The Fleet Science Center will be open from 12noon to 9 p.m. on Friday and Saturday, December 6 & 7.
It takes more than luck ...
Did you know that only one out of 10,000 clovers has four leaves? This might make your St. Patrick’s Day hunt a bit harder than you think. Let us help you find your “lucky” four-leafed clover … with science!
First, you need to find the perfect place. You can find approximately 200 clovers in a plot of clover-growing grass or field that spreads about one-square foot. This means that a space of about 12-square feet should contain a four-leaf clover.
Now, how can you find it? The item you are looking for is what cognitive psychologists call the “target.” In this case, that’s the four-leaf clover. Non-target items (i.e., three-leaf clovers) are called distractors. In this particular environment, the clover happens to be perfectly camouflaged with too many distractors, so we can't immediately spot it.
The best way to find a target is to look for that very particular characteristic that would make it stand out. When scanning that patch, don’t examine every one of those 10,000 leaves. Instead, stare at the patch without focusing on any one detail that deviates from the overall pattern of leaves. This increases the odds that a four-leafed clover will jump out at you!