A Canadian researcher won an Ig Nobel Prize for her eyebrow-raising study

A Canadian researcher won an Ig Nobel Prize for her eyebrow-raising study

*Note: The Ig Nobel Prize is a satiric prize awarded annually since 1991 to celebrate ten unusual or trivial achievements in scientific research, its stated aim being to “honor achievements that first make people laugh, and then make them think.” The name of the award is a pun on the Nobel Prize, which it parodies, and the word ignoble.

Written content from Jackie Dunham CTV News

TORONTO — A Canadian researcher and her American colleague have been awarded the satirical Ig Nobel Prize in psychology for devising a method to identify narcissists by their eyebrows.

Miranda Giacomin Unbiased Non-Political News Without Politics
Miranda Giacomin
Nicholas Rule Totally unbiased news without politics
Nicholas Rule

Last week, Miranda Giacomin and Nicholas Rule were presented the lighthearted award during a webcast event titled the “30th First Annual Ig Nobel Prize ceremony.”

The comedic awards show, which has been held every year since 1991, honours academic discoveries “that first make people laugh, then think,” according to the Annals of Improbable Research magazine, which organizes the awards.

“The prizes are intended to celebrate the unusual, honor the imaginative — and spur people’s interest in science, medicine, and technology,” a description of the event on the Improbable Research website reads.

The awards are usually handed out in person by “genuine (and genuinely bemused) Nobel Laureates” at Harvard University, but they were moved online this year as a result of the pandemic.

Giacomin, an assistant professor in psychology at MacEwan University in Edmonton, shared the prize with Rule, who was her professor at the University of Toronto, where she conducted the winning research as a postdoctoral student.

Their research examined if there is a particular facial feature on someone’s face that can help people identify them as a narcissist and thus, avoid the “negative interpersonal consequences often associated with narcissists.”

Participants were asked to rate photos of different faces in which certain facial features were obstructed to see if they could identify narcissistic individuals.

“We did a long series of experiments, basically showing participants pieces of the face, to try and figure out where the cue for narcissism lies – and that led us to our eyebrows,” Giacomin explained to CTVNews.ca during a telephone interview from Edmonton on Thursday.

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The researchers discovered that pronounced eyebrows were more often associated with narcissistic personalities.

“We found that narcissism tended to predict having more distinctive eyebrows, which consisted of them being darker, bolder, standing out more on people’s faces,” she said.

Their research was published in the Journal of Personality in April 2019.  

Giacomin said they found out they had won the Ig Nobel Prize in psychology earlier this summer.

“I was surprised,” she recalled of the moment. “It was exciting to find that out.”

During last week’s virtual ceremony, Nobel laureate Eric Maskin, who won the prize in economics in 2007, presented Giacomin and Rule with their award. Read more from CTV

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