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Audio long read: How a silly science prize changed my career

Audio long read: How a silly science prize changed my career

The Ig Nobel prizes are famed for their spotlighting of offbeat research. Nature investigates how some winners feel about their ‘honour’.

Nature Podcast · [email protected]

December 27, 202411m 55s

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Show Notes

Marc Abrahams created the Ig Nobel prizes in 1991, after years of collecting examples of weird research that he included in the Journal of Irreproducible Results. The aim of these satirical awards is to honour achievements that “make people laugh, then think”.


While the initial response from the scientific community was mixed, last year the prize received more than 9,000 nominations. Several researchers who have won an ‘Ig’ say that it has improved their careers by helping them to reach wider audiences, and spend more time engaging with the public about their work.


This is an audio version of our Feature: How a silly science prize changed my career


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