Pek van Andel

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Menko Victor (Pek) van Andel, known as a ‘serendipitiologist', got his university degree in medical research in Groningen, where he developed, with the internationally known and inventive ophthalmologist Jan Worst, among other things, an artificial cornea as a treatment for blindness.

In 2000, Van Andel won the satirical Ig Nobel Prize for medicine (for ‘improbable research’ that makes people laugh and then think) for the iconoclastic and classic MRI scans of human sexual intercourse, published in the British Medical Journal[1] and inspired by fMRI scans of the larynx of someone singing.

Van Andel was one of the first researchers to study and extract serendipity patterns for accidental unsought knowledge discovery. He published an influential paper titled 'Anatomy of the unsought finding'[2] in the British Journal for the Philosophy of Science. In 2015 Van Andel gave a TEDx talk about that topic.[3]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Schultz, W. W.; van Andel, P.; Sabelis, I.; Mooyaart, E. (18 December 1999). "Magnetic resonance imaging of male and female genitals during coitus and female sexual arousal". BMJ. 319 (7225): 1596–1600. doi:10.1136/bmj.319.7225.1596. PMC 28302. PMID 10600954.
  2. ^ ANDEL, PEK VAN (1994). "Anatomy of the Unsought Finding. Serendipity: Origin, History, Domains, Traditions, Appearances, Patterns and Programmability". British Journal for the Philosophy of Science. 45 (2): 631–648. doi:10.1093/bjps/45.2.631.
  3. ^ Serendipitology | Pek Van Andel | TEDxLeuven. YouTube. Archived from the original on 2021-12-08.