
    • Well, they are probably right. Someone has invented it, and you know the government will take any advanced exotic technology from the inventor; a'la Tesla.

    • 1 year ago
  • bailey78
  • postlapsaria
    • 0
      postlapsaria  
    • technically, these people sound like idiots.

      but, like the article says, considering the advances in technology-- maybe some of the responders to the poll knew more about the advances like:

      there IS a memory erasing technology, it's a shot, and it's worked in mice but not tested on people. http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/06/health/research/06brain.html

      and while i still think going back in time is impossible despite what some scientist (including stephen hawking have said), going forward in time is theoretically possible. http://mkaku.org/home/?page_id=252

      I've seen footage of a hoverboard actually working-- but it's not strong enough to hold any weight. so maybe they're aren't uninformed people, just confusing things they've seen-- the gravity and light saber thing... yea those are just stupid.

    • 1 year ago
  • ArthurDent
  • extracrazykiwi2008
  • bailey78
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