Saturday, 3 October 2015

Talk: Malaysia's Nuclear Age

This talk was given by Kok Boon Cheong, a theoretical physicist. He had done some research into nuclear power and came over to share his findings with us.

He thinks is a bad idea for Malaysia to go nuclear for several reasons:
  • The cost is very high. A generation 3 or generation 4 nuclear power plant will cost billions and given Malaysia's record of corruption (think PKFZ, KLIA2 etc), the final cost will probably be several times more.
  • The level of expertise needed is very high. Over 30 fields of expertise are needed to run a nuclear power plant efficiently. However, Boon is not confident that Malaysia can sustain a high level of professionalism to ensure the plant is run properly.
It seems Malaysia and Korea experimented with nuclear reactors in the 1980's but today, the Malaysia Nuclear Agency conceeds we are now 30 years behind Korea.

He suggested the country look into solar, wind, biomass and tidal energy.

Sunday, 23 August 2015

Melawan Sains Palsu Bloopers 22.8.15

To shoot 2 one-minute videos took us half a morning. We started at 7.30am with breakfast and finished at 10am. Here is the reason why.

Manusia Memakai 10% Otak Saja?

APOSL Melawan Sains Palsu. Script by Muhammad Musoddiq Bin Jaafar. Please share!

Apa Itu Deria Ke-6?

APOSL's Melawan Sains Palsu video shoot. Muhammad Musoddiq Bin Jaafar wrote the script. Shot at Penchala Terrace.

Sunday, 9 August 2015

A.R. Wallace: Exploratory Journeys in Melaka & Sarawak, and his Influences on Malaysian Natural History Study



This wonderful talk was given by  Lim Tze Tshen, a research assistant at University Malaya.

I fetched the speaker at 4.15pm and made our way to Lake Gardens. Kian Keong was already eaiting for us there.

Upon arrival, we ate and chit chatted while waiting for the rest to show up.

This is the first time we have held a talk in the open, without the use of a projector. Participants had to download the presentation and load it into their smart phones so they could follow the speaker as he presented.

The talk was very intersting. It was obvious Tshen is a fan of Wallace's work and life. The man discovered and catalogued many thousands of species of flora and fauna found in our home country. His study was so extensive and authoratative that several animals and regions were named after him! Yet, until the talk, I did not know much about Wallace.


Tshen only covered Wallace's explorations in Malacca and Sarawak, and did not touch on his research into the theory of natural selection. Part 2 of his talk will be held another day, probbaly next year as APOSL already has events every month till October.

PS. Tshen is giving the same talk at People's Merdeka Exhibition (https://www.facebook.com/events/1456072861364575/permalink/1457800061191855/)

Saturday, 4 July 2015

The Surprise at Hari Rosalind Franklin

This year, we celebrated our birthday by honouring Rosalind Franklin.

Lyana helped us get a room in Universiti Malaya. I arrived early with my kids and Doppo to set up.

Only 5 people showed up at the appointed time. Nonetheless, we settled down to watch a documentary about Rosalind Franklin and the race to figure out the structure of the DNA while tucking into the food.

Most of the members were about an hour late!

I had organised a surprise for APOSL that day. It was a video of Rosalind Franklin's Student Council President saying hi to the science club! I had written to RFU a few weeks in advance. I did not think anything would come of it. To my relief, Maggie from RFU helped by asking Gabe to do the video. You can see the reaction of the APOSL members below.


After that, we sang happy birthday and had the most fabulous chocolate ganache cake made by Su.

Tuesday, 23 June 2015

Su's APOSL Visit To UM Zoology Museum: I make a lousy fossil

http://snuze.blogspot.com/2015/06/i-make-lousy-fossil.html

Some people want to become diamonds after they die. Some people want to be star dust again. Me, I'm happy to be fertiliser. Unless I could become a fossil, because that would be extremely cool. But then again, that isn't very likely.
I got an opportunity to see fossils first hand at the Universiti Malaya Museum of Zoology with the crew from the Advocates of the Propagation of Science Literacy (APOSL) on Saturday, April 25th. Whodathunkit there's a museum of natural history in the heart of the great metropolitan of Kuala Lumpur? 

Ta-da!

The Museum of Zoology is located in a new-ish block in the Institute of Biological Science (better known as ISB , Institut Sains Biologi), Faculty of Science. It is adjacent to the Institute of Mathematical Science (whose notice boards feature the most interesting stuff about numbers that even those allergic to maths like me find fascinating) and is open during weekdays from 9 am to 4 pm.


The entrance to the museum.

We were fortunate that the curator, Prof. Sasekumar, very graciously agreed to open the museum to us on a weekend and made himself available to show us around and answer our questions.

Prof. Sasekumar, the Curator.

He explained that a large number of the specimens were collected over the years from various sources. Some were donated by state museums that have run out of space to store their natural history specimens, while others were the university's own research collection. A few others were gifts from visiting biologists who brought specimens of animals that are common in their country, like the muskrat specimen from North America and a piranha from Brazil. It was here that I discovered that piranhas look a lot like pomfrets with bad teeth.

Prof. Sasekumar explaining the Earth's biological time scale.
Prof. Sasekumar began the tour by explaining the wonderful mural of the Earth's geological and biological time scale that was painstakingly done by students of the ISB. No members of the Homo spp. family were included in the mural as the most recent animal in the mural still predated Lucy by a few million years
 The Earth's biological time scale mural

 The Earth's geological time scale mural
The Curator further explained about how fossil evidence supports the biological time scale. He invited us to read further on the geological time scale as it was not his area of expertise and suggested that we speak to the Geology Department for more information.
One of the members asked Prof. Sasekumar if he has had to answer questions from students who are inclined towards creationism. His adroit answer was, "Let's keep science and religion separate." 


 Some of the resources available at the museum. Sticky tape is optional.

 Look at the date of the periodical at the far right. 

Prof. Sasekumar took us into his office for fossil viewing. I was gaping so much at this huge replica of a crinoid leaf fossil that I forgot to snap a pic. It looked like Han Solo in carbonite! He explained to us that fossils are generally expensive and that most that are on display are replicas of some sort. However, he did show us one of the few real fossil specimen of the museum which was a trilobite fossil. It was a lot smaller than what was shown in my biology text books, that's for sure.

Previously, there was no real effort to hunt for fossils in Malaysia. The recent discovery in Pahang gives hope to paleontologists and dinosaur hunters in the country for more exciting discoveries to come. The BBC has an excellent page of resources on fossils, which you can visit here.

 The Godfathers of Biology: Darwin, Linnaeus, Wallace and Mandel

Decorating the entrance to the exhibit are posters of the Godfathers of Biology; Charles Darwin, Carolus Linnaeus, Alfred Russel Wallace and Fr. Gregor Mandel. I can't wait for the September talk on Russell Wallace! Please visit the APOSL Facebook page for updates on this talk and other exciting events.

The Zoology Museum is divided into several sections: the Fossilarium (in Prof. Sasekumar's office), the Osteological exhibits, the Rainforest Diorama, the Animal Diversity exhibit, the River Basin Diorama and the Entomology Box.

The Osteological or bones exhibit feature several specimens that help us compare how form matches function in terms of skeletal structure. Although all bones are hardened by calcium, the structure differs to match the form and function of the animal.

Prey vs Predator skull comparison.

The crocodile skull above is an excellent example. Its skull is heavy, with a hinged jaw that gives it one of the most powerful bite in the animal kingdom. The muscles that hold the jaw open, however, are relatively weak, which makes the slamming force of the upper jaw snapping shut perfect for quick kills.

Their triangular teeth is perfect for tearing their  prey's flesh, but the lack of molars means that crocs cannot chew their food. Therefore, crocodiles use biting and whiplash motions to rip their prey apart and swallow the pieces whole. Think of it as swallowing your KFC drumstick as a whole piece. Plant-based food requires a lot of chewing to render it digestible, so this lack of molar also means a strict Atkins diet and no carbs for the crocs.

The crocodiles' metabolism is relatively sluggish and they take a long time to digest the pieces of prey that they swallowed. This is why they only need to eat every few weeks or so and spend most of their time just hanging out and chilling. Eyes at the top of their head are perfect for scouting careless prey moseying by where they lie in wait, half submerged.

Multi-teeth nightmares are made of these.

You expect to be frightened by the fangs of predators but nothing prepared me for the squirm-inducing teeth of herbivorous critters. Apparently plant-devouring critters have TONNES OF MOLARS to help them grind down their tough and fibrous vegetarian meals. I can't really explain why they give me the heebie-jeebies, but if you have trypophobia, you would probably understand.

Not serpent wine

No El Nino this year, thank God
I found the water cycle diorama interesting as it gave a good explanation about the great flood that affected Kelantan late last year. Did people really think that they can raze forests to a nub and that nature will not retaliate? Idiots.
Flood oracle

Scary tales.
We never really pay attention to soil loss because we are in the tropics. But in places where desertification is a problem, people scrutinise water movement and soil erosion in order to arrest the widening of deserts. Let's hope that we don't let things get that far before we do something concrete about our top soil loss.

The exhibit included some fine examples of the local fauna. Sadly, a number of them are already no more, and many more are on the endangered species list (e.g. kancil, binturong, tenggiling etc.). I'm an omnivor myself, but I don't get people who eat animals that are already diminished in number unless they actually dwell in the forest and cannot get poultry et al. What's wrong with sticking to beef, rabbits, chicken, etc? Assholes.
Tropical jungle animals

Corals and peat swamp forest
More on peat swamp forest.

I'm sure that not many of us here in Malaysia realise that we are home to more than one kind of swamp forest: the mangrove as well as peat swamp. Sepang used to be a humongous peat swamp forest reserve, as well as many areas dotting the coastline of the peninsula.
The mangroves are important because it provides a nursery for the natural fishery lots. Not to mention it helps to control coastal erosion, provides home to tonnes of biodiversity, help to detoxify the coastline and is a pretty neat place to visit.

Peat swamps are important because they are invaluable water catchment areas, provide shelter and food to migratory birds, enriches the soil, increases the underground water table reservoir, and many more. Sadly, they are also located in areas that are prime for development. I guess we'll only pay attention to the damage caused by loss of peat swamp forest when we have problems like flash floods and top soil loss.
Oh wait. It's already on going but nobody cares.

 Prof. Sasekumar explaining the difference between the stingless 
and regular bees


We ended the tour with a visit to the stingless bee colony housed outside the museum. The bees were acquired from an apiary in Melaka. They produce small quantities of high quality honey that the Institute sells on a seasonal basis. What a pity that our visit did not coincide with the season. *pouts*

 Stingless bee colony
The museum may be modest in size but is chock-full of information on Malaysia's environmental heritage with  its exhibits of preserved animal specimens and informative posters. The museum is happy to entertain tours of pax up to 20 people, so please contact them if you are interested!

Saturday, 20 June 2015

Melawan Sains Palsu Dalam Masyarakat



Hari ini APOSL menjemput Muhammad Musoddiq Bin Jaafar untuk memberi ceramah bertajuk Melawan Sains Palsu Dalam Masyarakat.

Beberapa bulan yang lalu, saya menjumpai satu komuniti Facebook bernama Pseudoscience Watch yang banyak membongkar produk-produk dan perkongsian online yang berasaskan sains yang tidak betul atau palsu. Saya mengajak kumpulan ini untuk berkongsi pandangan mereka dengan APOSL.

Mereka menghalakan saya kepada Muhammad Musoddiq. Muhammad memegang ijazah dari Universiti Malaya dalam bidang Eksperimen Fizik.

Pada mulanya beliau berkata dia akan bercakap selama 30 minit sahaja disebapkan bulan puasa. Tetapi akhirnya, dia bercakap selama 2 jam!

Dia menjelaskan ilmu yang digunakan oleh orang-orang tertentu dan syarikat-syarikat tertentu yang mempromosikan produk-produk yang meragui. Satu daripadanya ialah produk yang boleh detox badan daripada racun-racun dalaman, kononnya. Produk ini dilekatkan pada tapak kaki dan kaki direndam dalam air. Setelah beberapa minit, air kelihatan gelap. Kononnya itu adalah racun yang keluar daripada badan pesakit dengan pertolongan produk yang berkenaan. Kami para hadirin semua gelak apabila ketahui fakta yang sebenar daripada Muhammad.

Selepas perkongsian Muhammad, kami bercadang untuk menghasilkan video pendek untuk orang awam supaya tidak tertipu oleh produk-produk yang mempunyai dakwaan yang luar biasa.

Sunday, 10 May 2015

APOSL & Good Will Walk 2015



by Pepper Lim

I met The Flying Singh last year at Mantin. This year he told me about his plan to raise money for Food Bank Malaysia to help needy people like the recent flood victims in Kelantan. His plan was to raise money by walking from Perlis to Melaka.

I asked the APOSLs if they were interested to help and a few stepped forward to donate while a few said they would walk. We raised RM510 among ourselves and 5 APOSLs volunteered to walk.

Terence, Lyana, Izzudin, Arvinder and I met the Good Will Walk team at Tanjung Malim on Saturday, 9.5.15. The meeting point was at the Tg. Malim Gurdwara. Everyone including the men had to cover their heads. The gurdwara had scarfs and bandanas for visitors. We made Terence wear a pink scarf.



All the walkers were resting when we arrived at 3.30pm. So, we amused ourselves by telling stories.

At 4.00pm, the gurdwara served hot tea with crackers. Then, it was time to start walking. Our target for that afternoon was to walk about 12 kilometres towards Kuala Kubu Baru.

The walk was quite easy. There was no rush. The GWW team was more interested in the safety of the group and ensuring everyone was enjoying themselves. Some of the local teenagers joined us.

We walked along the old trunk road. It was a one lane and narrow. We had to pay attention to the on coming traffic. At the front of the pack was old uncle Jagtar Singh. He constantly gestured the traffic away from us during the entire walk.

There were kampong houses along the road we were on. There were no fences surrounding the homes and I noticed the garden was usually swept and kept neat.



I had a talk with Dendi Johari, an Orang Asal from Kampung Jader, Gua Musang, Kelantan. He is a youth leader of his people. He told me many stories about his kampong life and his vision for his kin. While we walked, he told me something interesting. He said, they walked to know what it feels like to suffer like the poor who had to walk everywhere.


Sunday, 22 March 2015

APOSL Beer Survey

Sam, the guy who brought you all the APOSL street surveys, is at it again. This time, he is surveying the perception of beers and their actual tastes.

Video here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vV7814-5bQE



TL;DR: Heineken came out tops.

Thursday, 26 February 2015

Hari Darwin 2015 by Pac Kun

This article is written by Pac Kun and is taken from his blog: http://pacuniverse.blogspot.com/2015/02/hari-darwin-2015.html

(Darwin my man. Great scientists and a naturalist. )

Hari yang paling aku tunggu2 dalam bulan ni adalah Hari Darwin. Bagi aku, Darwin adalah salah satu dari hero aku. Begitu juga dengan Nikola Tesla, Einstein dan ramai lagi saintis dari masa dulu. Nama penuh beliau adalah Charles Robert Darwin. Bapanya bernama Robert Waring Darwin. Dalam mendekati sains dari asas ke big bang, cosmologi, fizik (sikit sikit la), quantum mekanik, string theory, multiverse theory (masih hipotesis) aku terjumpa satu topik yang menarik ia berkenaan asal usul, teras biologi, evolution. 
Sebenarnya Hari Darwin tu disambut di seluruh dunia pada 12/2/2015. Tapi Hari Darwin tak dapat cuti sehari, well it's not a holiday, well ia macam hari penghargaan macam tu la, so semua orang bekerja hari Khamis dan Jumaat macam biasa. Terpaksa la benda tu dibawa ke hari Sabtu di Pusat Sains Negara.

Ini first time aku pergi sini. Tapi aku terdatang lambat pulak. Kira ada 30 minit tertinggal tayangan filem Inherit The Wind di Makmal Watson-Crick.

(Watching inherit the wind ♡)

Tapi memang boleh tahan cerita itu. Nampak sangat jelas2 pendidikan di US menolak teori evolusi didalam biologi pada mata pelajaran sains di masa lampau. Semua ajaran yang boleh dipercayai adalah melalui the Bible. Sains tadak. Habis tayang masing2 tepuk tangan. Haha! Cerita tu memang awesome. Memang tepat pilihan Pepper! Lepas tu Pepper cakap kuat2 kat semua orang yang Pac Kun nak take group photo. Alamak! Terkial2 aku pasang tripod. Alamak! Masing2 tengah menunggu.

(Yang kat sebelah aku tu Sam. Co founder APOSL. Baris ke 2 yang aku kenal Ecah, Ken dan Mike. Baris ke 3 yg aku kenal Yat, adik ken, amoi Sabah cosplay, amoi putih gile, Pepper, doktor pakar kulit, Hafiz dan Terence.)

Lepas buat test shot 10 saat, then we have a go with full member shot! Hah! See that?? 10 orang Melayu ada dalam group yang hadir (ini bukan semua jumlah ahli). T^T !!!! Aku sangat terharu. Akhirnya jumpa jugak dengan orang yang sama fahaman tentang sains dan evolusi serta. Mula2 aku agak pandang rendah bagi 1-2 orang ahli tu... tapi aku buat silap. Aku mintak maaf lepas kenal dia orang. Sorry~~~ I was wrong and I feel ashamed of myself. Dan dapat juga berjumpa ahli lain dan baru. Separuh dari dia orang aku kenal. Separuh lagi tak kenal.

(Permandangan kat luat psn. Terus aku pasang tripod kat sini.)

Ada yang datang dari berbagai background. Ada yang baru kenal APOSL.


Then we go outside the lab and drink coffee and biscuits. It was fun. Ingatkan dah habis dah lepas tu. Tapi Pepper ajak kita orang lepak sampai habis waktu. So aku okay. Jom pergi McD Bangsar. Perbualan topik masa dalam kereta adalah yang terbaik. Sesungguhnya mereka adalah my people. Lepas itu disambung dekat McD.

Kami bual sampai malam non stop tentang sains, falsafah, theologi dan politik semasa. Sangat suka dengan dengan perbualan macam ni. Nampak kami macam hero dekat McD masa tu. Orang lain banyak pasang telinga. Yes!

(oh yeah~~)



Lepas pukul 10 malam, kami bersurai. Penuh rasa puas hati, rasa beruntung, dan hidup semula. Terima kasih Pepper dan Sam sebab sudi jayakan perjumpaan group APOSL atas nama Darwin. It's great stuff and we want more!!

Monday, 23 February 2015

Hari Rosalind Franklin & APOSL Birthday 2015


Rosalind Franklin was a scientist who broke the secret of the double helix but her great achievement was stolen from her at a time when women were seen as nothing more than assistants to male scientists.

Born 25 July 1920, APOSL celebrates her birthday together with ours.


Saturday, 4July 2015
B6 Seminar Room, Division of Genetics and Molecular Biology, University Malaya

RSVP here: https://www.facebook.com/events/357776544406695/?ref=4

Thursday, 5 February 2015

Measles: A Deadly Disease With No Cure (An Open Letter To Parents)


Measles: A Deadly Disease With No Cure
An open letter to parents


6 February 2015


Dear Parents In Malaysia,
RE: MEASLES: A DEADLY DISEASE WITH NO CURE
In light of the recent measles outbreak in the USA, allegedly spread from Disneyland, the APOSL Science Club encourages every Malaysian parent to insist on measles vaccination for themselves and their children. It is free for all new born babies in our country but for those who missed that chance, you can ask your trusted doctor about it.
Measles is one of the most infectious diseases known to mankind. It is airborne and a “carrier” who is seemingly healthy can easily spread it while walking in public spaces such as shopping centres through coughing and sneezing. At Disneyland, 59 people contracted the disease. Before global immunisation, an estimated 2.6 million people died from measles a year.
There is no cure for measles but it is highly preventable through vaccination. Measles is more than just red spots on your body. While it is usually harmless, some patients could develop complications which could lead to subacute sclerosing pan-encephalitis (SSPE) and even death. Children and the elderly are two groups of people most at risk.
The best defence against measles is prevention by way of immunisation through vaccination.
Immunisation has been proven safe for decades despite unproven allegations from the anti-vaccine movement. We request parents to be more informed about vaccination and not succumb to fear mondering by certain parties. Please listen to your doctor who approves of vaccination to protect your loved ones.
Read more at: http://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/measles/basics/definition/con-20019675


On behalf of the APOSL science club,
Pepper Lim
Dr Chow Su Lin, Paediatrician
Dr Kok Sen Wai, Psychiatric MO.
Dr Alistair Furze, Ph.D Life Sciences
Dr Norliana Khairuddin, Senior Lecturer, Universiti Malaya


PS. Andrew Wakefield who started the controversy of linking MMR vaccines to autism was convicted of falsifying his research and has been barred from practising medicine.

Update: MalayMail Online published it here: http://www.themalaymailonline.com/what-you-think/article/measles-a-deadly-disease-with-no-cure-aposl-science-club

Wednesday, 4 February 2015

Hari Darwin 14.2.15

Pusat Sains Negara
Bilik Watson.

Click for more info: https://www.facebook.com/events/371360799709911/

APOSL Survey 3.0 (Video and results)

We put forth the statements below to Malaysians and recorded their reply only as TRUE, FALSE or DON’T KNOW:
1. Human has never been to the moon
2. You can get AIDS by hugging someone with AIDS
3. Vaccination causes autism
4. Science brings more harm than benefit to humanity
5. *Shark's fin has the same nutrition as your fingernails

This survey was carried via 2 methods; on the streets where we approach them personally and online.

Information for the street survey
Time : 10am to 4pm
Date : 25 January 2015
Location : KL Sentral, Central Market and Masjid Jamek
Method : Be nice, smile and approach random people and ask for their reply on selected statements.
Total respondents : 166

Information for the online survey
Date : 24 to 31 January 2015
Method : 3 sets of Google Forms in 3 languages namely; English, Malay and Chinese, were shared out online. The downside for this method is that we can’t really be sure if the respondents are Malaysians

Total respondents breakdown by language:
English - 67 Respondents
Malay - 118 Respondents
Chinese - 8 Respondents
Total - 193 online respondents

Total samples collected is 359

Sample size, Margin of Error and Confidence Level
a. http://www.robertniles.com/stats/marg...
b. https://www.checkmarket.com/market-re...
c. https://www.surveymonkey.com/blog/en/...

In reference to the websites above and the sample size of 359, the margin of error is 5.3% at the confidence level of 95%

I acknowledged the above calculation is very simplistic and that there are proper methods and mathematics involved that only professional statisticians are able to do.

*Typo error
Mistakes were made during language translation that resulted into 2 versions of statement number 5 as such:

In the English and Malay online survey, the statement is as such:
“Shark's fin has THE SAME nutrition as your fingernails”
It has 185 respondents, making the margin of error 7.35% for a confidence level of 95%

In the Chinese online and Street Survey, the statement reads:
“Shark's fin has MORE nutrition as your fingernails” (174 respondents)
It has 174 respondents, making the margin of error 7.58% for a confidence level of 95%

Both the above statements are different and we shall treat the results as separate.

Demographics
For each of the respondents, we also recorded their age group as such:
a. 13-20
b. 21-30
c. 31-40
d. 41 and above

We also recorded their ethnicity as such:
a. Malay
b. Chinese
c. Indian
d. Others

We admit the ethnic category might create discontentment from the public who might see us as being racist. We understood the risk of being labelled as such. However, after much deliberation on the objectives some of the statements are trying to achieve, we went ahead. We have a hunch the results will show an interesting gap. Do bear in mind that not all the results will necessarily show the ethnic breakdowns, only the selected few which we want the relevant authorities to take note.

At the time of writing, we have yet to tabulate the results, hence we could be dead wrong.

Why are we doing this survey?
Curiosity.

Are we funded?
Nope. Not a single cent.

Are we professional statisticians?
Nope. We wouldn’t even dare refer ourselves as amateur. Think of us as motley crews trying to find out what’s up with Malaysians in terms of basic scientific knowledge

Survey 3.0 detailed breakdowns will be out soon

Friday, 23 January 2015

Science Survey 3.0 Online

Ambil survey ini untuk sains!

https://docs.google.com/forms/d/1P0uoEfPxekKXzaPNFlQkh9xqdTz930XpvAhFb27uPiA/viewform

https://docs.google.com/forms/d/1P0uoEfPxekKXzaPNFlQkh9xqdTz930XpvAhFb27uPiA/viewform


Chinese version: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/1f8ieP2UKRipCho4K-XRD7PCKQf_DKlmnxazgMK9hlOE/viewform