See link below for the whole articlehttp://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/2014/09/29/352505171/swedish-scientists-square-off-over-who-can-sneak-in-most-dylan-lyrics
by Scott Neuman
September 29, 2014
Some might say a group of Swedish scientists have "got a lot of nerve," running a 17-year secret contest to hide as many Bob Dylan lyrics as possible in their scholarly articles. The attitude of others, no doubt: "Don't think twice, it's all right."
As Sweden's edition of The Local reports, it all started back in 1997, when John Jundberg and Eddie Weitzburg, two professors from the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm, published an article on flatulence titled "Nitric Oxide and inflammation: The answer is blowing in the wind."
Weitzburg told the website: "We both really liked Bob Dylan and we thought the quotes really fitted nicely with what we were trying to achieve with the title," adding,"We're not talking about scientific papers — we could have got in trouble for that — but rather articles we have written about research by others, book introductions, editorials and things like that."
A few years later, two others scientists, Jonas Frisen and Konstantinos Meletis, picked up the riff in a research paper on the ability of non-neural cells to generate neurons, which they called "Blood on the Tracks: A Simple Twist of Fate," incorporating the title of one of Dylan's most famous albums with the song title of one of its most best-known cuts.
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