TRASH, Negging, and Pyramidality: A Quiz Bowl Glossary

A glossary, annotated by Harvard Quiz Bowl Team members

With annotations by Harvard Quiz Bowl Team members

(This glossary supplements "Buzzing In," January-February 2009.) 

Negging: An uncomfortable situation in which a player buzzes in with a wrong answer before the question is over, disqualifying his team from any further chance at answering. "When someone negs in another person's area of expertise, that gets ugly," says Harvard team member Julia Schlozman, taking a deep breath.

 

Powering: In particular Quiz Bowl formats, "powering" denotes a response to a toss-up given before the question has been read half-way, resulting in the awarding of five extra points.

 

Pyramidality: Style of question-writing that arranges clues within a question in decreasing order of obscurity so that teams with the most knowledge will be able to buzz in sooner.

 

Shadow Effect: The phenomenon in which two players on the same team score fewer points in a match than they would have if each were playing alone. Because only the first player who buzzes in is allowed to answer a toss-up, one team member frequently has to forgo answering a question because a teammate buzzes in more quickly.

 

TRASH: An acronym for Testing Recall About Strange Happenings that has become the umbrella term for any question that does not fall within a specific academic category. "I find there's no way of studying for TRASH, besides watching Sportscenter and movies obsessively, which takes away in other areas," current Harvard Quiz Bowl club president Andrew Watkins tells new members. "So just experience whatever leisure you experience and hope for the best."

This sidebar accompanies "Buzzing In," January-February 2009, page 67

 

Most popular

AI Outperforms Doctors in Emergency Room Tasks, New Harvard Study Shows

Researchers say the technology could help physicians with triage, diagnosis.

Harvard Alumni and Faculty Win Six Pulitzer Prizes

Winners include Jill Lepore, Bess Wohl, Pablo Torre, and Hannah Natanson.

Martin Nowak Placed on Leave a Second Time

Further links to Jeffrey Epstein surface in newly released files.

Explore More From Current Issue

Woman with long hair, smiling, wearing a black sweater, in a textured beige background.

For This Poet, AI is a Writing Partner

Sasha Stiles trained a chatbot on her manuscripts. Now, her poems rewrite themselves.

Portrait of a man with white hair, wearing a black coat, arms crossed, thoughtful expression.

The Framer Who Refused to Sign the Constitution

Harvard’s Elbridge Gerry helped draft the U.S. Constitution, but worried it might create a new monarch.