Alexis Noel has a cat named Murphy. One day in 2015, Murphy tried to lick a fuzzy blanket. Suddenly, his tongue got stuck. “I had to help him untangle it,” says Noel. “It was hilarious.”
Noel is an engineer at the Georgia Institute of Technology in Atlanta. Murphy’s mishap gave her an idea. She decided to find out what makes a cat’s tongue grip so well. Now she’s using what she learned to make a better brush for people.
“The basic form of a hairbrush hasn’t changed for 10,000 years,” says Noel. “How do you improve on something so old?” The answer was purring right under her nose.
Alexis Noel has a cat named Murphy. In 2015, Murphy tried to lick a fuzzy blanket. His tongue got stuck. “I had to help him untangle it,” says Noel. “It was hilarious.”
Noel is an engineer. She works at the Georgia Institute of Technology in Atlanta. Murphy’s mistake gave her an idea. She decided to find out what makes a cat’s tongue grip so well. Now she’s using what she learned to make a better brush for people.
“The basic form of a hairbrush hasn’t changed for 10,000 years,” says Noel. “How do you improve on something so old?” The answer was purring right under her nose.