The syrup experiment is actually a very interesting result. It suggests that placebo is at least somewhat sub-conscious, and relies on information that the conscious brain doesn’t have direct access to. You might not be aware of a white blood cell decrease in your blood, but some part of your brain might, which likely increases the placebo effect beyond a fully conscious illusion. It could also explain how placebo can occur even when the patient is aware of it’s existence, as the sub-conscience could be influencing the body against the will of the conscious brain according to the findings of this study, much the same as it does during digestion or fast heart rate when you might not want a stomach movement to occur or for your heart to race, but your brain sends the signals to cause it regardless.
I'm wondering if this might somehow be gut related? We still understand so little about how our whole body communicates or how each body part might "think". The relationship of the gut to hormone production, the brain, and who knows what else is still being newly explored. I seriously wonder if the SYRUP was somehow the trigger. The gut "remembered" and then set off an assumed and unfortunate reaction. Almost like an allergy response? Just a theory. It makes me think about the case of a liver transplant and the person who received the liver woke up and discovered they had developed a life threatening allergy to a certain food. The same food the previous owner was allergic too. We still have so much to learn about our own body.
@@annalawrence824 probably not gut related as the placebo effect isn't specific to oral treatment. You can have the exact same thing with an injection for example.
I've also read that there's research suggesting that, even if someone *knows* it's just a sugarpill/placebo, the placebo effect is still somewhat effective in humans!
I respect people who are actually good at their field yet are still humble enough to admit "we dont't know (yet)". It just comes to show how giving accurate information to educate the society is as important as them performing their jobs.
I know right! It means they still have lots to learn... I'm more willing to listen to people like this than someone who throws up their hands and says "God did it that way!" (Now I'm not saying don't believe in God, just that god should be more than your ignorance!) The one about cat eyes is interning, it's like "Here's a hypothesis that *may* explain it, but we don't know."
That's what happens when people deal with facts and what can be proven, instead of faith and conspiracies. The more someone knows, the more they know how much they don't know. The less knowledgeable someone is, the less likely they are to know or admit how little they know.
Yea, even the thing about animals having slit pupils being nocturnal, we are all told that like it's a fact and this is the only time I've ever heard anyone call it a theory.
I took a basic 101 course in astronomy just to complete my degree. The beginning of the semester was very straightforward, and factual, but by the end of the semester, all of the information was uncertain, and we could only go over the data of what people had recorded so far. The professor mentioned several times that maybe one of us could go in to professional astronomy, in order to get closer to some of these answers. It was awesome.
I don't see the correlation. We had a veterinarian in my state a few years ago, possibly quite knowledgeable on various animals as well, but she was eventually arrested for posting videos of her killing cats in her neighborhood with a bow because she hates cats.
@@anaargg Just because someone knows a lot about different animals doesn't mean they love animals. Also, nice job posting your comment then liking it right away to remove any suspicion.
@@bodyrumuae2914 just because you anecdotally know about some psycho lady that killed cats doesnt mean you should distrust in the passions of normal people who love their jobs ya goofy goober
@@BioTheHumanI gathered they were excited, not anxious. With that I thought his answer was perfect. Forget about being excited, remember you’re there to do a job and get out alive 😂
@@Happy_Spatula South African accents vary a lot! Just like many countries, but SA especially because there are so many official languages. But this sounds authentically South African :)
As elephants have their own dialects, they can also recognize human languages and learn to avoid the groups most likely to hunt them. IIRC there has been actual science on the matter showing that they act more cautiously when audio of someone speaking the languages of tribes that hunt elephants is played around them as compared to the languages of tribes that don't or european languages (I don't quite recall the languages used in this experiment, I think the hunting one was Masai, and English was the control but I Could Very Easily Be Wrong). So at least they know how to take precautions.
@@celestinemorningstar4851it was Masai, and specifically male Masai. They didn't react the same way to female Masai, as they do not participate in the hunts.
@@robpolaris7272 they dont, they see or sense one getting killed and they're out. would you stay in an area where people are getting killed, legally or not? dont think so tbh
Questions are actually really good! Props to people who asked these questions and props to the doctor for being so informative and passionate in his answers
I’m an ER doctor, and many patient populations don’t talk either. However, they still show certain symptoms or have change of vitals signs. Not only that, blood tests and imaging helps too!
I love your accent and tone so much. It is so relaxing for some reason. Also preciseness of the answers also very engaging and easy to listen. This whole video is like an educational asmr
I remember seeing the pupil difference explained by the height of the animal in a zefrank video. Foxes and small cats have slit pupils because they’re lower to the ground and more useful to see through grass because it’s a lot of vertical lines? Or something like that. Whereas wolves and big cats have round pupils because they’re taller than grass so it wouldn’t really benefit them. Interestingly enough, goats have horizontal pupil that widen their field of vision and their eyes actually rotate to keep their pupils parallel to the ground. Easier to spot predators.
Yes you are completely correct. I would add that having slitted pupils will help smaller predators judge small distances, as most often times they leap on to their prey, and won't chase them.
Correct! It must also be considered that vertical and round pupils are better for focusing, while rectangular ones (like those of goats) are always oriented parallel to the ground regardless of the orientation of the animal's head to increase the range of vision. Returning to the vertical pupils, the difference is only noticeable during the day when there is a lot of light, at night the pupil dilates and becomes round. Lions and tigers hunt in all light conditions because the large animals they eat cannot hide in a cave, while cats almost always hunt at night when rodents come out to eat, so it would not be unusual for them to have greater sensitivity. to the light Sorry for the long comment!
Whoever came up with this format for WIRED needs a raise. Getting experts in all sorts of subjects like this to sit down and answer questions is a brilliant format, I might get addicted it to.
In Australia our songbirds often have a different song in different area. One suburb I lived in had lots of children. We all noticed the butcherbirds warble there had the first line of Happy Birthday to You in it but not in other places 😊
In every single country I've visited, the crows sound different. I swear in Japan they were softer and more mumbl-ey. In India they just caw and sound a bit hoarse. In the US they sound louder and more throaty. I've read that they have different accents in different regions. It's quite fascinating.
that's why attentiveness and logic is important when diagnosing an animal it's not just a lucky guess of what illness they may have based on a common symptom
For the "How to tell if a snake is a male or a female?" question: In some pet snake species, you can also tell by the length of the tail (and yes, the snake is not all tail, if you flip it upside down you can see a fleshy strip close to its end, that's where their butt and other things are and everything after that is a tail), when it's short and stubby it's a girl and if it's long it's a boy.
This was amazing. I feel like I just left a science class with the coolest teacher in school that’s incredibly passionate. Please more of this lovely human! ❤
Really like when he said "It's a good question because we dont know yet" or "there's still much to learn about it." so humble. this is how the world advanced.
Romain is an amazing highly respected vet, alway pushing boundaries and bringing elements of human and animal healthcare together when appropriate! Imagine being a zoo with Romain as your part time vet, Edinburgh Zoo held that honour for a while!
Please bring him back!! This isso fascinating and it's obvious he loves animals and loves educating people about them! Netflix needs to give him a show!!!!!!!!
Thank you for the information on the Russian study with the non-medicated syrup. I've always wondered how to respond to people who argue that pseudo-medicine obviously with no direct physical effect must be real because it works on animals, and animals can't experience the placebo effect. Usually people who say this are too far away to strike lightly with a rolled-up newspaper or inflated pig bladder, which of course would be the first scientific treatment.
It’s classical conditioning, where a stimulus produces an involuntary, physiological response. Pavlov discovered it ages ago when he conditioned dogs to salivate by ringing a bell.
@@charleschristianson2730 Interesting question, but I think it belongs more within the realm of cognitive science, which I find fascinating, and less in the realm of medical science. That is, how is the category _real_ constructed in the brain?
@@deadman746 Results are results. It's quite common in medicine to not know how or why a drug works, but use it anyway because it produces desired effects.
Giraffe horns are called ossicones, if anyone is curious (and okapis have them too!) They’re not technically horns because they’re permanently covered in skin, nerves, and hair, and depending on the species, giraffes can actually have anywhere between 3 and 5 - not just 2 🦒
I thought the pig question was interesting because my parents have a mini Juliana pig (mini being a relative term, Carl is easily 200lbs at least) and he has a straight tail. So some domesticated pigs don’t have curly tails! I personally like Carl’s straight tail because he wags it all the time which I find super cute and funny. I really liked the way this vet answered questions though! I love when you all have people on who answer animal questions.
Animals tend to have “accents” in different part of the world. Like humans, birds of the same species will sing a slightly altered song in different areas because the acoustics, sound pollution, and temperature affect how song travels.
Noooo! im a vet student rn, and I know how incredibly hard it is to stream into wildlife, but it has always been my passion to be a wildlife vet. Would love to hear his two cents on how he went into ot
The explanation I’d heard for why small cats have vertical slit pupils while large cats don’t has to do with their body size and predatory nature. If you look at the animals that have vertical slit pupils, they all tend to stand pretty low to the ground and be ambush predators, like small cats, crocodilians, and vipers. The shape of vertical slit pupils allows improved depth perception for low standing creatures. The benefit isn’t there for taller creatures, such as big cats. Horizontal slit pupils tend to be present in prey animals with their eyes on the sides of their heads. It helps them have a very wide, panoramic field of view while minimizing visual distortion in front of them.
13:50 is fascinating! It makes sense when I think about a larger cat's surface area to volume ratio, as a cat species gets bigger their insides get bigger much faster than their surface area and thus fur ingestion does!
The placebo effect works on my dog. I had to give her a med that made her sleepy twice a day. After she no longer needed it, I'd give her the treat. She'd go lie down, & take a nap. She still does whenever I give her the treat, & she loves them. It's fruit gummies snack treats. I just told it over the pill, & give it to her. They're also good training treats.
He’s an excellent instructor. Enthusiastic in a gentle way, he doesn’t dumb it down, but makes it understandable. He’s very engaging. This would be great for kids age 10 and up as well as adults.
I have watched a few videos now on this channel. This one was refreshing because this Dr was actually asked some really intelligent questions. Good job to those who asked these questions.
It reminded me of a joke: a vet comes to a human doctor for some issue. The doctor asks him: "What seems to be the problem?" The vet looks at him and replies:"Oh, you have it so easy anyone could do it!"
I love how he kept saying “but what’s MORE interesting” & shares really cool facts while still being on topic/answering the question. ❤
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wait, it says you have a reply...... and I can't expand it. How is that possible
@@leynenslucker2991 TH-cam is crappy.
🎓🥒🥒😎🚗❤️🥒🚗😎😭❤️😎🚗😎🔥😎😎🥒😎😎🥒🥒
@@leynenslucker2991 mk
The placebo question and answer is fascinating.
The syrup experiment is actually a very interesting result. It suggests that placebo is at least somewhat sub-conscious, and relies on information that the conscious brain doesn’t have direct access to. You might not be aware of a white blood cell decrease in your blood, but some part of your brain might, which likely increases the placebo effect beyond a fully conscious illusion.
It could also explain how placebo can occur even when the patient is aware of it’s existence, as the sub-conscience could be influencing the body against the will of the conscious brain according to the findings of this study, much the same as it does during digestion or fast heart rate when you might not want a stomach movement to occur or for your heart to race, but your brain sends the signals to cause it regardless.
That's what I'm here for. Placebo and nocebo effects are literally like miracles.
I'm wondering if this might somehow be gut related? We still understand so little about how our whole body communicates or how each body part might "think". The relationship of the gut to hormone production, the brain, and who knows what else is still being newly explored.
I seriously wonder if the SYRUP was somehow the trigger. The gut "remembered" and then set off an assumed and unfortunate reaction. Almost like an allergy response?
Just a theory. It makes me think about the case of a liver transplant and the person who received the liver woke up and discovered they had developed a life threatening allergy to a certain food. The same food the previous owner was allergic too.
We still have so much to learn about our own body.
@@annalawrence824 probably not gut related as the placebo effect isn't specific to oral treatment.
You can have the exact same thing with an injection for example.
I've also read that there's research suggesting that, even if someone *knows* it's just a sugarpill/placebo, the placebo effect is still somewhat effective in humans!
I just love how he narrates as if he was reading a bedtime story to kids but in fact he is explaining science to adults.
I never wanted him to stop talking 🫢
He even changed idk to “I’d like to know” 😂
Absolutely! I wonder if his calming ways are well-received by his patients... If I were lion I'd like this dude treating me ❤
Is he Australian? He sounds Australian to me.
I'm imagining a children's book where someone is up to the elbow in an elephant's butt, complete with cartoony watercolor illustration.
I respect people who are actually good at their field yet are still humble enough to admit "we dont't know (yet)". It just comes to show how giving accurate information to educate the society is as important as them performing their jobs.
I'd even say it's a mandatory trait to have if you want to be really good. Believing to know everything sounds like a mental disorder.
I know right! It means they still have lots to learn... I'm more willing to listen to people like this than someone who throws up their hands and says "God did it that way!"
(Now I'm not saying don't believe in God, just that god should be more than your ignorance!)
The one about cat eyes is interning, it's like "Here's a hypothesis that *may* explain it, but we don't know."
That's what happens when people deal with facts and what can be proven, instead of faith and conspiracies. The more someone knows, the more they know how much they don't know. The less knowledgeable someone is, the less likely they are to know or admit how little they know.
Yea, even the thing about animals having slit pupils being nocturnal, we are all told that like it's a fact and this is the only time I've ever heard anyone call it a theory.
I took a basic 101 course in astronomy just to complete my degree. The beginning of the semester was very straightforward, and factual, but by the end of the semester, all of the information was uncertain, and we could only go over the data of what people had recorded so far. The professor mentioned several times that maybe one of us could go in to professional astronomy, in order to get closer to some of these answers. It was awesome.
I could listen to him talk about anything. Soo calming.
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Agreed. Perhaps he should consider doing some sleep hypnosis videos, lol. Honestly!
Open the video in 3-5 tabs at the same time, each one half to one second apart.
every single expert who has been on this show needs their own podcast, audio book, or something like that - I will listen to those ALL DAY EVERYDAY
I could listen to any expert in their field talk with this much passion
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Agreed!
I like how he says everything like he's telling a secret.
You can tell how much he loves animals 🥺
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Especially seals
I don't see the correlation. We had a veterinarian in my state a few years ago, possibly quite knowledgeable on various animals as well, but she was eventually arrested for posting videos of her killing cats in her neighborhood with a bow because she hates cats.
@@anaargg Just because someone knows a lot about different animals doesn't mean they love animals.
Also, nice job posting your comment then liking it right away to remove any suspicion.
@@bodyrumuae2914 just because you anecdotally know about some psycho lady that killed cats doesnt mean you should distrust in the passions of normal people who love their jobs ya goofy goober
That South African accent is unmistakable! 😁😁 So good to see a South African on this page 🇿🇦🇿🇦
Oh that’s what it is. I’m Swedish and don’t hear this type of English very often.
I had initially wondered what I was hearing. It sounded like an Australian accent sold at a discount, so thanks for clarifying its true provenance. ;)
Hah, I thought it was. I've noticed if I hear an accent that kinda sounds Australian or Kiwi but doesn't quite match, it's usually South African.
I was confused. Like he sounded Australian for a minute then said a sentence that sounded more like a Southern US accent.
Was glad someone said it, I came to comments to find his accent. I thought he might have been a Eastern European person who moved to New Zealand
That placebo question was really good. You can tell how passionate this guy is. Keep these videos coming please. Other peoples' jobs are fascinating.
Except it wasn't an example of the placebo effect.
@@jessicaporter7517what
@@jessicaporter7517 it was, in a way. But the reverse.
Internet Person: "Operating on a big cat tomorrow and I'm so excited!"
Dr. Pizzi: "You know sometimes they wake up during surgery, right?"
Lol
Exactly my thought ahahah
I was like : "Wait, weren't you supposed to calm them? How can this help their anxiety?" 🤣
@@BioTheHumanI gathered they were excited, not anxious. With that I thought his answer was perfect. Forget about being excited, remember you’re there to do a job and get out alive 😂
Yep, adrenaline is brown!
I love his accent and passion for animals. He’s awesome ❤
🇿🇦🦁👑
South African!!! 💞
Ikr it’s attractive
@@OneStilettoAtATime I was wondering if it was pure . Sounded a bit like there was a hint of British accent . Maybe moved to Britain
@@Happy_Spatula South African accents vary a lot! Just like many countries, but SA especially because there are so many official languages. But this sounds authentically South African :)
The fact that elephants can hear when other elephants are being poached is heartbreaking. :(
As elephants have their own dialects, they can also recognize human languages and learn to avoid the groups most likely to hunt them. IIRC there has been actual science on the matter showing that they act more cautiously when audio of someone speaking the languages of tribes that hunt elephants is played around them as compared to the languages of tribes that don't or european languages (I don't quite recall the languages used in this experiment, I think the hunting one was Masai, and English was the control but I Could Very Easily Be Wrong).
So at least they know how to take precautions.
Do you have a citation? Would love to include it in an essay.
@@celestinemorningstar4851it was Masai, and specifically male Masai. They didn't react the same way to female Masai, as they do not participate in the hunts.
How can Elephants tell the difference between poaching and a legal shooting?
@@robpolaris7272 they dont, they see or sense one getting killed and they're out. would you stay in an area where people are getting killed, legally or not? dont think so tbh
Questions are actually really good! Props to people who asked these questions and props to the doctor for being so informative and passionate in his answers
A few of them, sure, but many of them (crocodile teeth, giraffe neck bones, etc) could have been answered with a simple google search.
I just learned about 800% more new information than I was expecting. This was awesome!
I absolutely love Dr Pizzi, I really hope he comes back for more content.
I could go for a slice of Pizzi
I’m an ER doctor, and many patient populations don’t talk either. However, they still show certain symptoms or have change of vitals signs. Not only that, blood tests and imaging helps too!
He's amazing! I love all of the facts he shared about animals! I hope we see him in another video!
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I could listen to this dude talk about animals for hours
I love your accent and tone so much. It is so relaxing for some reason. Also preciseness of the answers also very engaging and easy to listen. This whole video is like an educational asmr
I remember seeing the pupil difference explained by the height of the animal in a zefrank video. Foxes and small cats have slit pupils because they’re lower to the ground and more useful to see through grass because it’s a lot of vertical lines? Or something like that. Whereas wolves and big cats have round pupils because they’re taller than grass so it wouldn’t really benefit them. Interestingly enough, goats have horizontal pupil that widen their field of vision and their eyes actually rotate to keep their pupils parallel to the ground. Easier to spot predators.
Interesting topic of conversation, thanks for the mind food
Yes you are completely correct. I would add that having slitted pupils will help smaller predators judge small distances, as most often times they leap on to their prey, and won't chase them.
Correct! It must also be considered that vertical and round pupils are better for focusing, while rectangular ones (like those of goats) are always oriented parallel to the ground regardless of the orientation of the animal's head to increase the range of vision. Returning to the vertical pupils, the difference is only noticeable during the day when there is a lot of light, at night the pupil dilates and becomes round. Lions and tigers hunt in all light conditions because the large animals they eat cannot hide in a cave, while cats almost always hunt at night when rodents come out to eat, so it would not be unusual for them to have greater sensitivity. to the light
Sorry for the long comment!
Love Zefrank!
Just need to high five another Zefrank fan! Why is Jerry always trying to ruin him?🤣
Whoever came up with this format for WIRED needs a raise. Getting experts in all sorts of subjects like this to sit down and answer questions is a brilliant format, I might get addicted it to.
In Australia our songbirds often have a different song in different area. One suburb I lived in had lots of children. We all noticed the butcherbirds warble there had the first line of Happy Birthday to You in it but not in other places 😊
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Thanks for sharing this! I'm imagining hearing them and smiling broadly.😊
In every single country I've visited, the crows sound different. I swear in Japan they were softer and more mumbl-ey. In India they just caw and sound a bit hoarse. In the US they sound louder and more throaty. I've read that they have different accents in different regions. It's quite fascinating.
@@sapodilla25 they definitely do. Crows can develop regional dialects and even different murders will micro-communicate differently.
that's why attentiveness and logic is important when diagnosing an animal it's not just a lucky guess of what illness they may have based on a common symptom
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For the "How to tell if a snake is a male or a female?" question: In some pet snake species, you can also tell by the length of the tail (and yes, the snake is not all tail, if you flip it upside down you can see a fleshy strip close to its end, that's where their butt and other things are and everything after that is a tail), when it's short and stubby it's a girl and if it's long it's a boy.
Sounds like you are describing the cloaca. Could also tell on some snakes that retain the now vestigial spurs.
This was amazing. I feel like I just left a science class with the coolest teacher in school that’s incredibly passionate. Please more of this lovely human! ❤
Really like when he said "It's a good question because we dont know yet" or "there's still much to learn about it." so humble. this is how the world advanced.
Props to the team at wired that finds this specialists, they always manage to find charismatic and very interesting professionals.
WIRED did it again! The people they find for their videos are always top notch.
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But he got the sexing snake question completely wrong it’s the opposite of what he said 😂
Romain is an amazing highly respected vet, alway pushing boundaries and bringing elements of human and animal healthcare together when appropriate! Imagine being a zoo with Romain as your part time vet, Edinburgh Zoo held that honour for a while!
Thoroughly enjoyed this. Love how calm he is
This is one of the coolest episodes so far. I love when specialists sound so excited about what they are talking about!
Please bring him back!! This isso fascinating and it's obvious he loves animals and loves educating people about them! Netflix needs to give him a show!!!!!!!!
We need more of this guy. He's the best!!!
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that animal placebo question is genuinely fascinating. the fact they saw effect so many years later.
Thank you for the information on the Russian study with the non-medicated syrup. I've always wondered how to respond to people who argue that pseudo-medicine obviously with no direct physical effect must be real because it works on animals, and animals can't experience the placebo effect. Usually people who say this are too far away to strike lightly with a rolled-up newspaper or inflated pig bladder, which of course would be the first scientific treatment.
It’s classical conditioning, where a stimulus produces an involuntary, physiological response. Pavlov discovered it ages ago when he conditioned dogs to salivate by ringing a bell.
@@evilsharkey8954 Yes it is. Thus a plausible portion of the placebo effect. Non-human mammals are as subject to Hebbian learning as much as humans.
So if this "pseudo-medicine" works, how is it not real?
@@charleschristianson2730 Interesting question, but I think it belongs more within the realm of cognitive science, which I find fascinating, and less in the realm of medical science. That is, how is the category _real_ constructed in the brain?
@@deadman746 Results are results. It's quite common in medicine to not know how or why a drug works, but use it anyway because it produces desired effects.
Giraffe horns are called ossicones, if anyone is curious (and okapis have them too!) They’re not technically horns because they’re permanently covered in skin, nerves, and hair, and depending on the species, giraffes can actually have anywhere between 3 and 5 - not just 2 🦒
I've heard once that only male okapi have the ossiccones
"yeah snake surgeries are pretty cool, but let me tell you about snake necks because those are also cool" i love this man
He should make ASMR. I absolutely loved this video. He sounded like the kindest man ever.
Straight to the point, super interesting, knowledgeable and fascinating! I love this series
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This guy should do audiobooks
Not when he gets snake sexing questions completely wrong 😂
I love this man!!! His accent and excitement for animals is so pure ❤️ He knowledge is incredible 🥺
I need this guy doing an informational sleepcast - so soothing and definitely a scenario where you'd do some seriously cool sleep learning!
This is one of the most interesting videos of this format that I've seen. Really great questions, too.
Came here to say this!
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Please bring this guy back. I loved this so much!!!
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I thought the pig question was interesting because my parents have a mini Juliana pig (mini being a relative term, Carl is easily 200lbs at least) and he has a straight tail. So some domesticated pigs don’t have curly tails! I personally like Carl’s straight tail because he wags it all the time which I find super cute and funny.
I really liked the way this vet answered questions though! I love when you all have people on who answer animal questions.
I went to college with this guy back in the day, He was always giving out facts in class LOL glad to see him doing good!
Thats so cool. What were/did you study for?
@@gabs1224 oh me? nothing, i just enjoy spreading misinformation on the internet
😆
@@joelbautista9219 😂😂
@@joelbautista9219
Absolute madlad lmao.
I could listen to Dr Pizzi talk for hours, this was interesting and informative but also completely relaxing.
its the south africsn accent lol
Currently studying to be a veterinarian. Got kicked, it hurt. But this guy makes me realise that Im definitely doing the right thing. Love it!
He was really cool. I want to see more of him!
"idk" being read as "I'd like to know" rather than "i don't know" is such a great new perspective
there's something about wildlife professionals/experts/personalities speaking as if everything they're explaining is exciting and i love that
This guy is incredible!!! I’ve loved and learned about animals my entire life and I learned so so many new things
2:56, Placebo question here
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Animals tend to have “accents” in different part of the world. Like humans, birds of the same species will sing a slightly altered song in different areas because the acoustics, sound pollution, and temperature affect how song travels.
What a precious and obviously competent human being :)
He sounds so passionate about the topic and such a good story teller. ❤
Another wonderful expert and communicator with infectious excitement and curiosity. Love love this series!
Found this episode so interesting! Would love to see him answer more questions 😊
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I appreciate how professionally blunt he is.
Noooo! im a vet student rn, and I know how incredibly hard it is to stream into wildlife, but it has always been my passion to be a wildlife vet. Would love to hear his two cents on how he went into ot
ooh i love this vet! he's awesomely skilled
And incorrect in his information
th-cam.com/video/USbkGnoqrec/w-d-xo.html
Hippos are omnivores like humans
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The explanation I’d heard for why small cats have vertical slit pupils while large cats don’t has to do with their body size and predatory nature. If you look at the animals that have vertical slit pupils, they all tend to stand pretty low to the ground and be ambush predators, like small cats, crocodilians, and vipers. The shape of vertical slit pupils allows improved depth perception for low standing creatures. The benefit isn’t there for taller creatures, such as big cats.
Horizontal slit pupils tend to be present in prey animals with their eyes on the sides of their heads. It helps them have a very wide, panoramic field of view while minimizing visual distortion in front of them.
I love this expert so much. He’s so knowledgeable and passionate!
13:50 is fascinating! It makes sense when I think about a larger cat's surface area to volume ratio, as a cat species gets bigger their insides get bigger much faster than their surface area and thus fur ingestion does!
The Placebo question starts at 2:56
I ❤ how he totally, completely, effectively avoided that F-Bomb 😂
God Bless You Dr. Pizzi!
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Why, because words hurt your little feelings?
Definitely need to bring him back. I have so many questions!
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Not that he will answer them correctly. He failed on sexing snake question as it’s the complete opposite
I like most of these "Q&A's" but this was one of my favourites, interesting questions and an EXCELLENT presenter :)
The way this guy talks is so sweet, I hope to see him do another one of these
The placebo effect works on my dog. I had to give her a med that made her sleepy twice a day. After she no longer needed it, I'd give her the treat. She'd go lie down, & take a nap. She still does whenever I give her the treat, & she loves them. It's fruit gummies snack treats. I just told it over the pill, & give it to her. They're also good training treats.
That's conditioning not the placebo effect
He’s an excellent instructor. Enthusiastic in a gentle way, he doesn’t dumb it down, but makes it understandable. He’s very engaging. This would be great for kids age 10 and up as well as adults.
This guy is phenomenal and presents the info so interestingly (and nicely in a calm manner)!
Please have him back. So informative
Can I hire him to read to me?
More please! This is absolutely fascinating, and I love the way he speaks
so many vets talk so calm and soothing like this
PLEASE I NEED MORE OF HIM! 3RD PART PLEASE!
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I want more videos of him, he’s so pleasant to listen to.
This was easily one of the top three most interesting experts!!
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He is awesome! I am a veterinary herpetologist and love how he describes snake anatomy and surgical methods!
Wow! I love the way this Vet explains things !!!
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I could listen to this man talk all day, and his information was so clear and intriguing 😁
As a teen that really wants to be a vet, I find this video super interesting!! Thank you so much ❤
I have watched a few videos now on this channel. This one was refreshing because this Dr was actually asked some really intelligent questions. Good job to those who asked these questions.
What an amazing expert !i could listen to him talk for days 😊
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this was one of the best videos i have seen on this channel. Please bring back this Dr again
This was probably the best Wired X Support video I’ve ever seen
Seeing a South African on a page like this always makes me happy
"But we have to catch them first." I CACKLED
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The way my jaw DROPPED when he said a TIGER WOKE UP DURING SURGERY. 🤯
Humans can too
I was expecting him to complete that story, what happened after that? how is he still alive?
This episode was SO INTERESTING! I loved these facts!
I love him!! I would love to just converse with him all day, bring him back!
Ohh this guy was awesome, bring him again!
Easily my favorite one of these so far! Mesmerizing.
I want this guy to narrate my day
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I like this guy, he's so wise to say "we're not sure", unlike many I-know-all experts
It reminded me of a joke: a vet comes to a human doctor for some issue. The doctor asks him: "What seems to be the problem?" The vet looks at him and replies:"Oh, you have it so easy anyone could do it!"
His job is my dream job! I love listening to all the facts he has to share😊
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Talking like a true scientist, "We don't know yet". That's great!