Anna Rothschild: Why you should love gross science
安娜‧羅斯柴爾德: 為何要熱愛粗鄙的科學
Anna Rothschild makes videos about science for the young and the young at heart. Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
of the first fertility drugs
that when women enter menopause,
科學家們知道當女性進入更年期時,
of fertility hormones in their urine.
生育激素到尿液中。
named Bruno Lunenfeld,
isolate those hormones from the urine
who are having trouble getting pregnant.
was that in order to test this idea,
got special permission from the Pope
得到了教皇的特別許可,
老修女的大量尿液,
get pregnant today,
synthesized in a lab,
intellectual audience about nun pee?
關於修女尿尿的事情?
and multimedia producer,
和多媒體製作人,
fascinated by gross stuff.
一段 YouTube 系列的影片,
that I started a weekly YouTube series
creepy underbelly
令人毛骨悚然的下腹部的
a little gross about pee.
that we don't really like to talk about,
of doing it very private.
peered into the world of pee,
deeply helpful to humanity.
有深遠幫助的東西。
一年半之後,
of making my show,
when we explore the gross side of life,
would have thought we'd find,
that we didn't think was there.
about gross things for a few reasons.
對我們來說很重要。
talking about gross stuff
to preserve curiosity.
about what I was like as a child?
a slime chemistry set
一套粘液化學套裝時開始,
大量實驗,增強了我的興趣。
in my sixth-grade biology class.
surfaces around our classroom
that are undigested that owls barf up,
未消化的物質球,
and awesome and cool.
with gross stuff as a kid
are really into gross things,
or eating their boogers.
或吃他們的鼻屎。
are like little explorers.
as much as they can
可被接受的程度是一無所知。
about the relative acceptability
how everything works
of life as they can.
及觸摸鼻涕蟲或蟾蜍
and not to touch the slugs or toads
in the backyard,
是為了孩子的安全,對嗎?
to keep kids safe, right?
your nose spreads germs
will give you warts,
actually think that's true.
as many toads as you want.
when kids get a little bit older,
that engaging with gross stuff
finding out where the limits are,
will have burping competitions
會參加打嗝比賽,
who can make the grossest face.
it's a little bit transgressive, right?
還有另一個層次。
to why we define stuff as gross.
the concept of disgust to morality.
we categorize as gross
that we're just animals.
bodily fluids and sex
can be really unsettling,
或許令我們很不安,
of our own mortality.
with this deep existential angst.
and the avoidance of gross things
to protect our bodies,
kids really begin to internalize
disgusting things and immorality.
to back up this next idea,
支持我的下一個想法,
事情發生在我們進入青春期的時候。
it happens around the time we hit puberty.
our bodies are changing,
正在發生變化,
and girls get their periods,
女孩子們開始她們的月經,
in this way that we never did before.
for abstraction,
really gross is happening to my body!"
發生了噁心的事!」
也許自己很粗鄙。
something bad or wrong about me."
我有些不好或不對勁。」
associate gross stuff with immorality,
out there in the world
for a walk in the woods.
to the birds and the trees and the flowers
a bigger and more awesome picture
更精彩的生命畫面,
that are driving forest growth,
推動了森林的生長,
beneath your feet
all of the plants around you.
經常與年輕人討論粗鄙的東西,
about gross stuff early and often
allowed to claim this bigger picture
對粗鄙的東西仍很著迷,
the fascination with gross stuff
like it's not there.
度過了大部分時間,
sort of a big part of our lives
and some weird tissues
consciously or subconsciously,
not to fart publicly.
to avoid being gross all the time,
this kind of voyeuristic delight
who show my videos
中學教師的數量
of adults, too.
hearing about gross stories,
to explore the gross side of ourselves.
gross stuff is so important.
on tonsil stones -- sorry, everyone --
做了一段影片——
and bacteria and food
and they smell really terrible,
and it's like -- it's awful.
have experienced this.
who have experienced this
to talk about it.
is my most popular video.
became sort of like a self-help section,
觀眾在自問自答,
their tonsil stone experiences
扁桃腺結石的體驗,
for getting rid of them.
for people to talk about something
taking about publicly.
something as goofy as tonsil stones,
can have an effect like that
所產生的效果,令我有點兒傷心。
as common as periods.
關於女性月經的影片,
a video on menstruation,
I am still getting messages
問我關於她們的月經。
who are asking me about their periods.
and some not-so-young people -- out there,
和一些並不年輕的人,
what's happening to their bodies
that I am not a medical professional,
我不是專業醫學人士,
they should talk to a doctor.
that everyone should feel comfortable
都不應該感到不自在。
about their own bodies.
it's really important for us
from a pretty early age,
交給醫生處理。
over your own body
that talking to your doctor
can only address issues
要解決什麼問題的時候。
there's something to address.
我學到的一件非常有趣的事情,
interesting things I learned
one scientist who told me
we don't know about periods.
that still hasn't been done.
a lot of scientists in the field
女性科學家很少,
that women talk about publicly.
to ask a question.
talking about gross stuff is so important,
what you're going to find
of disgustingness.
那些令人厭惡的外層後。
this lovely, bright purple ink
會噴出可愛的,紫色明亮的鼻涕水,
one of the kinkiest creatures
最古怪的生物之一。
male and female genitalia.
in this kind of, like, conga line
康加線地聚集在一起,
the partner in front of it
an awesome time-saver,
and they were like,
touch that with a stick,"
the bigger thing about sea hares
have a small number of very large neurons,
to use in neuroscience research.
used them in his research
在研究中利用了這些海兔
and play in dirt and ask questions.
和玩弄泥土,並且提問;
and don't be ashamed of it,
也不要為此感到羞恥,
what you're going to find.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Anna Rothschild - Science journalistAnna Rothschild makes videos about science for the young and the young at heart.
Why you should listen
Anna Rothschild combines whimsical writing with painting, collage and digital animation to bring her stories to life. She is currently at the Washington Post, where she directs and hosts the series Anna's Science Magic Show Hooray! The show explores science questions like "Why do we have butts?" or "Why is blood red?" and Rothschild regularly answers questions submitted by the audience. She is also the creator of the YouTube series Gross Science for NOVA and PBS Digital Studios. Rothschild has won multiple awards for her work, including the 2016 AAAS Kavli Science Journalism Award for Children's Science News. She has an MA in science journalism from New York University and a BA in biology from Brown University.
Anna Rothschild | Speaker | TED.com