In the summer of 1992, my wife and I took a trip to the Florida keys. One of the events was a day at the Dolphin Research Center in Marathon Key. It was one of the most amazing experiences of my entire life (for many reasons that I won't go into here). But the most incredible thing happened when we were finally allowed to get in the water with the dolphins. They were not captive; but instead free-swim mammals that could leave out to open ocean anytime they wanted - they just liked to hang around and work with the Marine Biologists (and the visitors!). I climbed down into the lagoon first. and the dolphins came over & checked me out; splashing, "talking", etc. However, when my wife got in the water, something completely different happened...one-by-one, all the female dolphins started to gather around her in a circle; clicking incessantly. My wife started to get a little unnerved by this. The Bilologist was watching from the platform, and asked me "Is your wife pregnant?" I told her "Yes, about 5 months". She said "They know. They can see the baby. As long as she's in the water, they will not allow anything to come near her." How incredibly cool is that ?!?
INCREDIBLY COOL is how that is!! There are stories of women who work with wolf sanctuaries - and the wolves can smell when a woman is pregnant and are clearly DELIGHTED that there is a puppy on the way :D
@@bookmouse2719 I think they're a lot smarter than most people realize... A friend of mine is (well - was :-) a surfer from Ventura, CA. He was out one day in the early morning; surfing off the coast of Ojai. One of his friends who was on-shore started hollering at him - there was a 12 to 15' Great White on the surface of the wave just a couple yards behind him. He said his heart almost jumped out of his chest. Then out of the corner of his eye to the left, he saw 3 dorsal fins cutting across the face of the wave heading directly at him. He told me that at that point, he figured his time was up, and started praying...all while trying not to lose his balance. The 3 fins split up and swam around him on either side. When he turned to see what was going on, there were 3 dolphins heading right toward the shark. The shark broke off his pursuit, and dropped back. Two of the dolphins continued to chase it away; the third one swam alongside my friend until he reached the shore break. It lingered in the shallows for a few seconds while my (truly blessed!) pal grabbed his board and walked out of the water. Then the dolphin turned and swam off. My friend said he sat down on the sand - and cried his eyes out 15 minutes.
Was slightly surprised to not see this mentioned.. I recently saw a video online of a spider caught in a cup, and a pair of girls were trying to take a video of it with their smartphone. When they would tap on the table the spider wouldn't flinch, but every time they tried to focus on the spider by tapping their phone screen where the spider was, the spider would flinch as if it was responding to the tap directly. It was discovered that the spider was responding to the lidar or infrared signal being emitted from the phone every time it sent out a beam to focus. Apparently spiders and some other animals like deer can see this spectrum, but humans can not.
Radio waves, and any form of light that way can be seen. Our eyes are nothing more than visual-wavelength radio dishes. Its very possible if we find alien life, they could see completely different spectrums. Maybe only AM, maybe only Microwaves, maybe only Gamma waves. Assuming they see at all of course. Basically if it can be picked up through a radio dish, it can be seen by an animal with eyes tuned correctly. And also that all radio dishes are effectively man-made eyes, more so than cameras weirdly.
My mom had a mark on her arm that was pretty normal, it really only looked like a mole. My dog would sniff at it for upwards of a minute every time she saw her so I told her to get the spot looked at. She just got it biopsied and the results came back yesterday. She has Melanoma and is going to a cancer specialist next week.
@@tomgvaughan she's getting a surgery next month... we think we caught it early! It's really all thanks to my dog, the spot looked super normal to us. If all goes well she'll be cancer free by Christmas. Thanks for asking :D
my childhood dog actually found skin cancer in my dads forearm when i was growing up. Its was a spot she was fixated on and anytime he was around she would keep going back to that spot. He got checked soon after and come to find out she detected very early melanoma and basically saved my dads life because it was found so early. More so than for hospitals, i think having a dog in the home that can smell cancer is extremely valuable, I'm not sure how we would go about that but if your dog every gets fixated on a spot on your body, best to get it checked.
There are quite a few stories in this same category. I heard one about a lady whose dog kept pawing at the back of her leg, then eventually started nipping at the same spot, which finally got her to check the spot, go to the doctor, and have the melanoma removed.
@@boganvogue6694 No, the heinous attempts to make money are by the corporate healthcare providers who vigorously and relentlessly try to stomp on anything that might somehow diminish their profit margins. In the video, Joe specifically mentions an organization that is working on a standardized method of training the dogs for this task, which means your comment is obnoxiously ignorant.
@@boganvogue6694 Dogs are routinely trained for finding medical issues, so nothing stops a dog from flagging something they find off without training - They just don't have any context for what it is, they just identify something as different and are curious or concerned/irritated. But there are also plenty of properly trained personal assistant dogs who can sense different conditions, like dogs that help their owner identify blood sugar levels etc. There's also rats that can successfully sniff out things like cancer and land mines - dogs are not unique in this. Just because you lack all kinds of productive potential doesn't mean other animals do.
A lot of dogs are fixated on people’s crotches, but I don’t think that means there’s something wrong with those people. If dogs have such sensitive noses, why do they need sniff each others butts from so close up, because I understand the scent of the excretion from anal glands is extremely strong.
@@kellydalstok8900 They sniff each others butts because unlike humans they have a much more complex registration and separation of scent; The closer they are to the scent the stronger they are likely to perceive the different subtleties, so we can safely assume they get more stimuli + a clearer "image" of whatever information it brings them. Not unlike you bringing something closer to your eyes to see more detail or get increased perception; You can see and hear your friend from 10 meters away, so why stand 1-2 meters away? Or bring a flower closer to your nose to smell for that matter. Since dogs are notoriously bad at bringing their calling cards with them, they do the butt sniff instead, as the anal glands supposedly reveals a lot of information about the other dog to them. There is nothing wrong with the crotches dogs sniff, there is just a lot of scent information (and the dog is unlikely to behave "strange" when doing it) - it's a bit of a weird analogy as likewise doctors talk to a lot of people around them that aren't sick. (But if you meet a doctor that looks at your arm and remarks "you might want to get that looked at" you probably should - regardless how many healthy arms that doctor has looked at prior to it)
Echolocation Sense: I learned the "Daniel Kish style" human passive and active echolocation (even though my vision is perfect). It is simultaneously suprisingly simple and difficult. The concept is simple: You just have to learn to interpret, single out, enhance, discard and/or focus on specific sounds. But the difficult thing is the "sound vocabulary" that you have to build up by making a tongue click at literally everything you "see". It's just like learning Chinese is theoretically simple to learn, yet you have to study and learn thousands of vocabulary words in order to understand it. I'm at an active echolocation level now where I can comfortably walk through my own rooms, dangle along a forest path without swaying to the sides too much, find my way around in rooms and buildings where I've never been before. Perfectly blindfolded, of course. I've even trained myself to interpret the sound as "images". This imaging technique can be a blessing *and* a curse because once aquired I even see sounds when I try to fall asleep. Tremor Sense: I'm experimenting making this sense available for humans, too. I achieve this by combining a relatively small compression spring that has a small rubber ball on the one side and a magnet on the other. Then, I attached an equally sized magnet to the base of my thumbnail. This construction allows me to put this sense on and off whenever I like. The magents are very thin and small so they usually don't bother me. Now, whenever I move my hand - and especially my thumb - the vibrations and kinetic energy gets amplified by this small self-built tremor sense as the ball oscillates on the small compression spring. It is a really weird feeling because my brain interprets the vibrations that I can newly sense now as sound. So if the self-built compression spring tremor sense swings back and forth at 5Hz I'll hear 5 Hz. The same goes for smaller and higher frequencies. The thumbnail is very sensitive and ideal for things to stick onto without irritating the skin. I'm working on a combination of differently sized compression springs on a single stick-on tremor sense construction so that I'll be able to "hear" more than just one frequency at a time. Polarization sense: Humans can see the polarization of light. It's called Haidinger's Brush and is located in the center of the visual field. But it is way too faint to have any practical use in day to day life. However, we can wear passive linearly polarized glasses where the left lens polarizer is rotated to 45 degrees and the right one to 135 degrees. Putting these glasses on you can see stress patterns as colored patterns in conditions where there is polarized light and/or polarized filters. And you can make out the general polarization of light in the form of (dependently monochromatic) light intensity differences. If you now wear appropriate glasses with two differently colored lenses (that don't possess a stress pattern or birefringence) you can even see this polarization in a dichromatic gradient instead of a situational monochromatic one. With the right interfernce glasses (like: Infitec's Triple Band Pass Interference Glasses) you can make the colorful stress patterns (birefringence) even way more visible, sharp and distinct AND give (monchromatic) polarized light a dichromatic gradient. Tetrachromacy or more: I'm working on making humans more than trichromats by bestowing a fourth cone or something similar onto them. Earlier, I mentioned Infitec's Triple Band Pass Interference Glasses (TBP glasses) that split the RGB cones in our eyes into R1G1B1 in the left and R2G2B2 in the right eye. This is achieved by the combination of multiple band pass filters in a single lens. If we take the green cone for example the TBP glasses split the cone sensitvity into two parts: The left eye now only receives a green where all the green cones that are more sensitive to red-ish light are cut off and the right eye now only receives a green where all the green cones that are sensitive to more blue-ish light are cut off. In effect, it makes 2 cones out of one. And because a lesser sensitivity of a cone type results not just in a perceived luminosity change but also in a perceived color change - because the surrounding colors shift closer in to the color space of the diminished color - you implement impossible color combinations into your vision. This happens to all three cone types and enables you to make out color differences you could have never imagined being able to differentiate before. Unfortunately, you won't see any new "primary" color. However, I feel like I can see new secondary and tertiary colors / color differences. With only a single magenta lens over one of my eyes I calculated that I can even see at least 1.25 times the colors (especially in the yellow-green/lime and cyan-green/turquoise color space). Wearing this single magenta lens allows me to make out double the color differences in the lime and turquoise color space. So where the green to greenish-lime colors #00FF00 and #20FF00 look identical to me under normal conditions, with the single magenta lens on these two colors are as different to me as #00FF00 and #40FF00 (where I can normally see a slight difference). So this an increase in color discriminability from 40 down to 20, that is double the color discriminability. I can make out details in cyan to yellow things I could have never noticed before, even (and especially) on RGB screens. Yellow is as different from green to me now as red is from green. And red glows like a beacon. My subjective color contrasts are definitely a lot higher. And this is only the beginning. I'm working an active XR glasses and software (the glasses I mentioned before are all passive) that implement impossible colors into the perceived color spectrum. So like a red-orange, a red-yellow, a red-lime, red-green, a magenta-green, a cyan-red, a green-purple, etc. With this technology you can implement at least 155 new distinct (impossible) color combinations into your color spectrum. And oh boy, I've already seen it. The camera and color pass through quality of the XR glasses I used were abysmally bad and yet it was so beautiful. You can imagine what I saw with it like Star Trek's Geordi La Forge's VISOR. (There are clips online that show what he'd see. It was in an offical episode.) There is color in color in color in color and it's not an exaggeration. If you can learn to make sense of this even tetrachromacy seems inferior. As you might tell, I'm a sense researcher. I love senses because they are the only things that connect us to this world. If you can sense more of this world by acquiring more senses or enhance the already existing ones, this world will become even more beautiful and rich in detail.
@@r0cketplumber I have relatively recently made a new English TH-cam channel named "Ooqui" were I (inconsistently) post a 5 to 15 minute long video on the topic of "human senses" and how to enhance them. Until now, I've only made videos on enhancing color vision. But videos on human echolocation, tremor senses, polarization senses and more tetrachromacy will come eventually, too. On this here channel I write this comment with I've also made videos on enhancing human senses. However, these videos are in German and you'll most likely won't understand it. I don't have a blog, yet. But maybe soon. Other resources are difficult to provide because some of the things I learned are by experience and yet not studied enough. At least in the way I use them, as I tend to methodically and deliberately misuse ordinary things to turn them into new sensory experiences.
Sensory augmentation is something that has fascinated me since I first grokked it. It’s rare to hear about this sort of thing from legitimate researchers. A couple of years ago I got all excited about the idea of sticking magnets under the skin on my fingers but the materials and processes were far from perfect and potentially dangerous. Sorry to upset the grinder/bio hacking community but I think non invasive methods are the way forward.
@@frankdaze2353 I wouldn't call myself a "legitimate" researcher. However, I am very passionate about sensory augmentation and everything that comes along with it. In my opinion non-invasive methods of sonsory enhancement/augmentation is definitely the safer method. You could theoretically achieve a higher degree and quality of sensory augmentation via invasive methods but the risks are higher the more invasive the method becomes. I am personally focussing on non-invasive methods because they are more easy to achieve with a small budget, because they are safer, and because they are less permanent and thereby much more adjustable/configurable. If you implant a magnet inside of you finger tip you can't easily iterate and update the "version" of that magnet. If the magnet however is placed on top of the finger nail, for example, you can take it on and off anytime you like without much pain involved. That's also why I favor glasses over contact lenses in general. The option to turn a new sense on and off in extremely valuable.
Electric Eels - you missed those. Electric Eels can move forwards and backwards, without contacting anything, even in sediment-filled opaque water. They create an electric field around their body that enables them to sense what's around them through their skin. It's a bit like echo-location only using electricity rather than sound.
@@pauldeddens5349 I don't believe sharks produce their own electricity though; they sense electricity created by other things like the muscle contractions of fish or boat motors. Electric eels produce their own electricity and use it to kill their prey, and unfortunately the occasional person or horse (supposedly a gaucho crossing a river in South America perished this way). They also use different muscles to create different voltages depending on their goal (searching/hunting, stunning/killing, or communicating).
@@RyanDugan23 I thought sharks produced a very small current in order to find prey, like shining a flashlight. Though it is possible they just find ambient current in the water, i dont know.
I remember watching a news report years ago where a cat in a nursing home could sense the pending death of a patient. The cat was so accurate that the people working there notified the next of kin so they can make one last visit.
Tortoises don’t have ears yet can hear your voice and come to you when you call them. We think they know your vibrations. I own an exotic animal sanctuary and we were a tortoise rescue for 15 years. It’s an incredible phenomenon
It's called "Reptillian Hearing". You can experience this yourself. If you put your chin on a table and tap it, you can hear it through your bones. I have actually managed to hear through my fingers, it's kind of weird.
How about the dogs who are able to smell high sugar levels in Type 1 Diabetics, or the cat in the rest home who was able to tell when one of the patients was about to die, this was documented in over 100 cases. Animals are amazing! Thanks for sharing
I'm type 1 diabetic, and my cat has forcefully woken me up if my blood sugar crashes while I'm asleep. He's probably saved my life several times already.
Regarding echolocation by blind people, I remember seeing a programme where a young blind guy was using just that to get around and was refusing to use a cane. Another blind person showed him that echolocation wouldn't let him know if there was a hole in the road in front of him, whereas a cane would have warned him that the ground wasn't solid ahead of him.
Also it's not precise since it can't properly distinguish these barriers. For example a pole verses many forming a fence. In crowded places people will register woefully awfully, animals, cars, moving momentary barriers. Source? I'm a blind person. I had a device doing it coz I have a bit of hearing loss too and it'd vibrate depending on distance and barrier. Kept sleeping off steps, gutters or bumps. I kept going round non-existence barriers or "seeing" a crowded street like a wall. And isn't that hearing finger movement universal, I mean it sounds different. Worst feeling is nail over rough brown braille paper.
@@CBEnoddyy You are full of ------. We can echo location, hear with our feet, just a dog tell smells with our nose, and some of ours can see magnetic line of force! And it proven all the back to the 60s.
As someone who has recently become visually impaired, I find it quite inspiring to learn about how are people have managed to sharpen their other senses in order to compensate. I have certainly noticed that I pay a lot greater attention to my sense of touch and for example use it to properly orientate my clothing when folding or getting dressed in a way that was very difficult when this first happened to me.
I used to be a Sonar Tech in the Navy, and our man-made sonar works the same way as the bat's ears. The transducer switches between a "transmit" mode, where it can emit sound but can't hear, to a "receive" mode, where it can hear but not transmit so that it doesn't "blind" itself with every transmission. The stuff about "telepathy" in dolphins got me thinking about a couple of things though, as this same sort of "telepathy" is how I learned to "echolocate". By that I mean looked at an listened to subs recorded by people who had seen them before, figuring out what their diagnostic features were and learning to ID real ones in the wild. I imagine that dolphins would probably teach their children to hunt in a similar way. Of course, most of my own training didn't involve listening to recorded pings bouncing off of subs. Finding something you are screaming at is actually pretty easy so you don't have to spend much time on it. The vast majority of my own training revolved around detecting subs "passively", that is, just listening and and figuring out what it is you are looking at before you turn on that loud ass sonar that will give away your position. For every one hour I spent practicing at tagging and tracking active contacts, I probably spent 4 working through "grams", recordings of known subs that you have to ID based on the frequencies they emit. Bonus points if you can get range, bearing, course, and speed information from the gram. I imagine that there would be similar pressures on animals like dolphins, who would probably listen for the sounds of a school of fish before focusing their sonar on a known location, rather than clicking away using active search and scaring away all the fish. One good way to see if dolphins are teaching one another or transmitting information by mimicking the returned clicks from a given piece of stimuli may be to see if they are doing this for other, stranger sounds. Do dolphins ever mimic the tailbeats of a school of fish or the staticky clicking of a school of shrimp? I'd be interested to see if mother dolphins are mimicking very undolphinlike sounds to teach their children what prey sounds like.
in my opinion the mantis shrimp is one of the weirdest but coolest Animal to existed, because it has 12 color cones (16 in some reports), which means they can see both ultraviolet and infrared. they also hit the hardest of any living creature because, their club like arm accelerates faster than a bullet out of a gun, which can break through shells.
@@alphagt62 Technically its in its own group, between lobsters and shrimp. Just visually resembles a shrimp. Current ideas focus around sociality, territoriality, and hunting. They are social creatures, who appear to communicate using UV (Or IR, its one of the wavelengths just beyond visible light), and using their iridescent paddles next to their heads, can reflect or alter the signal, as a response. They are also very territorial, and will generally obliterate anything that comes near its dens. A spotless den means a strong, evolutionarily fit mantis shrimp. And hunting, its hard to camouflage when you see that many spectrums of light. Most creatures sneak in predators blind spots by signaling with one spectrum or another. Like how many insects, fish, and even mammals glow under UV light. Seeing all of those wavelengths makes it easier to spot intruders into their dens, and hunt creatures hiding in sand and camouflaging among rock and plant. Why it needs 3 "pupils" is beyond me. Its not like they really could hunt three things at the same time. Maybe to keep an eye on opposing mantis shrimp, potentially during a mating season? I dont know enough about them.
@@pauldeddens5349 Maybe so they can focus vision across multiple spectra to make overlays of the thing they are focusing on. Pupils are focal points, so multi specrta layering when focusing on something.
Years ago I worked in a large photographic lab. Part of that was a blacked out corridor that went from six printing darkrooms to two paper processors. Two or three of us would be working in that area at the same time. We never collided with each other untill there was a cold going round that muffled our hearing, we had to start calling out to each other to avoid collisions.
Heat sense... I remember taking a welding class in HS, and reaching towards something, and feeling that radiant heat, knowing it was about to hurt, but could not react fast enough to stop. I'll always remember how weird it was knowing that it was going to hurt, but being unable to do anything about it because it was so fast.
Yeah it's amazing how fast the brain is able to interpret impending events but the rest of the body can't react quick enough and when you think back on it it's like it happened in slow motion. I was a passenger in in a car going 55 mph that was approaching an intersection with a green light and I saw a car to my left run a red light and realized we were going to T-Bone it so i instinctively put my feet on the dash (bad idea- never do this!) as I tried to warn the driver but all that came out was "OH OH OH!" and WHAM! Everyone was okay except for minor injuries. One of my feet went through the windshield and the other foot went down below the dash as I flew forward because I had the automatic shoulder belt on but not the lap belt and the shoulder belt didnt lock immediately so I flew forward and when it locked it was like getting hit with a sledge hammer and cracked my chest plate. Good thing we didn't have passenger side airbags or it would've certainly broke my feet and legs. Good times!
In regards to using sound to determine structural integrity: I used to work on tanker ships that transport fuel for the Navy. We would always clean the tanks before we entered a shipyard for repairs. One of the times I thought it was very cool that the company occasionally hires experienced climbers to climb around in the tanks "sounding" the different parts of the metal structures to make sure the metal hasn't thinned to the point of needing to be replaced. Extra related info: A big part of my job was removing rust from the metal and painting over it. This is a big contributor to the thinning of the metal.
@@susang4507 Being able to travel at a young age was great and I made good money but I missed having consistency and control over my life which is why I got out. IMO maritime jobs are great for young people who don't know what they want to do, want to travel, and don't mind physical labor.
Was outside a week ago feeding our resident cat (long story - we “inherited” this outdoor cat from a neighbor - I agree, cats really ought to be kept inside) and there were some bats flying around the yard, eating mosquitoes (yay! go bats!)… and I was pleasantly surprised to notice that I could still hear their sonar chirps. Being in my mid-40s, that’s quite nice.
Yup.. for sure it does.. would Love a ”in depth” video about that too.. with all the aspects and diff there can be..😌👌🏼.. Please Joe🥺.. do one..Thank You❤
I was a Dog Trainer for the U.S. Navy. For the most part I trained bomb,drug and cadaver dogs. When it comes to how dog's smell, the amazing part is their ability to distinguish each of these scents. An easy way to explain it is, when you pull up to a McDonalds, you smell food. A dog smells, beef, bread, catsup, mustard, potatoes, oil etc.. they can distinguish each ingredient. This is of course is how they find your "drugs" when they are encased in things like coffee or whatever you "try" to hide your drugs in. It's the same with human remains, even with all the other scents in the air, they break them all down and ignore what they are not trained to look for. It is really amazing.
Solpugids (sun spiders, camel spiders, wind scorpions) have unusual sense organs on the undersides of one pair of legs. Last I heard, no one has yet figured them out. I've watched the way they move and run. Very different movement patterns. Something different is going on with the way they are sensing. They often move like a leaf that has suddenly dislodged from a snag in a strong wind, and then travels five or ten feet and hits another snag, and suddenly freezes. Then it happens again, sometimes with a change in direction. They move fast and suddenly. They are apparently the fastest land arachnids.
I didn't need that. I didn't need that mental image. We don't even have scorpions here, but I'm imagining seeing a scorpion and it making a dash up my leg. Oh shit! 🦂
@@stevechance150 If they get caught out in the sun, they will run towards shade. They don't seem to care how much shade just as long as there is shade. Including the shade we produce. Semi related fact, they don't stop running towards the shade no matter what octave the screaming hits, it doesn't seem to bother them.
@@wakjagner Their taxonomic order is "Solifugae" - fugitives from the sun. "Solpugids" - fighters of the sunlight, opponents of the sun. The first time I saw one, I was walking up a hill in the dark, on a trail. I had a flashlight, and saw it in the middle of the trail just in front of me. It froze in the light. It looked strange at first, like a tarantula, but not like a tarantula. I bent down and kept the light on it. Then it no longer looked strange, it looked exceedingly strange. I thought I knew all the local life forms pretty well. This was like some alien with ten legs. It freaked me out. These things are scary looking. They are rivalled by vinegaroons: th-cam.com/video/nKYXWfbBRyI/w-d-xo.html
The monarch butterfly is a good one. It's able to follow the migration flight patterns of distant ancestors skipping over generations who have never been on that trip.
An analogy I once heard to describe how much light we can see with the human eye went like this: If all the visible light that humans could see were piano keys, we would be able to see 8 of them. The rest of the piano would stretch to the moon. That is how little light we can see. Crazy!
I had a cat that could sense metal fatigue. No ****. She was fine for a couple of years with the fan running, then it broke down and repaired and rehung. When it came on she would run and hide. Fan went off, she would come out. We found out that one of the brackets that was used by the repairman was faulty and the fan loosened up from the ceiling. When it was fixed there was a little crack in the metal strap.
Here’s an odd one. My 10 year old nephew when visiting us a couple hours away from home had the ability to feel what direction north was… I tested him left and right (made sure to check at noon when Sun was above, no device or car queues present, etc) but he was 💯 accurate each time I’d ask. To this day he doesn’t know why/how but has an innate sense - only explanation I could find was a rare ability to feel magnetic fields (sounds crazy, I know).
Also, he travelled mainly SW to get here, and I would make a point to take confusing winding roads (sneakily) and then suddenly ask where north was. He wouldn’t think but 1-2 seconds before pointing. Super bizarre
not that out there, there's at least one tribe that uses cardinal directions instead of left/right, granted they're probably mostly just going by environmental clues.
There is research on this done in a lab with artificially generated fields AND in room that blocks out ALL outside magnetic fields including north. There's even a video on here about it. (or several.) They hook people up with EEG brainwave detectors and other brain monitoring devices. The researchers can watch people's brains react to changes in the artificial field. (Like, MOST people they test have brain reactions.) However, most people don't have any other reaction to it and don't "notice" the reaction. But, some do. Your nephew is one of the people tuned into the automatic brain reactions.. which is super cool. It's something people can automatically have, OR I think a skill they can also learn.
All dogs have two incredible superpowers that you didn't mention. The first is the ability to spread out and occupy all the surface of any human's bed, and do it silently while you are asleep. The second is an exponential increase in the gravity affecting the hind end of the dog whenever the words "go to the vet" are spoken or spelled out. The butt of a thirty pound dog will weigh more than ninety pounds once the phrase is uttered.
Combined with their inability "drop the ball" and their ability to respond to "what's in our mouth?" with various evolutionary avoidance tactics, I believe this makes dogs the most interesting creatures on the list.
I've read in one manga, that elephants can hear better with feet than ears. Since their ears are used for thermoregulation, they aren't made to catch and direct sound. And if they want to hear something better, they press their foot towards the sound. I'm aware this was in the video, I just think it's interesting
I literally wait for your videos to come out every Monday, it's disappointing because I'm in the UK and I can't watch it first thing in the morning but this video was by far the funniest I've seen so far! I just love the off-the-cuff jokes and wordplay, you can't beat it
When I lived up in Arkansas I was told that when they built the Russelvile lock and dam the Army Corp of Engineers complained that the giant catfish would rub up against them and try to take bites out of the divers, so they had to have extra divers to protect the workers from the fish.
I have a friend at the University of Washington who has trained at least two hunting dogs to track whales! Apparently, they can detect them from tens of kilometers away. Even if they're under water.
Fun fact about catfish, like gold fish they can essentially grow as big as their habitat will protect them, in our local 200ft lake it's not uncommon to find 7ft long catfish under the docks
There are dogs that are trained to detect bed bugs and although it's been disputed dogs that can detect impending seizures in people with epilepsy. I can't imagine what the world would be like with a sense of smell that strong!
The dog liked bugging bees in the yard. I tried to warn her. "No Amber!.. buggies NO ! Buggies BAD Buggies BAD " I visited my wife who had bed bugs from the moving truck. 'Amber! Get the buggie! Where the buggie"? Instantly, she put her nose right down on the nest. "Good Job. Good Job. Good Girl". Its not so hard to train them. They already know. Communication is the thing.
How do you keep on finding so many interesting topics?! You never disappoint. Love the videos and I love how you made analogies to help us understand what it’s like for animals to sense. So cool.
I've thought about this before: taste and smell could be considered extensions and variations of a chemical sense. Hearing (and to some extent, the kinesthetic (sense of body position) and balance) could be considered extensions of touch/tactile. Vision is an extreme case, though it could also be an extension of tactile/thermal. Another extension of tactile is barometric pressure. My sinuses often act as a barometer. An intermittently open chamber takes a reference pressure and doesn't open again for days at a time, giving a reference to what the weather is doing. I feel the pressure shift in my head long before a storm front arrives.
Most of our senses are dumbed down for general understanding, but are definitely chemoreceptors, or kinesensors. Sight is a form of radio receptor, light is a form of radio wave. I feel the barometric abilities of most animals are coincidental. Since some people dont have it, but others have fluid deposits in their bodies, like blocked sinuses, which expand or contract in presence of humidity.
The dog sniffing cancer thing would be excellent for early detection in remote communities where access to CT and other imaging equipment is very limited. Instead a team of sniffer dogs get deployed anywhere.
I swear my cats can detect what objects are lying on the table (or any other high elevated platform) and always jump onto the free space never knocking things over. Probably they are just adjusting at the last fractions of seconds while still in the jump but it always looks like they sit on the floor, look up and scan and then jump up on the free space.
In the '80's my stupid cat loved to pee into my Atari's. This would disable keys. I used Atari for programming. The Keyboard IS the Computer. Drove me Nuts! Worse than the Wife! "Bean me with a frying pan but don't piss on my Computer"!
The Mantis shrimp and other animals that can see other parts of the light spectrum, there are also people that are able to see 4 colours instead of the normal 3.
My parents have a friend who is blind. When he visits them he can count the door frames between the guest room and the bathroom because the noise is different when it bounces off walls or doors (even closed doors). He also walked around their house when he visited the first time in several years and asked what the big thing in their backyard was, it hadn’t been there the last time he visited. They’d bought a caravan and he could hear the echo coming off a large object.
Yep. That's not quite echolocation/sonar (it's actually hearing the ambient resonances of the space), but even as someone who sees normally I've noticed that on occasion. The main trick is just paying more attention to the sounds around you in everyday life.
There's a type of thrush called Veeries that are thought to be able to predict hurricanes. There was study and journal article by Christopher Heckscher and he found that nesting habits and number of eggs they lay are surprisingly accurate predictors of the next year's hurricane season severity.
That might have been the best delivery of a "your mom" joke I've ever heard. Struggled to pay attention to the next few minutes of the video due to excessive residual hilarity.
I’ve met old hunters who found tricks to develop their own tremor sense. My uncle and his buddies used to stab Bowie knives into trees when they were hunting deer and put their ears to the pommels. If there happened to be a herd or a good sized pack of animals nearby they’d be able to feel a vibration. They weren’t superheroes, they couldn’t track a single deer from 500m by the hilt of a Bowie knife alone, but if there happened to be a large population of animals nearby it would lead them to it.
I think some people have relative superpowers. I always thought that a lot of people had a very bad sense of direction. After a while, I realised that they are normal and a few people have a very good sense of direction. I have a very good sense of direction and used to get frustrated when I had to deal with someone who had a poor sense of direction. But I have things that I'm personally quite terrible at! I don't think i have extra senses, I just think my brain processes sun direction better and my brain logs small ground features in my memory so i can use them. I am also very good at geolocation just by looking at a few photos.
We have a cement factory near us that makes a lot of lighter surface rumbles (nothing Earth shaking, but I often "hear" the machinery thru slight vibrations in my house more so than I actually hear what they are doing with my ears. It reminds me of a deaf family I knew who loved music and "listened" to it via the bass vibrations rather than the actual sound in the air.
Something the natural compass section and the cryptochrome part made me think of: if we lack the “neurological hardware” to take advantage of our cryptochromes, could implanted technology (something like Neuralink) do it for us? Would it count as a new sense or an extension of sight? And if it counts as a new sense, would it weaken our other senses the same way lacking a new sense tends to strengthen our other senses? *edited for spelling*
Videos like this are always a great time to remind ourselves that our senses are not a direct apprehension of the objective world as it is, but the complete and total transformation of just a sliver of the phenomena around us, into a real-time hallucination playing out in our individual brains. Color and sound are internal experiences only, generated by a mind in response to external stimuli. Although they have an analog in the external world, they do not actually exist outside of the mind.
Our brains construct an entire word for us with sensory input. We are totally subject to how our brains interpret what they perceive. We truly do live in our own reality.
2:03 - "Luckily we got this gelatinous blob that can brainificate real good..." I actually guffawed. My coworkers are now aware that I watch TH-cam at the office, and they now watch your channel.
I just wanted to say that I really need this today. I needed the laughs you gave me and I always enjoy the new knowledge I get from watching your videos. So thank you, Joe and team
this one of my most favourite videos from you Joe. keep going! really appreciate how you always manage to make things exciting and fun as a science channel :)
My Chihuahua kept smelling my left ear. He was very persistent. When I mentioned that to my Determitologist, he noticed a small spot on my ear lobe that turned out to be melanoma. I had surgery and my dog no longer is obsessed with my ear. Good dog..🐕
I can't tell u how much ur videos have helped with my depression ik u post educational videos but it's something about ur content delivery and light hearted feel which puts a smile in my face even in the worst days pls keep up the work P.S looking forward for more random Thursday content
When my kids were young I could smell the difference when they were sick and when I was pregnant with my youngest I could tell which of my coworkers was walking behind me by the way they smelled. 😳 it was bizarre
smelling when my kids were sick! i found that once that switch got turned on, it never flipped off - i can smell when any family member is sick, days before they develop symptoms. it's accurate enough that family members start taking preventative measures asap
I could detect when my Pa forgot to take his Colcheciene (I am probably spelling that wrong, but this was over fifty years ago), a medication for gout. He would get a sickening sweet smell to his sweat. I suspect it was the smell of pain? The smell would also linger after he had used the bathroom. He wondered how I knew he forgot his pill, but every time I asked, he would check, and sure enough, there was a pill in his bottle, that should have been taken with the previous meal.
As a deaf person I can sort of describe what I would say is some form of "tremor sense." I do have cochlear implants which I wear most of the time, so my experience probably doesn't reflect that of people who have been deaf their entire lives. But when I am without my implants, I would describe it as my brain involuntarily imagining a sound I feel. In other words, an automatic reconstruction of the sound based on some kinesthetic prompt. It's definitely not like ant-man, but I can recognize the "sounds" individual people's patterns of walking make, among other simple things.
video SO INTERESTING! a thought on dog-sniff diagnosis: as a breast cancer survivor, it was YIKES! to learn that unlike other cancers, we literally *have no way to detect breast cancer metastasis.* so you get your surgery/chemo/radiation...and then no blood test can help find metastasis for the *remainder of your liiiife* - you just have to wait till SYMPTOMS appear...by the time you have *cancer symptoms* you're in bad shape. If dogs could do semi-annual breast cancer screening, that would be HUGE.
Wow, thank you,Joe. I have been deaf in one ear for most of my life. I plan on researching the bone conducting headphones to see if they really work for the nerve deafness I have. You may have just changed my life!!!!! I’ll keep you updated. Grateful for you.
Fun Video! Thank you! Horses. Horses being able to show eachother mental pictures. Blind horse with seeing-eye horse. AND being able to see the visualizations in your head when they are around you. Dogs. Dogs knowing when you are coming home without any clues. (including daily schedules).
Don't know about the horses (but they do have the uncanny ability of being able to hide behind themselves) but some the dog's ability to know when you are coming home, is thought to be down to the fading of your scent during the period of absence.
People that inplant small magnets on their fingers can gain the perception of electric fields. It’s kind of amazing and perhaps worth doing a video on! Bonus fact: two weeks ago a Yellow-browed bunting was spot in the Netherlands for the first time since 1982. It’s so special because they live in Siberia in the summer and migrate to China in the winter. It’s hypothesized that this particular bird has its magnetism detection inverted compared to healthy individuals. That’s why it flew the other way around the world.
Magnetic fields not electric. I actually have several that are quite sensitive. They're useful for a lot of things from just realizing a magnet is nearby to determining if a power cable has a heavy load on it or if a piece of metal is magnetic or not.
@@ontheruntonowhere I'm just pointing out that electric and magnetic fields don't always go together. An electromagnetic field is present when current is flowing but the magnet part is missing when the wire has no load. I only point this out because its a common misconception that people with magnets can sense electric fields when in reality they can only sense magnetic fields whether created by electric currents or magnets.
@@ryanhebron4287 But electric and magnetic fields _do_ always go together. A wire without electricity is just a thing. But because an electric current creates a magnetic field (and vice versa), people with magnets can sense the field and deduce that it isn't being caused by another magnet. I'll take your point that technically it's not possible to tell without other evidence, but that evidence usually exists and is quite obvious...because it's a wire. Seems like a minor niggle.
That is the first totally original and absolutely non-cliché mom joke that I think I have ever heard. I actually laughed out loud. My hats off to you sir, good job.
humans have iron in our nosess that we can use for a sense of direction. I was told that if you sleep in a north south alignment it improves your sense of direction. Orienteering people told me this.
I took a class in "Non-destructive evaluation" in college, which basically means detecting fractures in materials without breaking open the structure. In our project, sensors shot acoustic waves through a rock, and if there was a fracture, the waves would bounce back to the sensors. We unpacked the data from the sensors and were able to create a 3D model of the cracks inside the rock, without ever having to open the rock up. It was pretty incredible
My wife has the ability to know when im trying to nap. If its within 200 meters of her, she can show up and give me chores that need to be done. Neat power.
Our dog got really interested in my lower tummy and less than two months ago they accidentally found out that I had cancer. It was so early on it didn’t show up in MRI, ultra sound or CT-scans. After surgically removing that cancer (it had not spread, no chemo etc needed) the dog lost interest in sniffing my tummy. Now, three years later my new dog shows interest in sniffing my tummy again, so it’s time to go see my doctor.
You mentioned heat sense (infrared) but left out that some critters can see ultraviolet (pollinators, birds). Some others can see polarized light. I'm sure there's a whole other video that could be done on plant sensing which is its own interesting world of light, chemo, and touch.
I often think about plants' "trophisms" and wonder how they sense what to do in various situations. Trees communicate through their roots with senses and "language" of their own. The secret life of plants, indeed.
Narwhals, Narwhals Swimming in the ocean Causing a commotion Coz they are so awesome Narwhals, Narwhals Swimming in the ocean Pretty big and pretty white They beat a polar bear in a fight Like an underwater unicorn They've got a kick-ass facial horn They're the Jedi of the sea They stop Cthulu eating ye Narwhals They are Narwhals Narwhals Just don't let 'em touch your balls Narwhals They are Narwhals Narwhals Inventors of the Shish Kebab
I hit the pause button! I've never considered this before but whenever I yawn, I go completely deaf. I never thought of it as a mute button before. I like that! Special at last....
We have several senses we don't learn about as kids. Temperature, time, motion... All are senses. And though you can sort of make an argument for temperature being part of touch you absolutely can't with motion and time.
Catfish are ruthless. My pops was a commercial fisherman so I grew up on a bay shrimp boat, people would be mind blown by some of the sizes of fish out in those waters, he used to catch gatorgars that would be 6-7 foot long and several hundred pounds, they’d destroy his nets so often times would break the snouts off and throw them overboardbut I also lived off a lake and there’s many many many underwater photos taken of catfish the size of small fishing boats, even a super famous one of a catfish about 150 foot down with a diver in front of the frame and the catfish had to have been 8-10 foot long and easily three times the size of the diver.
I really appreciated the your mom joke in there, thank you sir.
Had me rolling!!!
It's the nonchalant delivery that is key. Well done sir. 😂
So did your kids
That was nice one.
It was a great one too. For me it came out of nowhere and hit like a truck. Very well executed.
In the summer of 1992, my wife and I took a trip to the Florida keys. One of the events was a day at the Dolphin Research Center in Marathon Key. It was one of the most amazing experiences of my entire life (for many reasons that I won't go into here). But the most incredible thing happened when we were finally allowed to get in the water with the dolphins. They were not captive; but instead free-swim mammals that could leave out to open ocean anytime they wanted - they just liked to hang around and work with the Marine Biologists (and the visitors!). I climbed down into the lagoon first. and the dolphins came over & checked me out; splashing, "talking", etc. However, when my wife got in the water, something completely different happened...one-by-one, all the female dolphins started to gather around her in a circle; clicking incessantly. My wife started to get a little unnerved by this. The Bilologist was watching from the platform, and asked me "Is your wife pregnant?" I told her "Yes, about 5 months". She said "They know. They can see the baby. As long as she's in the water, they will not allow anything to come near her." How incredibly cool is that ?!?
INCREDIBLY COOL is how that is!! There are stories of women who work with wolf sanctuaries - and the wolves can smell when a woman is pregnant and are clearly DELIGHTED that there is a puppy on the way :D
How amazing that they can do this! Love dolphins.
@@bookmouse2719 I think they're a lot smarter than most people realize... A friend of mine is (well - was :-) a surfer from Ventura, CA. He was out one day in the early morning; surfing off the coast of Ojai. One of his friends who was on-shore started hollering at him - there was a 12 to 15' Great White on the surface of the wave just a couple yards behind him. He said his heart almost jumped out of his chest. Then out of the corner of his eye to the left, he saw 3 dorsal fins cutting across the face of the wave heading directly at him. He told me that at that point, he figured his time was up, and started praying...all while trying not to lose his balance. The 3 fins split up and swam around him on either side. When he turned to see what was going on, there were 3 dolphins heading right toward the shark. The shark broke off his pursuit, and dropped back. Two of the dolphins continued to chase it away; the third one swam alongside my friend until he reached the shore break. It lingered in the shallows for a few seconds while my (truly blessed!) pal grabbed his board and walked out of the water. Then the dolphin turned and swam off. My friend said he sat down on the sand - and cried his eyes out 15 minutes.
@@ivytarablair Puppy??? In woman? :o
That's AWESOME! I love dolphins💙🐬
Was slightly surprised to not see this mentioned.. I recently saw a video online of a spider caught in a cup, and a pair of girls were trying to take a video of it with their smartphone. When they would tap on the table the spider wouldn't flinch, but every time they tried to focus on the spider by tapping their phone screen where the spider was, the spider would flinch as if it was responding to the tap directly. It was discovered that the spider was responding to the lidar or infrared signal being emitted from the phone every time it sent out a beam to focus. Apparently spiders and some other animals like deer can see this spectrum, but humans can not.
I'm gonna try that the next time i see a spider. I've tried flashing a regular light but didn't get a response.
How would I find this video about this pair of girls and a cup? LoL
@@stevechance150 very, very carefully.
Radio waves, and any form of light that way can be seen. Our eyes are nothing more than visual-wavelength radio dishes.
Its very possible if we find alien life, they could see completely different spectrums. Maybe only AM, maybe only Microwaves, maybe only Gamma waves. Assuming they see at all of course. Basically if it can be picked up through a radio dish, it can be seen by an animal with eyes tuned correctly.
And also that all radio dishes are effectively man-made eyes, more so than cameras weirdly.
@@stevechance150 you're better off searching "spider responds to lidar" lol
My mom had a mark on her arm that was pretty normal, it really only looked like a mole. My dog would sniff at it for upwards of a minute every time she saw her so I told her to get the spot looked at. She just got it biopsied and the results came back yesterday. She has Melanoma and is going to a cancer specialist next week.
is she alright?
@@tomgvaughan she's getting a surgery next month... we think we caught it early! It's really all thanks to my dog, the spot looked super normal to us. If all goes well she'll be cancer free by Christmas. Thanks for asking :D
@@izzy4bitney Keep us updated. I Love that your dog did this!!! Good luck to your Mom.
That dog deserves lots of love and treats
How is she now? Is she okay? Also your dog is a legend.
my childhood dog actually found skin cancer in my dads forearm when i was growing up. Its was a spot she was fixated on and anytime he was around she would keep going back to that spot. He got checked soon after and come to find out she detected very early melanoma and basically saved my dads life because it was found so early. More so than for hospitals, i think having a dog in the home that can smell cancer is extremely valuable, I'm not sure how we would go about that but if your dog every gets fixated on a spot on your body, best to get it checked.
There are quite a few stories in this same category. I heard one about a lady whose dog kept pawing at the back of her leg, then eventually started nipping at the same spot, which finally got her to check the spot, go to the doctor, and have the melanoma removed.
@@boganvogue6694 No, the heinous attempts to make money are by the corporate healthcare providers who vigorously and relentlessly try to stomp on anything that might somehow diminish their profit margins. In the video, Joe specifically mentions an organization that is working on a standardized method of training the dogs for this task, which means your comment is obnoxiously ignorant.
@@boganvogue6694 Dogs are routinely trained for finding medical issues, so nothing stops a dog from flagging something they find off without training - They just don't have any context for what it is, they just identify something as different and are curious or concerned/irritated. But there are also plenty of properly trained personal assistant dogs who can sense different conditions, like dogs that help their owner identify blood sugar levels etc.
There's also rats that can successfully sniff out things like cancer and land mines - dogs are not unique in this.
Just because you lack all kinds of productive potential doesn't mean other animals do.
A lot of dogs are fixated on people’s crotches, but I don’t think that means there’s something wrong with those people.
If dogs have such sensitive noses, why do they need sniff each others butts from so close up, because I understand the scent of the excretion from anal glands is extremely strong.
@@kellydalstok8900 They sniff each others butts because unlike humans they have a much more complex registration and separation of scent;
The closer they are to the scent the stronger they are likely to perceive the different subtleties, so we can safely assume they get more stimuli + a clearer "image" of whatever information it brings them.
Not unlike you bringing something closer to your eyes to see more detail or get increased perception; You can see and hear your friend from 10 meters away, so why stand 1-2 meters away? Or bring a flower closer to your nose to smell for that matter.
Since dogs are notoriously bad at bringing their calling cards with them, they do the butt sniff instead, as the anal glands supposedly reveals a lot of information about the other dog to them.
There is nothing wrong with the crotches dogs sniff, there is just a lot of scent information (and the dog is unlikely to behave "strange" when doing it) - it's a bit of a weird analogy as likewise doctors talk to a lot of people around them that aren't sick.
(But if you meet a doctor that looks at your arm and remarks "you might want to get that looked at" you probably should - regardless how many healthy arms that doctor has looked at prior to it)
Echolocation Sense:
I learned the "Daniel Kish style" human passive and active echolocation (even though my vision is perfect). It is simultaneously suprisingly simple and difficult. The concept is simple: You just have to learn to interpret, single out, enhance, discard and/or focus on specific sounds. But the difficult thing is the "sound vocabulary" that you have to build up by making a tongue click at literally everything you "see". It's just like learning Chinese is theoretically simple to learn, yet you have to study and learn thousands of vocabulary words in order to understand it. I'm at an active echolocation level now where I can comfortably walk through my own rooms, dangle along a forest path without swaying to the sides too much, find my way around in rooms and buildings where I've never been before. Perfectly blindfolded, of course. I've even trained myself to interpret the sound as "images". This imaging technique can be a blessing *and* a curse because once aquired I even see sounds when I try to fall asleep.
Tremor Sense:
I'm experimenting making this sense available for humans, too. I achieve this by combining a relatively small compression spring that has a small rubber ball on the one side and a magnet on the other. Then, I attached an equally sized magnet to the base of my thumbnail. This construction allows me to put this sense on and off whenever I like. The magents are very thin and small so they usually don't bother me. Now, whenever I move my hand - and especially my thumb - the vibrations and kinetic energy gets amplified by this small self-built tremor sense as the ball oscillates on the small compression spring. It is a really weird feeling because my brain interprets the vibrations that I can newly sense now as sound. So if the self-built compression spring tremor sense swings back and forth at 5Hz I'll hear 5 Hz. The same goes for smaller and higher frequencies. The thumbnail is very sensitive and ideal for things to stick onto without irritating the skin. I'm working on a combination of differently sized compression springs on a single stick-on tremor sense construction so that I'll be able to "hear" more than just one frequency at a time.
Polarization sense:
Humans can see the polarization of light. It's called Haidinger's Brush and is located in the center of the visual field. But it is way too faint to have any practical use in day to day life. However, we can wear passive linearly polarized glasses where the left lens polarizer is rotated to 45 degrees and the right one to 135 degrees. Putting these glasses on you can see stress patterns as colored patterns in conditions where there is polarized light and/or polarized filters. And you can make out the general polarization of light in the form of (dependently monochromatic) light intensity differences. If you now wear appropriate glasses with two differently colored lenses (that don't possess a stress pattern or birefringence) you can even see this polarization in a dichromatic gradient instead of a situational monochromatic one. With the right interfernce glasses (like: Infitec's Triple Band Pass Interference Glasses) you can make the colorful stress patterns (birefringence) even way more visible, sharp and distinct AND give (monchromatic) polarized light a dichromatic gradient.
Tetrachromacy or more:
I'm working on making humans more than trichromats by bestowing a fourth cone or something similar onto them. Earlier, I mentioned Infitec's Triple Band Pass Interference Glasses (TBP glasses) that split the RGB cones in our eyes into R1G1B1 in the left and R2G2B2 in the right eye. This is achieved by the combination of multiple band pass filters in a single lens. If we take the green cone for example the TBP glasses split the cone sensitvity into two parts: The left eye now only receives a green where all the green cones that are more sensitive to red-ish light are cut off and the right eye now only receives a green where all the green cones that are sensitive to more blue-ish light are cut off. In effect, it makes 2 cones out of one. And because a lesser sensitivity of a cone type results not just in a perceived luminosity change but also in a perceived color change - because the surrounding colors shift closer in to the color space of the diminished color - you implement impossible color combinations into your vision. This happens to all three cone types and enables you to make out color differences you could have never imagined being able to differentiate before. Unfortunately, you won't see any new "primary" color. However, I feel like I can see new secondary and tertiary colors / color differences.
With only a single magenta lens over one of my eyes I calculated that I can even see at least 1.25 times the colors (especially in the yellow-green/lime and cyan-green/turquoise color space). Wearing this single magenta lens allows me to make out double the color differences in the lime and turquoise color space. So where the green to greenish-lime colors #00FF00 and #20FF00 look identical to me under normal conditions, with the single magenta lens on these two colors are as different to me as #00FF00 and #40FF00 (where I can normally see a slight difference). So this an increase in color discriminability from 40 down to 20, that is double the color discriminability. I can make out details in cyan to yellow things I could have never noticed before, even (and especially) on RGB screens. Yellow is as different from green to me now as red is from green. And red glows like a beacon. My subjective color contrasts are definitely a lot higher.
And this is only the beginning. I'm working an active XR glasses and software (the glasses I mentioned before are all passive) that implement impossible colors into the perceived color spectrum. So like a red-orange, a red-yellow, a red-lime, red-green, a magenta-green, a cyan-red, a green-purple, etc. With this technology you can implement at least 155 new distinct (impossible) color combinations into your color spectrum. And oh boy, I've already seen it. The camera and color pass through quality of the XR glasses I used were abysmally bad and yet it was so beautiful. You can imagine what I saw with it like Star Trek's Geordi La Forge's VISOR. (There are clips online that show what he'd see. It was in an offical episode.) There is color in color in color in color and it's not an exaggeration. If you can learn to make sense of this even tetrachromacy seems inferior.
As you might tell, I'm a sense researcher. I love senses because they are the only things that connect us to this world. If you can sense more of this world by acquiring more senses or enhance the already existing ones, this world will become even more beautiful and rich in detail.
All of that is very interesting, do you have a blog or other resources to learn more?
@@r0cketplumber I have relatively recently made a new English TH-cam channel named "Ooqui" were I (inconsistently) post a 5 to 15 minute long video on the topic of "human senses" and how to enhance them. Until now, I've only made videos on enhancing color vision. But videos on human echolocation, tremor senses, polarization senses and more tetrachromacy will come eventually, too. On this here channel I write this comment with I've also made videos on enhancing human senses. However, these videos are in German and you'll most likely won't understand it. I don't have a blog, yet. But maybe soon. Other resources are difficult to provide because some of the things I learned are by experience and yet not studied enough. At least in the way I use them, as I tend to methodically and deliberately misuse ordinary things to turn them into new sensory experiences.
This was very interesting, thankyou!
Sensory augmentation is something that has fascinated me since I first grokked it. It’s rare to hear about this sort of thing from legitimate researchers. A couple of years ago I got all excited about the idea of sticking magnets under the skin on my fingers but the materials and processes were far from perfect and potentially dangerous. Sorry to upset the grinder/bio hacking community but I think non invasive methods are the way forward.
@@frankdaze2353 I wouldn't call myself a "legitimate" researcher. However, I am very passionate about sensory augmentation and everything that comes along with it. In my opinion non-invasive methods of sonsory enhancement/augmentation is definitely the safer method. You could theoretically achieve a higher degree and quality of sensory augmentation via invasive methods but the risks are higher the more invasive the method becomes. I am personally focussing on non-invasive methods because they are more easy to achieve with a small budget, because they are safer, and because they are less permanent and thereby much more adjustable/configurable. If you implant a magnet inside of you finger tip you can't easily iterate and update the "version" of that magnet. If the magnet however is placed on top of the finger nail, for example, you can take it on and off anytime you like without much pain involved. That's also why I favor glasses over contact lenses in general. The option to turn a new sense on and off in extremely valuable.
Electric Eels - you missed those.
Electric Eels can move forwards and backwards, without contacting anything, even in sediment-filled opaque water. They create an electric field around their body that enables them to sense what's around them through their skin.
It's a bit like echo-location only using electricity rather than sound.
I think thats just advanced electrosense. Its pretty much what sharks do but cranked to 11.
Wow, that's pretty cool
Electro-location?
@@pauldeddens5349 I don't believe sharks produce their own electricity though; they sense electricity created by other things like the muscle contractions of fish or boat motors. Electric eels produce their own electricity and use it to kill their prey, and unfortunately the occasional person or horse (supposedly a gaucho crossing a river in South America perished this way). They also use different muscles to create different voltages depending on their goal (searching/hunting, stunning/killing, or communicating).
@@RyanDugan23 I thought sharks produced a very small current in order to find prey, like shining a flashlight. Though it is possible they just find ambient current in the water, i dont know.
I remember watching a news report years ago where a cat in a nursing home could sense the pending death of a patient. The cat was so accurate that the people working there notified the next of kin so they can make one last visit.
Tortoises don’t have ears yet can hear your voice and come to you when you call them. We think they know your vibrations. I own an exotic animal sanctuary and we were a tortoise rescue for 15 years. It’s an incredible phenomenon
durger
Awesome!
They hear through ears.
It's called "Reptillian Hearing". You can experience this yourself. If you put your chin on a table and tap it, you can hear it through your bones.
I have actually managed to hear through my fingers, it's kind of weird.
That is super cool and interesting! I’m learning lots of unusual, random facts from the comments section today 😊
How about the dogs who are able to smell high sugar levels in Type 1 Diabetics, or the cat in the rest home who was able to tell when one of the patients was about to die, this was documented in over 100 cases. Animals are amazing! Thanks for sharing
I'm type 1 diabetic, and my cat has forcefully woken me up if my blood sugar crashes while I'm asleep. He's probably saved my life several times already.
Dogs can also detect if someone is about to pass out or about to have a panic attack.
Regarding echolocation by blind people, I remember seeing a programme where a young blind guy was using just that to get around and was refusing to use a cane. Another blind person showed him that echolocation wouldn't let him know if there was a hole in the road in front of him, whereas a cane would have warned him that the ground wasn't solid ahead of him.
Also it's not precise since it can't properly distinguish these barriers. For example a pole verses many forming a fence. In crowded places people will register woefully awfully, animals, cars, moving momentary barriers.
Source? I'm a blind person. I had a device doing it coz I have a bit of hearing loss too and it'd vibrate depending on distance and barrier. Kept sleeping off steps, gutters or bumps. I kept going round non-existence barriers or "seeing" a crowded street like a wall.
And isn't that hearing finger movement universal, I mean it sounds different. Worst feeling is nail over rough brown braille paper.
A scorpion has tremorsense and others but also a UV sensor in their tail that acts like an eye - it detects if the scorpion itself is in light
Was he riding a bike?
I remember watching one, where he was riding a bike down the street while clicking his tongue!
also, a load of rubbish, the human ear cannot do that. But we just believe everything we hear nowadays, don't we?
@@CBEnoddyy You are full of ------. We can echo location, hear with our feet, just a dog tell smells with our nose, and some of ours can see magnetic line of force! And it proven all the back to the 60s.
As someone who has recently become visually impaired, I find it quite inspiring to learn about how are people have managed to sharpen their other senses in order to compensate. I have certainly noticed that I pay a lot greater attention to my sense of touch and for example use it to properly orientate my clothing when folding or getting dressed in a way that was very difficult when this first happened to me.
Getting to hang out with the doggos would be a lot more pleasant than getting put in a CT scanner. That's for sure!
Everyone's down with the animal diagnostic and hanging with the doggos... and then they lick you with a big catfish! 🤣🤣🤣73s
Unless, of course, you had a bag of pot in your pocket.
I used to be a Sonar Tech in the Navy, and our man-made sonar works the same way as the bat's ears. The transducer switches between a "transmit" mode, where it can emit sound but can't hear, to a "receive" mode, where it can hear but not transmit so that it doesn't "blind" itself with every transmission. The stuff about "telepathy" in dolphins got me thinking about a couple of things though, as this same sort of "telepathy" is how I learned to "echolocate". By that I mean looked at an listened to subs recorded by people who had seen them before, figuring out what their diagnostic features were and learning to ID real ones in the wild. I imagine that dolphins would probably teach their children to hunt in a similar way. Of course, most of my own training didn't involve listening to recorded pings bouncing off of subs. Finding something you are screaming at is actually pretty easy so you don't have to spend much time on it. The vast majority of my own training revolved around detecting subs "passively", that is, just listening and and figuring out what it is you are looking at before you turn on that loud ass sonar that will give away your position. For every one hour I spent practicing at tagging and tracking active contacts, I probably spent 4 working through "grams", recordings of known subs that you have to ID based on the frequencies they emit. Bonus points if you can get range, bearing, course, and speed information from the gram. I imagine that there would be similar pressures on animals like dolphins, who would probably listen for the sounds of a school of fish before focusing their sonar on a known location, rather than clicking away using active search and scaring away all the fish. One good way to see if dolphins are teaching one another or transmitting information by mimicking the returned clicks from a given piece of stimuli may be to see if they are doing this for other, stranger sounds. Do dolphins ever mimic the tailbeats of a school of fish or the staticky clicking of a school of shrimp? I'd be interested to see if mother dolphins are mimicking very undolphinlike sounds to teach their children what prey sounds like.
That was truly interesting. Thanks for sharing!
in my opinion the mantis shrimp is one of the weirdest but coolest Animal to existed, because it has 12 color cones (16 in some reports), which means they can see both ultraviolet and infrared.
they also hit the hardest of any living creature because, their club like arm accelerates faster than a bullet out of a gun, which can break through shells.
Also polarisation! Cool critters.
This one still blows my mind ever since I heard about it.
It does make you wonder why a shrimp would have some of the most advanced eyes on the planet?
@@alphagt62 Technically its in its own group, between lobsters and shrimp. Just visually resembles a shrimp.
Current ideas focus around sociality, territoriality, and hunting.
They are social creatures, who appear to communicate using UV (Or IR, its one of the wavelengths just beyond visible light), and using their iridescent paddles next to their heads, can reflect or alter the signal, as a response.
They are also very territorial, and will generally obliterate anything that comes near its dens. A spotless den means a strong, evolutionarily fit mantis shrimp.
And hunting, its hard to camouflage when you see that many spectrums of light. Most creatures sneak in predators blind spots by signaling with one spectrum or another. Like how many insects, fish, and even mammals glow under UV light. Seeing all of those wavelengths makes it easier to spot intruders into their dens, and hunt creatures hiding in sand and camouflaging among rock and plant.
Why it needs 3 "pupils" is beyond me. Its not like they really could hunt three things at the same time. Maybe to keep an eye on opposing mantis shrimp, potentially during a mating season? I dont know enough about them.
@@pauldeddens5349 Maybe so they can focus vision across multiple spectra to make overlays of the thing they are focusing on. Pupils are focal points, so multi specrta layering when focusing on something.
Years ago I worked in a large photographic lab. Part of that was a blacked out corridor that went from six printing darkrooms to two paper processors. Two or three of us would be working in that area at the same time. We never collided with each other untill there was a cold going round that muffled our hearing, we had to start calling out to each other to avoid collisions.
Heat sense... I remember taking a welding class in HS, and reaching towards something, and feeling that radiant heat, knowing it was about to hurt, but could not react fast enough to stop. I'll always remember how weird it was knowing that it was going to hurt, but being unable to do anything about it because it was so fast.
Yeah it's amazing how fast the brain is able to interpret impending events but the rest of the body can't react quick enough and when you think back on it it's like it happened in slow motion. I was a passenger in in a car going 55 mph that was approaching an intersection with a green light and I saw a car to my left run a red light and realized we were going to T-Bone it so i instinctively put my feet on the dash (bad idea- never do this!) as I tried to warn the driver but all that came out was "OH OH OH!" and WHAM! Everyone was okay except for minor injuries. One of my feet went through the windshield and the other foot went down below the dash as I flew forward because I had the automatic shoulder belt on but not the lap belt and the shoulder belt didnt lock immediately so I flew forward and when it locked it was like getting hit with a sledge hammer and cracked my chest plate. Good thing we didn't have passenger side airbags or it would've certainly broke my feet and legs. Good times!
@@birdflipper oof!
Sounds incredibly painful.
Wear gloves !
Oh, I just remembered, some Birds of Prey like Sparrow Hawks can see Ultra Violet, that way they can follow trails of mice pee.
In regards to using sound to determine structural integrity:
I used to work on tanker ships that transport fuel for the Navy. We would always clean the tanks before we entered a shipyard for repairs. One of the times I thought it was very cool that the company occasionally hires experienced climbers to climb around in the tanks "sounding" the different parts of the metal structures to make sure the metal hasn't thinned to the point of needing to be replaced.
Extra related info: A big part of my job was removing rust from the metal and painting over it. This is a big contributor to the thinning of the metal.
You had a cool job!👍
@@susang4507 Being able to travel at a young age was great and I made good money but I missed having consistency and control over my life which is why I got out.
IMO maritime jobs are great for young people who don't know what they want to do, want to travel, and don't mind physical labor.
To be clear, the painting over the removed rust was to prevent further rust with an anti-rusting paint.
@@r3dp9 Thanks. I should have mentioned that.
They were hitting train wheels to check for cracks long before that
Was outside a week ago feeding our resident cat (long story - we “inherited” this outdoor cat from a neighbor - I agree, cats really ought to be kept inside) and there were some bats flying around the yard, eating mosquitoes (yay! go bats!)… and I was pleasantly surprised to notice that I could still hear their sonar chirps. Being in my mid-40s, that’s quite nice.
Speaking of senses, Synesthesia would be a really fun idea for a video. Basically it's where someone's senses get all messed up and crosswired
Yup.. for sure it does.. would Love a ”in depth” video about that too.. with all the aspects and diff there can be..😌👌🏼.. Please Joe🥺.. do one..Thank You❤
11:38 explains that for me sometimes 😉
th-cam.com/video/0qAcfRilm2I/w-d-xo.html
I’m pretty sure Joe did one on this topic already. Do a search.
I don't think he has done a whole video on it but I KNOW he's covered it before.
There are service dogs trained to sense seizures, diabetic conditions, anaphylaxis, and a few others.
I was a Dog Trainer for the U.S. Navy. For the most part I trained bomb,drug and cadaver dogs. When it comes to how dog's smell, the amazing part is their ability to distinguish each of these scents. An easy way to explain it is, when you pull up to a McDonalds, you smell food. A dog smells, beef, bread, catsup, mustard, potatoes, oil etc.. they can distinguish each ingredient. This is of course is how they find your "drugs" when they are encased in things like coffee or whatever you "try" to hide your drugs in. It's the same with human remains, even with all the other scents in the air, they break them all down and ignore what they are not trained to look for. It is really amazing.
@@krisf4969 Pot is fairly harmless. Getting charged can be extreamly Harmful
4:20 "blasting sounds at someone" is literally how we communicate with vocalized words
Solpugids (sun spiders, camel spiders, wind scorpions) have unusual sense organs on the undersides of one pair of legs. Last I heard, no one has yet figured them out.
I've watched the way they move and run. Very different movement patterns. Something different is going on with the way they are sensing.
They often move like a leaf that has suddenly dislodged from a snag in a strong wind, and then travels five or ten feet and hits another snag, and suddenly freezes. Then it happens again, sometimes with a change in direction.
They move fast and suddenly. They are apparently the fastest land arachnids.
I didn't need that. I didn't need that mental image. We don't even have scorpions here, but I'm imagining seeing a scorpion and it making a dash up my leg. Oh shit! 🦂
@@stevechance150 If they get caught out in the sun, they will run towards shade. They don't seem to care how much shade just as long as there is shade. Including the shade we produce. Semi related fact, they don't stop running towards the shade no matter what octave the screaming hits, it doesn't seem to bother them.
@@wakjagner Wakita Jagner?
@@wakjagner Their taxonomic order is "Solifugae" - fugitives from the sun.
"Solpugids" - fighters of the sunlight, opponents of the sun.
The first time I saw one, I was walking up a hill in the dark, on a trail. I had a flashlight, and saw it in the middle of the trail just in front of me. It froze in the light. It looked strange at first, like a tarantula, but not like a tarantula. I bent down and kept the light on it. Then it no longer looked strange, it looked exceedingly strange. I thought I knew all the local life forms pretty well. This was like some alien with ten legs. It freaked me out. These things are scary looking.
They are rivalled by vinegaroons:
th-cam.com/video/nKYXWfbBRyI/w-d-xo.html
The monarch butterfly is a good one. It's able to follow the migration flight patterns of distant ancestors skipping over generations who have never been on that trip.
One you missed (my apologies if someone mentioned it) is some crabs can see a much wider electromagnetic spectrum, more colors.
OMG, the way you slipped in a "your mom" joke was just brilliant. I bow to you, sir. You are the king.
An analogy I once heard to describe how much light we can see with the human eye went like this: If all the visible light that humans could see were piano keys, we would be able to see 8 of them. The rest of the piano would stretch to the moon. That is how little light we can see.
Crazy!
Its because people love to forget that all radio waves are a form of light. It just so happens we evolved to have eyes tuned to this radio spectrum.
I had a cat that could sense metal fatigue. No ****. She was fine for a couple of years with the fan running, then it broke down and repaired and rehung. When it came on she would run and hide. Fan went off, she would come out. We found out that one of the brackets that was used by the repairman was faulty and the fan loosened up from the ceiling. When it was fixed there was a little crack in the metal strap.
Here’s an odd one. My 10 year old nephew when visiting us a couple hours away from home had the ability to feel what direction north was… I tested him left and right (made sure to check at noon when Sun was above, no device or car queues present, etc) but he was 💯 accurate each time I’d ask. To this day he doesn’t know why/how but has an innate sense - only explanation I could find was a rare ability to feel magnetic fields (sounds crazy, I know).
Also, he travelled mainly SW to get here, and I would make a point to take confusing winding roads (sneakily) and then suddenly ask where north was. He wouldn’t think but 1-2 seconds before pointing. Super bizarre
not that out there, there's at least one tribe that uses cardinal directions instead of left/right, granted they're probably mostly just going by environmental clues.
Supposedly, Aborigines do it. There's an answers with joe video about five weird language phenomena where he explains it.
There is research on this done in a lab with artificially generated fields AND in room that blocks out ALL outside magnetic fields including north. There's even a video on here about it. (or several.)
They hook people up with EEG brainwave detectors and other brain monitoring devices. The researchers can watch people's brains react to changes in the artificial field. (Like, MOST people they test have brain reactions.)
However, most people don't have any other reaction to it and don't "notice" the reaction.
But, some do.
Your nephew is one of the people tuned into the automatic brain reactions.. which is super cool.
It's something people can automatically have, OR I think a skill they can also learn.
Not crazy at all, I do that too. 😃
All dogs have two incredible superpowers that you didn't mention. The first is the ability to spread out and occupy all the surface of any human's bed, and do it silently while you are asleep. The second is an exponential increase in the gravity affecting the hind end of the dog whenever the words "go to the vet" are spoken or spelled out. The butt of a thirty pound dog will weigh more than ninety pounds once the phrase is uttered.
I think you're a magician, sir.
They also have an internal chronometer so they always know when it’s supper time and treat time. This is a gift cats also possess.
Combined with their inability "drop the ball" and their ability to respond to "what's in our mouth?" with various evolutionary avoidance tactics, I believe this makes dogs the most interesting creatures on the list.
@Randy Novick 👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼
they can also hear a bag crinkle from 3 miles away and hit you with horrendous farts when you least expect it.
I've read in one manga, that elephants can hear better with feet than ears. Since their ears are used for thermoregulation, they aren't made to catch and direct sound. And if they want to hear something better, they press their foot towards the sound.
I'm aware this was in the video, I just think it's interesting
Ok the fact you veary occasionally do a "your mom joke" catches me off guard each time and I love it. Makes me smile each time man.
I literally wait for your videos to come out every Monday, it's disappointing because I'm in the UK and I can't watch it first thing in the morning but this video was by far the funniest I've seen so far! I just love the off-the-cuff jokes and wordplay, you can't beat it
When I lived up in Arkansas I was told that when they built the Russelvile lock and dam the Army Corp of Engineers complained that the giant catfish would rub up against them and try to take bites out of the divers, so they had to have extra divers to protect the workers from the fish.
I have a friend at the University of Washington who has trained at least two hunting dogs to track whales! Apparently, they can detect them from tens of kilometers away. Even if they're under water.
Fun fact about catfish, like gold fish they can essentially grow as big as their habitat will protect them, in our local 200ft lake it's not uncommon to find 7ft long catfish under the docks
Barry White Elephant - "Can't Get Enough of Your Trunk Baby"
The woman that can smell Parkinson. The story of the dogs reminded me of her even before she was shown. Great story, looking forward to it!
There are dogs that are trained to detect bed bugs and although it's been disputed dogs that can detect impending seizures in people with epilepsy. I can't imagine what the world would be like with a sense of smell that strong!
The dog liked bugging bees in the yard. I tried to warn her.
"No Amber!.. buggies NO ! Buggies BAD Buggies BAD "
I visited my wife who had bed bugs from the moving truck.
'Amber! Get the buggie! Where the buggie"?
Instantly, she put her nose right down on the nest. "Good Job. Good Job. Good Girl".
Its not so hard to train them. They already know. Communication is the thing.
That mom joke reminded me to get on with my backlog on your videos.
The theoretical "quantum entanglement bird vision" sounds pretty amazing
How do you keep on finding so many interesting topics?! You never disappoint. Love the videos and I love how you made analogies to help us understand what it’s like for animals to sense. So cool.
There is a team of people behind him
@@ukaszkaminski4405 Sir that's a bookshelf
TH-cam
@@drunkenmuse LMAO!! 😂😂
In some places where landmines are a problem, bees are trained to detect the chemicals released by the mine's explosives and flag their locations.
I laughed so loud at the mom joke I got stares from the rest of the coffee shop. Thank you for giving me, and them, a story.
Spiders and spiderlings can sense the right time to fly (via "ballooning") by means of electric potential differences.
I think, describing something even crazy abstract with words and other people can form a mental picture in their mind from them is already magical.
Just wanted to say that the “fail horn” from the Price is right show never fails to push the comedic value of anything I’m watching. Good job Joe! 👍 😅
"Brainificate" is my new word for "thinking really hard" & I can't thank you enough, Joe.
I've thought about this before: taste and smell could be considered extensions and variations of a chemical sense. Hearing (and to some extent, the kinesthetic (sense of body position) and balance) could be considered extensions of touch/tactile. Vision is an extreme case, though it could also be an extension of tactile/thermal.
Another extension of tactile is barometric pressure. My sinuses often act as a barometer. An intermittently open chamber takes a reference pressure and doesn't open again for days at a time, giving a reference to what the weather is doing. I feel the pressure shift in my head long before a storm front arrives.
Most of our senses are dumbed down for general understanding, but are definitely chemoreceptors, or kinesensors. Sight is a form of radio receptor, light is a form of radio wave.
I feel the barometric abilities of most animals are coincidental. Since some people dont have it, but others have fluid deposits in their bodies, like blocked sinuses, which expand or contract in presence of humidity.
The dog sniffing cancer thing would be excellent for early detection in remote communities where access to CT and other imaging equipment is very limited. Instead a team of sniffer dogs get deployed anywhere.
I swear my cats can detect what objects are lying on the table (or any other high elevated platform) and always jump onto the free space never knocking things over. Probably they are just adjusting at the last fractions of seconds while still in the jump but it always looks like they sit on the floor, look up and scan and then jump up on the free space.
My daughter had an exotic cat that loved jumping up more than 6 feet. It was a 'show off' too and could open doors with ease
My cat must be the expection, he knocks shit flying all the time 😄
Well then your cats are just polite. My cats kept knocking things off the table, counter, desk, mantle etc .. they became outside cats.
One of my cats do the same thing. I never thought about it as a super power but it's greatly appreciated.
In the '80's my stupid cat loved to pee into my Atari's. This would disable keys. I used Atari for programming. The Keyboard IS the Computer. Drove me Nuts! Worse than the Wife!
"Bean me with a frying pan but don't piss on my Computer"!
Just finished a book "An Immense World" by Ed Yong that goes into massive detail on exactly this subject. Highly recommend.
Loving the your mamma joke and the bad touch reference. 😆
This rabbit hole is deep! house pets detecting seizures and diabetes issues. Love this stuff
The Mantis shrimp and other animals that can see other parts of the light spectrum, there are also people that are able to see 4 colours instead of the normal 3.
My parents have a friend who is blind. When he visits them he can count the door frames between the guest room and the bathroom because the noise is different when it bounces off walls or doors (even closed doors). He also walked around their house when he visited the first time in several years and asked what the big thing in their backyard was, it hadn’t been there the last time he visited. They’d bought a caravan and he could hear the echo coming off a large object.
Yep. That's not quite echolocation/sonar (it's actually hearing the ambient resonances of the space), but even as someone who sees normally I've noticed that on occasion. The main trick is just paying more attention to the sounds around you in everyday life.
I always wondered how Narwhales travelled under the ice, only coming up in some spots, and how they did that without risking drowning.
Hello 👋 How are you doing??
There's a type of thrush called Veeries that are thought to be able to predict hurricanes. There was study and journal article by Christopher Heckscher and he found that nesting habits and number of eggs they lay are surprisingly accurate predictors of the next year's hurricane season severity.
Hello 👋 How are you doing today??
That might have been the best delivery of a "your mom" joke I've ever heard. Struggled to pay attention to the next few minutes of the video due to excessive residual hilarity.
Avoid Spam bot.
Report the bots
@@OkarinHououinKyouma yessir
I’ve met old hunters who found tricks to develop their own tremor sense. My uncle and his buddies used to stab Bowie knives into trees when they were hunting deer and put their ears to the pommels. If there happened to be a herd or a good sized pack of animals nearby they’d be able to feel a vibration. They weren’t superheroes, they couldn’t track a single deer from 500m by the hilt of a Bowie knife alone, but if there happened to be a large population of animals nearby it would lead them to it.
I think some people have relative superpowers. I always thought that a lot of people had a very bad sense of direction. After a while, I realised that they are normal and a few people have a very good sense of direction. I have a very good sense of direction and used to get frustrated when I had to deal with someone who had a poor sense of direction. But I have things that I'm personally quite terrible at! I don't think i have extra senses, I just think my brain processes sun direction better and my brain logs small ground features in my memory so i can use them. I am also very good at geolocation just by looking at a few photos.
As someone who has gotten lost Crossing the street, You're the super villain I never knew I needed in my life. 😂🍍
We have a cement factory near us that makes a lot of lighter surface rumbles (nothing Earth shaking, but I often "hear" the machinery thru slight vibrations in my house more so than I actually hear what they are doing with my ears. It reminds me of a deaf family I knew who loved music and "listened" to it via the bass vibrations rather than the actual sound in the air.
Something the natural compass section and the cryptochrome part made me think of: if we lack the “neurological hardware” to take advantage of our cryptochromes, could implanted technology (something like Neuralink) do it for us? Would it count as a new sense or an extension of sight? And if it counts as a new sense, would it weaken our other senses the same way lacking a new sense tends to strengthen our other senses?
*edited for spelling*
Videos like this are always a great time to remind ourselves that our senses are not a direct apprehension of the objective world as it is, but the complete and total transformation of just a sliver of the phenomena around us, into a real-time hallucination playing out in our individual brains. Color and sound are internal experiences only, generated by a mind in response to external stimuli. Although they have an analog in the external world, they do not actually exist outside of the mind.
Our brains construct an entire word for us with sensory input. We are totally subject to how our brains interpret what they perceive. We truly do live in our own reality.
2:03 - "Luckily we got this gelatinous blob that can brainificate real good..." I actually guffawed. My coworkers are now aware that I watch TH-cam at the office, and they now watch your channel.
I just wanted to say that I really need this today. I needed the laughs you gave me and I always enjoy the new knowledge I get from watching your videos. So thank you, Joe and team
this one of my most favourite videos from you Joe. keep going! really appreciate how you always manage to make things exciting and fun as a science channel :)
My Chihuahua kept smelling my left ear. He was very persistent. When I mentioned that to my Determitologist, he noticed a small spot on my ear lobe that turned out to be melanoma. I had surgery and my dog no longer is obsessed with my ear. Good dog..🐕
I can't tell u how much ur videos have helped with my depression ik u post educational videos but it's something about ur content delivery and light hearted feel which puts a smile in my face even in the worst days pls keep up the work
P.S looking forward for more random Thursday content
That yo mama joke tho...
1:33 That was unexpected, thanks for the great laugh Joe
9:03 oh, there you are, perry
Love the Tangent Cam - I need that in real-time when talking to anyone
When my kids were young I could smell the difference when they were sick and when I was pregnant with my youngest I could tell which of my coworkers was walking behind me by the way they smelled. 😳 it was bizarre
I can detect smokers (when they are not smoking), or people that are ill. My nose tickles when their breath is directed towards me.
smelling when my kids were sick! i found that once that switch got turned on, it never flipped off - i can smell when any family member is sick, days before they develop symptoms. it's accurate enough that family members start taking preventative measures asap
I could detect when my Pa forgot to take his Colcheciene (I am probably spelling that wrong, but this was over fifty years ago), a medication for gout. He would get a sickening sweet smell to his sweat. I suspect it was the smell of pain? The smell would also linger after he had used the bathroom. He wondered how I knew he forgot his pill, but every time I asked, he would check, and sure enough, there was a pill in his bottle, that should have been taken with the previous meal.
Also, planaria; the flatworms. You can cut them in half and the part without a head “remembers” things.
As a deaf person I can sort of describe what I would say is some form of "tremor sense." I do have cochlear implants which I wear most of the time, so my experience probably doesn't reflect that of people who have been deaf their entire lives.
But when I am without my implants, I would describe it as my brain involuntarily imagining a sound I feel. In other words, an automatic reconstruction of the sound based on some kinesthetic prompt. It's definitely not like ant-man, but I can recognize the "sounds" individual people's patterns of walking make, among other simple things.
video SO INTERESTING! a thought on dog-sniff diagnosis: as a breast cancer survivor, it was YIKES! to learn that unlike other cancers, we literally *have no way to detect breast cancer metastasis.* so you get your surgery/chemo/radiation...and then no blood test can help find metastasis for the *remainder of your liiiife* - you just have to wait till SYMPTOMS appear...by the time you have *cancer symptoms* you're in bad shape. If dogs could do semi-annual breast cancer screening, that would be HUGE.
Wow, thank you,Joe. I have been deaf in one ear for most of my life. I plan on researching the bone conducting headphones to see if they really work for the nerve deafness I have. You may have just changed my life!!!!! I’ll keep you updated. Grateful for you.
Hello 👋 How are you doing??
did they work
@@David_Robert_1 Hello to you. I am well , thanks! How about you?
@@jeanettecooper1582 Doing good thanks. Nice to meet you here
Well my name is Robert I’m originally from Texas USA. What’s about you?
Fun Video! Thank you! Horses. Horses being able to show eachother mental pictures. Blind horse with seeing-eye horse. AND being able to see the visualizations in your head when they are around you. Dogs. Dogs knowing when you are coming home without any clues. (including daily schedules).
Don't know about the horses (but they do have the uncanny ability of being able to hide behind themselves) but some the dog's ability to know when you are coming home, is thought to be down to the fading of your scent during the period of absence.
People that inplant small magnets on their fingers can gain the perception of electric fields. It’s kind of amazing and perhaps worth doing a video on!
Bonus fact: two weeks ago a Yellow-browed bunting was spot in the Netherlands for the first time since 1982. It’s so special because they live in Siberia in the summer and migrate to China in the winter. It’s hypothesized that this particular bird has its magnetism detection inverted compared to healthy individuals. That’s why it flew the other way around the world.
Magnetic fields not electric. I actually have several that are quite sensitive. They're useful for a lot of things from just realizing a magnet is nearby to determining if a power cable has a heavy load on it or if a piece of metal is magnetic or not.
@@ryanhebron4287 Magnetic electric, hence 'electromagnetism.'
@@ontheruntonowhere I'm just pointing out that electric and magnetic fields don't always go together. An electromagnetic field is present when current is flowing but the magnet part is missing when the wire has no load. I only point this out because its a common misconception that people with magnets can sense electric fields when in reality they can only sense magnetic fields whether created by electric currents or magnets.
@@ryanhebron4287 But electric and magnetic fields _do_ always go together. A wire without electricity is just a thing. But because an electric current creates a magnetic field (and vice versa), people with magnets can sense the field and deduce that it isn't being caused by another magnet. I'll take your point that technically it's not possible to tell without other evidence, but that evidence usually exists and is quite obvious...because it's a wire. Seems like a minor niggle.
Where did you hear this - inplant in fingers - I want to learn more, sounds wild!
That is the first totally original and absolutely non-cliché mom joke that I think I have ever heard. I actually laughed out loud. My hats off to you sir, good job.
humans have iron in our nosess that we can use for a sense of direction. I was told that if you sleep in a north south alignment it improves your sense of direction. Orienteering people told me this.
I learned echolocation as I was blinded for a couple of weeks. You can even distinguish materials and shapes of obstacles
That's a given. The cool thing is you can even "see" through things you can't see through with your eyes. Like a shower curtain, for example.
The trembler joke had me LMAO 😂😂😂😂
Your ability to subtly work in such juvenile your mom jokes into high concept educational points is amazing.
Wow. Thats one of your better episode. So many new interesting things. Keep going!
I took a class in "Non-destructive evaluation" in college, which basically means detecting fractures in materials without breaking open the structure. In our project, sensors shot acoustic waves through a rock, and if there was a fracture, the waves would bounce back to the sensors. We unpacked the data from the sensors and were able to create a 3D model of the cracks inside the rock, without ever having to open the rock up. It was pretty incredible
My wife has the ability to know when im trying to nap. If its within 200 meters of her, she can show up and give me chores that need to be done. Neat power.
😂👌🏼
Fun fact. I worked briefly for a pest control company that had a dog used to detect bedbugs…
Roscoe!? :)
Our dog got really interested in my lower tummy and less than two months ago they accidentally found out that I had cancer. It was so early on it didn’t show up in MRI, ultra sound or CT-scans. After surgically removing that cancer (it had not spread, no chemo etc needed) the dog lost interest in sniffing my tummy. Now, three years later my new dog shows interest in sniffing my tummy again, so it’s time to go see my doctor.
You mentioned heat sense (infrared) but left out that some critters can see ultraviolet (pollinators, birds). Some others can see polarized light. I'm sure there's a whole other video that could be done on plant sensing which is its own interesting world of light, chemo, and touch.
I often think about plants' "trophisms" and wonder how they sense what to do in various situations. Trees communicate through their roots with senses and "language" of their own. The secret life of plants, indeed.
I found your channel earlier today but what really sold me on subscribing was that random "your mom joke" in this video. Love it.
Narwhals, Narwhals
Swimming in the ocean
Causing a commotion
Coz they are so awesome
Narwhals, Narwhals
Swimming in the ocean
Pretty big and pretty white
They beat a polar bear in a fight
Like an underwater unicorn
They've got a kick-ass facial horn
They're the Jedi of the sea
They stop Cthulu eating ye
Narwhals
They are Narwhals
Narwhals
Just don't let 'em touch your balls
Narwhals
They are Narwhals
Narwhals
Inventors of the Shish Kebab
that was a blast from the past!
My dad had a giggle at some people doing their doctorate studies in how jelly sets, that work is now LCD screens.
I knew about the shark stuff, but not about some of the rest. Thank you for informing us of all that!
I hit the pause button! I've never considered this before but whenever I yawn, I go completely deaf. I never thought of it as a mute button before. I like that! Special at last....
Catfish whiskers are pronounced more like “bar-bills” or “bar-balls”. -from a life-long fisherman who also had a college course in ichthyology.
Beware the spambot reply
We have several senses we don't learn about as kids. Temperature, time, motion... All are senses. And though you can sort of make an argument for temperature being part of touch you absolutely can't with motion and time.
I really appreciate your channel Joe. Thank you helping me to brainificate this morning. 🙏
Brainificate added to my daily vocabulary.
Catfish are ruthless. My pops was a commercial fisherman so I grew up on a bay shrimp boat, people would be mind blown by some of the sizes of fish out in those waters, he used to catch gatorgars that would be 6-7 foot long and several hundred pounds, they’d destroy his nets so often times would break the snouts off and throw them overboardbut I also lived off a lake and there’s many many many underwater photos taken of catfish the size of small fishing boats, even a super famous one of a catfish about 150 foot down with a diver in front of the frame and the catfish had to have been 8-10 foot long and easily three times the size of the diver.