Reminds me of our office @GM_Cancer 😁 https://t.co/yQWqgAHQXy
TIL that there’s an academic article on the disappearance of workplace teaspoons. And it’s delightful. https://t.co/NUL8BKBppB
@lxrjl @LinchZhang @ChanaMessinger @davidmanheim I would hope your students would get the (unintentional) joke in this paper: https://t.co/yEDnYSnlNn (or from https://t.co/SXZERyCoF7) There's also https://t.co/uAZyPTYiEs and this paper is very short: https
@kmk2108 Ich empfehle ja Fachliteratur: The case of disappearing teaspoons https://t.co/hDZRX7QMGb
This one is such a great learning resource! And one I need to re-read as our teaspoons are disappearing at an alarming rate! 😄
Favourite epi paper? @KLBaldock: How to choose this?! I want to say “The case of the disappearing teaspoons” because it engages students in learning about key epidemiological concepts and it’s hilarious! https://t.co/L8K7xl1UZE
Today #Museum30 is about #utensil Cutlery is an under-reported issue in museums. We need to talk about S.O.S - Save Our Spoons. Visitors need spoons in the cafes. They're often found in the staff room.🙂 https://t.co/InBPVwCEQC https://t.co/wSnZ1gzk7h
@Single_Mole like this teaspoon BMJ article? https://t.co/k9hhxYcAh4 (which actually has useful policy suggestions for teaspoon management) @emble64
@nkburns3 @TribTowerViews Would you accept a medical journal publication about the disappearance of teaspoons from the break room? https://t.co/VvKXWNe37c
👇 is brilliant.
@FarzEdraki @bhakthi A few years ago there were some bored epidemiologists who decided to study the teaspoon disappearances in their institute, the follow up studies by other institutes include forks https://t.co/hD5Xp5QkD2
Where are the forks? Well, this paper opened a complete new avenue for further study. Maybe we should also try something similar at UPSC ;) https://t.co/akqd3DhpD3
@sciencejon This is my favorite, have you seen it? https://t.co/IPwAvBZzSw(that,affect%20the%20rate%20of%20loss.
This is fantastic, exactly the kind of science we need.
🤣🤣 A paper on why teaspoons disappear in the office
@SiphoKings @mailandguardian You will enjoy this then https://t.co/bSmM81QxQE
Time for my favourite @bmj_latest study! 🥄 https://t.co/B2w5qcKN76
@PetitVeg Time for my favourite @bmj_latest study! https://t.co/B2w5qd2ovG
RT @easduncan: @SarahHuggy @LondonAllergy Too good an opportunity not to share (why don’t I have these research ideas?) https://t.co/lFqL5l…
RT @geeky_gillon: This is an amazing study, someone please repeat with forks in ambo stations! https://t.co/otoh0jj6de
This is an amazing study, someone please repeat with forks in ambo stations!
@SarahHuggy @LondonAllergy Too good an opportunity not to share (why don’t I have these research ideas?) https://t.co/lFqL5lWuYm
@abhora_sucks @katya_zamo Even research studies can't answer that question https://t.co/HTylVlRrVz
@allieblablah Sounds like a case for Lim et al! cf "The case of the disappearing teaspoons: longitudinal cohort study of the displacement of teaspoons in an Australian research institute." BMJ 335:1498 (2005). https://t.co/iTry9xiYug
@agrossfield @MarkusDeserno The case of the disappearing teaspoons: longitudinal cohort study of the displacement of teaspoons in an Australian research institute. https://t.co/zz56OLcpy9
The case of the disappearing teaspoons: longitudinal cohort study of the displacement of teaspoons in an Australian research institute https://t.co/Iu62QlUmz3
"The half life of the teaspoons was 81 days.. At this rate, an estimated 250 teaspoons would need to be purchased annually to maintain a practical institute-wide population of 70 teaspoons" 🤣https://t.co/CErwII0Wro
@ivanoransky That's how papers get you to read the abstract: use a intriguing title. https://t.co/h3A3kx8BeR
@GMustacchi Forse lo conosci https://t.co/cqWunccsAV
@mancunianmedic This by the way is my favourite @bmj_latest article https://t.co/KMB5xdIba3
Evaluation of my panic shopping choices: Too much: toilet paper (I only got one pack!); soap Just right: tea; chocolate (didn't get much but more would have been very bad) Not enough: cotton thread; computing & related equipment; tea spoons https
@tuckeve Just in case you haven't seen these already... https://t.co/1hpWf4wKKb https://t.co/3VP8gWCMHu
@RobdaBank Teaspoons have a half life https://t.co/BlQSzb5wM6 Personally I think they evolve Pokemon-style into soup spoons. I’ve never bought one of those and I always have loads of them.
@langan_liam Now there’s a study on that... https://t.co/95Fj7jtaGH
Important research! We should do a longitudinal study on where the pens go... https://t.co/XyxIg9Ewhk
🥄'What this study adds ...People have no control over teaspoon migration; escape to a spoonoid planet and resistentialism are equally plausible explanations' @HMRIAustralia FYI
Talk about science solving the mysterious!
RT @EmmaOolemma: Longitudinal cohort study of the displacement of teaspoons in an Australian research institute: "An estimated 250 teaspoon…
Longitudinal cohort study of the displacement of teaspoons in an Australian research institute: "An estimated 250 teaspoons would need to be purchased annually to maintain a practical institute-wide population of 70 teaspoons" https://t.co/kOSKwczm9Y
Love this, a bit of #COVID19 reading relief
@Fiona_Kinghorn @NikkiForeman17 @abisimonharris @Fionacjenkins @LauraTolley13 @GemmaTrigg One of my favourite BMJ Christmas papers https://t.co/kAEoYQ4Lz9
@emergprehosp A bit outdated: https://t.co/Fj26hLqtyw
RT @bradford_pathol: @LiangRhea 😂😂 Reminded me of a Christmas BMJ article: https://t.co/S064tHAEeR
Thank you for this fascinating study. I, too, subscribe to the concept of spoonoid existence elsewhere.. Someone clever will be able discuss similarities of teaspoon displacement and #COVID19 asymptomatic transmission I'm sure
I knew the Burnett Institute did high quality research but this! @AstecAustin @AustinAspire
@LiangRhea 😂😂 Reminded me of a Christmas BMJ article: https://t.co/S064tHAEeR
@LiangRhea @DrCuriosity A research paper waiting to happen. If you produce some novel findings, you'll be up for a BMJ paper! https://t.co/0FbwaxUxXR
@medburnbook Hmmm, I wonder if you could collaborate with anyone in workplace cutlery use research https://t.co/108hktp2zl
The perversity of the Universe tends towards a maximum "die Tücke des Objekts" (the perfidy of inanimate objects) https://t.co/VU5HpOMzST
@_MBreed I’m not saying you can necessarily extrapolate from teaspoons to forks, but if start a study soon, could contribute to Australia’s track record in leading the way on #researchfacilitycutleryecology https://t.co/qUUBX6txOn
Where do all the spoons and forks in communal kitchen disappear to? A study found that tea spoons disappear within 2 months https://t.co/dek0kK5tnP BUT WHERE DO THEY GO? WHY DON'T THEY COME BACK? 🥣🍴
RT @KeefJudge: @ancientnmodern https://t.co/F0nrphB8PL Found it!
RT @KeefJudge: @ancientnmodern https://t.co/F0nrphB8PL Found it!
@ancientnmodern https://t.co/F0nrphB8PL Found it!
RT @sixthlight: @arysteia obligatory citation of the best science paper of all time (yes, ALL TIME): https://t.co/CYoE1nmQ4t
reading recommendation: https://t.co/PLLy6HXBuw "The case of the disappearing teaspoons: longitudinal cohort study of the displacement of teaspoons in an Australian research institute"
@arysteia obligatory citation of the best science paper of all time (yes, ALL TIME): https://t.co/CYoE1nmQ4t
@BenjaminAddy Don’t worry mate there’s been a study on this! I’ve used it in my masters https://t.co/MLBeASFVhE
Some excellent antipodean research right here: https://t.co/18zPFjmSpC
@sharrond62 It’s been the subject of academic study! https://t.co/iI9eNgry9F
@markalangreen Here might be some scientific answers from the @bmj_latest: https://t.co/TeoOK215EL
@markalangreen The literature on the issue has inexplicably neglected the area of working from home https://t.co/zoNvTwsmoL
@causalinf @jodiecongirl Looks like this is common at least for teaspoons 🤣 https://t.co/oaeTRDpgvU
@restlesscurator I think you’ll appreciate this: https://t.co/fD0yLPPhTF
@AEAKennedy @PTavner Based on this longitudinal study, I am hoping our strong ratio of 10 teaspoons:2 people and that that the 2 people are pretty much confined to the premises means we should be okay... but you never can be too careful. https://t.co/zu91
For your project @BeckyHall75 🤔🤷♂️
RT @GR_Morgan: Enjoying [@sciencemuseum trustee] @FryRsquared on @laurenlaverne’s @BBC6Music breakfast show talking about one of the great…
RT @GR_Morgan: Enjoying [@sciencemuseum trustee] @FryRsquared on @laurenlaverne’s @BBC6Music breakfast show talking about one of the great…
Related read: https://t.co/V66THP783D
Enjoying [@sciencemuseum trustee] @FryRsquared on @laurenlaverne’s @BBC6Music breakfast show talking about one of the great scientific studies: Logitudinal Cohort Study of the Displacement of Teaspoons in an Australian Research Institute - https://t.co/s0a
Science fun for #AprilFools: #StrangeResearch articles: The case of the disappearing teaspoons: longitudinal cohort study of the displacement of teaspoons in an Australian research institute. Lim MS, Hellard ME, Aitken CK. BMJ. 2005 https://t.co/h8Vkhq
@FinalBullet The half life of spoons is 81 days https://t.co/kTEsazYrFw
The case of the disappearing teaspoons: longitudinal cohort study of the displacement of teaspoons in an Australian research institute https://t.co/Iu62QlUmz3
RT @KarenHodgePodge: This study suggests the average half-life of a teaspoon is 81 days. I've been at home for 11 days and they are ALL GON…
RT @KarenHodgePodge: This study suggests the average half-life of a teaspoon is 81 days. I've been at home for 11 days and they are ALL GON…
This study suggests the average half-life of a teaspoon is 81 days. I've been at home for 11 days and they are ALL GONE. https://t.co/bmwSAinSXg
RT @dhldavidb: Credit to @jane_brindley who introduced me to a wonderful BMJ article last year which made me think of this idea. https://t.…
Credit to @jane_brindley who introduced me to a wonderful BMJ article last year which made me think of this idea. https://t.co/Mxzd0QSSi5
@ashleytrubin Give it a few days, they'll disappear anyway https://t.co/3BYVjo3TEh
Loss of teaspoons 🤓💫 #facts
RT @getrealfact: In 2004, an Australian research institute published a study on the loss of teaspoons in the workplace. #Facts #Australi…
In 2004, an Australian research institute published a study on the loss of teaspoons in the workplace. #Facts #Australia Source : https://t.co/SaPoSGZWVz
RT @neville_park: gold from 2005 "The case of the disappearing teaspoons: longitudinal cohort study of the displacement of teaspoons in an…