SciShow Tangents - Cats with Deboki Chakravarti - It Was a Dark & Stormy Month
Episode Date: October 12, 2021Thanks to Basepaws for sponsoring this episode. Check out Basepaws here: https://basepaws.com/?rfsn=6159575.bff641“It Was A Dark & Stormy Month" lumbers along with more frightful topics and fright...fully bad poetry!This week, an oft-requested and much anticipated topic: cats! These weird little goblins can steal our hearts even while infesting us with behavior-altering, poop-dwelling parasites! We must really love 'em! Need more Deboki in your life? Follow her on Twitter: @okidoki_boki! There you can find links to the myriad of projects she's involved in!Head to https://www.patreon.com/SciShowTangents to find out how you can help support SciShow Tangents, and see all the cool perks you’ll get in return, like bonus episodes and a monthly newsletter!A big thank you to Patreon subscribers Eclectic Bunny and Garth Riley for helping to make the show possible!Follow us on Twitter @SciShowTangents, where we’ll tweet out topics for upcoming episodes and you can ask the science couch questions! While you're at it, check out the Tangents crew on Twitter: Ceri: @ceriley Sam: @im_sam_schultz Hank: @hankgreen[Truth or Fail]Fact 1:https://phys.org/news/2021-07-dogs-people-lying.htmlFact 2:https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0003347296903206https://theaggie.org/2021/09/14/study-finds-domestic-cats-prefer-freeloading-to-working-for-food/Fact 3:https://www.eurekalert.org/news-releases/923830https://www.theatlantic.com/science/archive/2021/07/cat-genomes/619587/[Fact Off]Cats in development of cochlear implantshttps://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamaotolaryngology/fullarticle/1688121https://psycnet.apa.org/record/1931-04076-001https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/000348947208100514?url_ver=Z39.88-2003&rfr_id=ori:rid:crossref.org&rfr_dat=cr_pub%20%200pubmedhttps://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/000348947308200407https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4921065/https://www.jstor.org/stable/pdf/3220685.pdfhttps://www.mayoclinic.org/tests-procedures/cochlear-implants/about/pac-20385021[Ask the Science Couch]Cat tail movementshttps://www.nationalgeographic.com/pages/article/animals-behavior-cats-tail-body-languagehttps://brill.com/view/journals/beh/56/1-2/article-p69_3.xml  https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/7696400/https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/2074215/https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0166432897001010http://www.architalbiol.org/index.php/aib/article/view/138271/[Butt One More Thing]Cats sitting and not flipping over litter boxeshttps://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0168159114002366?via%3Dihub
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello and welcome to SciShow Tangents, the frightly competitive science knowledge scream
case.
I'm your ghost for this week, Sam Skulls.
And joining me this week, as always, is mad scientist Scary Riley.
Ruh-roh.
And our very scary special guest, Deboki Chakravarti.
Hello.
I realized I was supposed to come up with a scary way to say hi, but...
Deboki is Tangents' editorial assistant, and she's here sitting in for me, and I'm sitting in for Hank, because it's Pizzamas, and in addition to Halloween.
So Hank doesn't have the time of day for us.
He's too busy helping charity.
So that's why I'm here being the host, and this is my introduction question.
Do you have any nice memories of Halloween as children?
Oh, that's such a wholesome
question. Hank's always come out of left field. How does your butt feel on Halloween?
Yeah. What is the oldest and most rancid piece of candy you've ever eaten?
That is a Hank. That's a really good question. Did you do Halloween as children? Yeah. I mean,
mostly my memory is just like the spreading out of candy with friends after and trading.
Yeah.
Which is a happy memory.
I feel like efficient consumption of candy, making sure everyone's optimized what candy they get is very happy.
So you went out on like a big crew trick-or-treating?
It was like a three or four person crew.
And like one of my friends lived in, you know, the good neighborhood to get candy from.
How late did you trick-or-treat how old were you when you stopped i feel like the last time i went was maybe when i was in eighth grade okay that's a good time to
stop yeah you can't go trick-or-treating in high school or else you're gonna get your ass kicked
so my wholesome story maybe it's not so wholesome is the one time I went not quite trick-or-treating in high school.
Me and four or five friends, you can tell we were a bunch of nerds, dressed up as Christmas carolers.
And so we would ring doorbells on Halloween and sing a Christmas carol.
That's amazing.
I hate this and I hate you.
That's pretty good, though.
How did people react?
They were very surprised for the most part.
I think they reacted exactly like you did.
At first, they were like mad.
And then they were like, oh, this is actually kind of funny.
Okay, well, great.
Thanks for talking to me about Halloween.
Every week on Tangents, we get together to try to unnerve,
discuss, and horrify each other with science facts
while trying to stay on topic.
Our panelists are playing for Gory,
and they're also playing for Sandbox,
which I will be awarding as we play.
And at the end of the episode,
one of them will be crowned the winner.
And for this most horrible, awful, bone-chilling month of all,
we'll be focusing on some traditionally eerie topics.
We talked about storms last week,
and this week it's a surprise what we're talking about
if you didn't read the title.
But also each week we will all collaborate
on an exquisite corpse science poem.
If you don't know what exquisite corpses are
and you didn't listen to the last episode,
they're collaborative poems where everyone takes turns
adding the next word of a poem
without being able to see the words
that were added previously.
So then you unfold the piece of paper
and it's a big surprise poem.
I cheated a little bit and I make ours sound a little bit better
than maybe they otherwise would, but we'll get there.
Does it rhyme this week? I guess we'll find out.
It rhymes a little bit. We tried.
We tried out rhyming and you know what?
It kind of worked in a few different places,
mostly because we all accidentally picked words that rhymed with each other.
This one's much better. So buckle your seatbelts.
And now we introduce this week's topic of terror with our exquisite corpse science poem read to us by Deboki.
A whisker twitch, a tricky mouse.
With a purr, the predator waits.
Swipe of a paw, the house is quiet.
Hunter of the domestic realm, its claw raw peril peril a hiss from a fish stinging maw a ball
of smelly yelling snack wanting belly boy attacks its dish with fangs made for meat
beans careening through the room blank eyes hide an evil mind curled at the witch's feet, thinking of murder.
That was a scary voice, Devoki.
Yeah, very sinister.
That was like a murder podcast voice.
Well, great job.
So the topic this week is cats.
Sari, what is cats?
Scientifically speaking, the word cat refers to generally any member of the felidae family
of mammals.
So like carnivores get split into cat-like carnivores
and dog-like carnivores.
The classic divide.
Yeah, but cat can also refer more specifically nowadays
to the domestic cat, which is the species Felis catis.
We all have cats, so I'll just keep describing my cat. She's kind of chunky.
She has primordial pouch. Wait, what is a primordial pouch? That is to keep their guts
safe. Is that true? I think so. I didn't actually research this. My partner, Sylvia, always tells me
this fact. So a really reliable source. A really concrete source.
It's like a flap of skin that holds all their guts together.
But more importantly, I think, it's like the loose belly that hangs below a cat,
both male and female, and kind of swings around.
And it's so that if they get attacked,
they have all this loose skin that can be jostled around
before a predator can get to their organs, I think.
So it's like a bullfighting.
They have the red cape.
Cats have their little swishy primordial pouch.
And it's so cute, but like all things on a cat,
help it to murder better, right?
And not be murdered in return.
Yeah, help them twist around.
Okay. And where does the word cat come from?
So the word cat is thought to be from the late Latin catis, which was first used around the 700s, so like the 6th century.
And before that, I think because it wasn't white people, we don't really know.
And by we, I mean the online dictionary that I look at for these etymologies.
I'm sure some people know.
But it is probably derived from an Afro-Asiatic or Nubian or Arabic word.
Because there's like a similar word. think in arabic it's it basically sounds
like cat i just can't pronounce the the letters correctly which makes sense because that's where
domestic cats originated and so they would have the word for cat and then talk about it and by
the time greeks and romans learned about it they were like oh that's a cat I'm gonna take that word now
yeah have you did you look at all into why we think cats are spooky yeah like how did the the
cat witch thing come about it seems like the Catholics we're just looking at things to blame
because like we've mentioned cats were domesticated in like the fertile crescent
region and egyptians
they had rituals involving cats and thought of them with high esteem um and so those rituals
could have evolved or morphed through cultural exchange to pagan rituals and christians didn't
like that that makes sense because like there's got to be opposing forces sure so when pope gregory the ninth
but probably other popes too were warning against witchcraft and paganness they started associating
black cats with lucifer and the devil and just started like decrying random witchy type animals like frogs
and ducks and cats ducks why ducks i don't know they're kind of an outlier there they are spooky
at all oh no i think i would be pretty scared i don't maybe i'm just lumping them in with geese
but i i don't i don't know if i would trust them no i guess if you ran into a duck at night that
might be kind of a different story. Yeah.
Anyway, so I think a powerful person
was just like,
ooh, cats bad.
Cats.
And then everyone
took that idea
and ran with it
to the point where
even today,
like, people
are less likely
to adopt black cats
and especially
around Halloween times
are, like, really mean
to black cats
on the street.
Yeah.
Okay.
Well, now it's time to move into our game for the week.
So cats are one of the greatest animals of all time, in my opinion.
And they inspired one of the greatest musicals of all time.
Cats.
Unfortunately, I have never seen cats.
But I have seen the movie, which is also pretty good.
So this week, to celebrate cats and cats, I present to you Truth or Fail Cats, the musical,
the movie, the game.
So it's just.
So I will present you with three facts about cats, but two of them are not real.
Two of them are dirty cat lies and one of them is a dirty cat truth.
And you will have to
decipher and divine from my trickery which one is the true fact so here's fact number one
mcavity the napoleon of crime is a world-class deceiver but he and his cat kin may be able to
tell when they're being deceived as well earlier this year a study found that cats knew when a
human that they had been trained
to trust started to lie to them about which of two containers held a hidden treat. Other animals
tended to continue to trust the human even when they saw the treat be put into the bowl that the
human was not calling them to. The animal would see them doing it in all of the studies. So they
knew which one it was and then the person would be like, it's this one. And then they'd have to
see if they trusted him or not still.
Fact number two, Bustopher Jones, the cat about town, is known for his love of a free meal.
But a recent study found that, contrary to cats' reputation as moochers,
they are actually one of the most likely of all animals to turn their nose up at a free meal.
When given the option between a free meal, just like sitting in a bowl
out and easy to get, and one that they had to work for by solving a food puzzle, cats almost
always went for the puzzle first. Many animals, when given the choice, will tend to go for the
free meal first. The researchers theorize that by leaving the free meal alone, the cats are assuring
that they will have a meal if the harder to get meal disappears. So they're saving their easy food for later.
Fact number three, the cats in the movie Cats were uncanny valley nightmares.
Part cat, part man.
And real world cats are maybe a little more similar to people than you'd think too.
Recent genetic sequencing suggests that the cat genome might be closer to the human genome
in terms of structure than any animal outside of apes.
A cat is not a dog,
but they ain't too far away from humans in some ways.
So the three facts are, number one, cats know when they're being lied to. Number two,
cats will turn their nose up at a free meal. Number three, cats and humans have very similar
genetic structure, which is the true fact.
This is one of those ones where even if the first one is a lie, like if you're making up that cats like can tell a lie, like I know that my cat knows when I'm lying.
Oh, it's it's he knows when he's going to go to the vet and he knows when i'm trying to like bait him he knows when i'm
gonna try to grab him like he knows and he just has a deeply suspicious nature does he trust you
in good times like does he know when you actually have a treat and just like
want to hang out yeah he knows when like i have a treat for him like he can't figure out my lies
sometimes i'll like hold up my fist as if i have a treat in it and kind of like make a throwing motion.
That's a nasty one.
And then I'll be like really mad.
How is he supposed to know?
I know.
Yeah.
So I feel like it's fair.
But that's not enough for me to feel necessarily.
Because I don't know that he trusts anyone else either.
Like, so that's the thing is like, I don't know if this is an issue of like being taught to trust a specific person
versus just like his general untrusting nature.
Sure.
I also immediately was like, oh, one must be true
because Inky can also tell when I'm trying to get her to do something.
And I can sort of trick her into, she takes a pill every morning
and now it's like a routine
where if I give her other treats
in addition to like the pill pocket treat,
then she'll eat it.
But if not, she just won't eat the pill plain or-
You gotta buy her off.
Yeah, I've gotta pay her off
to do the thing that I want her to do.
And sometimes she still betrays me.
She like will eat around, she'll eat the pill pocket around the pill and then spit it out so that she can get more treats because I want her to do. And sometimes she still betrays me. She like will eat around,
she'll eat the pill pocket around the pill and then spit it out so that she can get more treats
because I'll give her more. But that's just, that's just being wily. That's not like a criminal
mastermind. But I could see cats being distrustful. The second one about turning their nose up at food.
In my experience,
cats are really lazy.
So, I don't know. I don't think there's ever a time.
Maybe not. Well, okay.
Would your cat
turn down a free meal is what I want to know.
Yeah, would Leeloo? You can't ask me
questions like that.
I know for a fact that she eats
so fast that she pukes
because she loves food.
So,
that's a no
from Sam.
Two,
absolutely fake.
If it's the real one,
I'll go eat some cat food.
And the third one.
Wow.
Okay, wait.
Are you willing to lock down
that statement?
I'll eat one piece of cat food
if it's the real one okay i feel like
one rings so true to my experience that i'm gonna overthink myself out of it so i just gotta go with
it i'm also gonna go with one we're gonna underthinkpes because that's the one is fake fact number one is about
dogs patooey patooey the opposite of a cat oh uh the experiment presented the dogs with two bowls
one empty one containing a treat the dog saw which one the treat was in the human led them to the
correct bowl a bunch of times and then started trying to lead them to the correct bowl a bunch of times, and then started trying to lead them to the wrong bowl,
but the dogs did not fall for it.
And asterisks, I don't think they've tested cats on this, but...
If you tested our cats, then they would absolutely distrust you.
But monkeys and even human children were more likely to follow the advice of the liar
than dogs were.
So dogs are smart, I guess. here's number two this one's not true this one's not true you don't have to eat cat food oh my goodness okay
cats have actually been found to be the most lazy of all animals in looking for food almost every single other animal
including pets including pet dogs like pets and pet dogs and giraffes and all kinds of stuff will
tend to favor a meal that they have to work for which is a behavior called contra freeloading
and people are not like scientists aren't entirely sure why animals prefer to work for their food
but they think that it might be because animals
need to test the reliability of harder to get food. And they just are instantly suspicious of
easy to get food. So just in case food becomes unavailable, they know really well how to get
the harder to get food. Cats, on the other hand, are huge freeloaders. And in a home environment,
cats studied chose free food every single time that they were given the option and they never would ever try to solve a puzzle.
Because why would you?
They're smart.
Why would they?
That's stupid.
That's like the whole reason they got domesticated in the first place.
They were like, oh, food over here?
This guy's going to give me food, so I don't have to do this shit anymore.
Yeah.
And fact number three is the true one.
The cat genome has recently been mapped thoroughly
and it was found to be arranged
very similar to the human genome,
more so than other common lab animals like mice.
And the similarity may also include DNA
that we don't know the function of in our own genome.
So that's sometimes called dark matter DNA.
So the thought is,
if we start messing with cat DNA
turning things on and off we'll be like ah
that makes the cat be inside out
and we'll know that and we can just assume
it makes the human be inside out and we don't have
to actually turn a human inside out to figure
that out so sorry
cats you shouldn't maybe be so similar to
us because now we're going to do bad things to you
but we still love you
that got dark so fast yeah it's a halloween episode okay
so that leaves us with the score yeah two big brains guys zero to zero
well now we're going to take a short break and then it will's time for the Fact Off.
Our panelists have brought science facts to present to me in an attempt to blow my mind.
I don't think I've ever been the recipient of a Fact Off before, except back when I used to commonly be the recipient of a fact off.
After they've presented their facts, I will judge them and award sandbox any way that I see fit.
But first, to decide who will present the first fact, here's a trivia question for you.
Cats are a known predator of rats, so naturally researchers put them in a coliseum test box
together incited them to attack and recorded the results under a variety of conditions
one of those conditions was blindfolding the cats compared to trials that just had a cat and a rat
in a box what percentage of attacks were completed when they blindfolded the cat so like a hundred
percent i imagine you could assume that pretty close to 100% would be the non-blindfolded cat.
Yeah.
It was not presented with that information.
Compared to that.
Well, I don't have good anecdotal data for this one because my cat...
You ever blindfolded your cat and put it in a coliseum with a rat?
Maybe like 20%? 20%. Taboki, what do you think?
I feel pretty optimistic about their ability. I'm going to say 50%. The answer is 68%.
Oh my gosh. Good. Blind hunting, huh? Wow. I was going to guess 70%.
Wow. I was going to guess 70%. Their bloodlust cannot be stopped even under any condition. So Deboki, would you like to go first or would you like to make Sari go first? they always understand what those laws are. Researchers have been trying to untangle just
how well cats understand causality, which is when you understand that there's some kind of force
connecting to events. In 2009, scientists tested this out with baited string, where cats had to
pull a string toward them to get food or a treat that was attached at the other end. And they were
pretty great at this when there was one string, but if there were two strings, whether those strings were like in parallel to each other or if they were
crisscrossed, they had a really hard time picking out which was the right string, like which string
actually had the treat at the other end, which suggests that they weren't super great at causality,
at least when it comes to the physical properties of string. But a few years later,
comes to the physical properties of string. But a few years later, scientists were like, hey,
maybe we're looking at the wrong skills. Cats rely heavily on sound to hunt. So a team decided to see if cats could use sound to predict some kind of effect. They decided to test this out by shaking
a container in front of a cat. So the container would either make a rattling sound or not when
shaken. So when you shake it, either it's rattling or it's quiet.
And then there was like a turning over phase where the experimenter would turn the container over and either an object would fall out or nothing would fall out.
So there's like two sets of conditions where like the physics makes sense.
You can have the case where the container rattles when you shake it and then you turn it over and something falls out.
So it feels like there's an object in there and then you actually see the object fall out.
And then there's the case where there's no sound and no object.
So those are the two physically possible cases.
And then you have the two possible conditions that don't make sense physically.
So that's where the container makes a sound but no object falls out.
Or the container doesn't make a sound but an object falls out or the container doesn't make a sound but an object falls out.
So when they tested out those four conditions on 30 domestic cats, they found that when the
container was shaken, the cats tended to look longer at containers that made a sound. And when
the container was turned over, the cats tended to look longer when the conditions didn't make sense.
So when it was those two physically kind of impossible conditions.
So to the researchers, these results suggest that cats have some kind of understanding of the causality around sound that they use to predict the presence of things that they
can't actually see and that they might even have a very basic understanding of gravity
that they rely on to hunt.
Wow.
I love that. Just like you get to look at confused cats. that they rely on to hunt. Wow.
I love that.
Just like, you get to look at confused cats.
Sadly, when I was looking at these different papers,
I could not find videos of these experiments.
But I do really want to try one.
And the containers that they used for those experiments were cool too.
I think they were containers that had a special kind of like magnetized lid situation going on. So there were like little
iron ball bearings
in the container that would like either rattle or
not rattle but there was a switch
that would like attract the ball bearings
to the lid. So that's like how they
changed the sound and like falling
out conditions. Oh you know
how else they could have done it?
They got two different cans.
But then the cats would have seen you switch them out and then it would have been a whole
other experiment. I guess. Yeah. Cats, they understand deception.
Cats are so much better than dogs, I would say.
Okay. So when you think of model organisms used in research, things like
fruit flies or mice or maybe zebrafish come to mind. But here's a weird one. I guess it's a
little less weird because of your truth or fail fact. But cochlear implants probably wouldn't
exist without cats. And the basic way a cochlear implant works is by taking sound as input,
skipping over damaged parts of the ear, and delivering electrical signals to auditory
nerves in the cochlea, which is the spiral-shaped inner ear cavity. And experiments where scientists
tried to use electricity to stimulate hearing started around the mid-1700s and 1800s with
human subjects, including themselves. But eventually, we had questions that, as far as I can tell,
felt unethical or unanswerable by testing human ears and brains.
So by 1930, some researchers had started looking at how cats' auditory nerves process sound.
So basically the question of dark matter DNA, but ears instead.
It's a question of dark matter DNA, but ears instead.
The biggest question I had was why cats?
Because, like, I didn't know that they were genetically similar.
I doubt these scientists did.
And after reading many of these old papers, I don't have a hugely satisfying answer, but I can relay their written down logic.
The explanation offered in a 1930 paper was, number one, cats are pretty smart, or as they framed it, stand fairly high in the animal scale.
Number two, scientists had experimented on cat ears and brains before,
so they kind of knew what they were doing, at least more than other mammals.
And number three, cat hearing is similar to humans,
which we now know is true on the low end of frequencies,
though cats are way better at hearing high frequencies than us. And that's kind of all hand-wavy, but I think it laid the foundation for further cat-based hearing experiments,
a once-you-pop-you-just-can't-stop kind of rationale.
Oh no. What did they do to them?
Yeah. So in the 1960s, for example, there was a team at Stanford University who tested some electrical hearing technologies for human ears and coined the term cochlear implant in 1967.
But whenever there was research on humans, more in-depth cat experiments were just around the corner.
team hooked up a bunch of wires and electrodes into cat inner ears and brains to see what happens if you send electrical signals directly to the cochlea nerves and compare that with sending an
acoustic signal to sort of echo around the inner ear. Because of those invasive wires, they pretty
directly compared how electrical and acoustic signals got transmitted to the inferior colliculus
region of the brain
where sound is processed.
And they figured out that the direct nerve stimulation was more effective than the acoustic
signals for hearing.
And to explain why cats, they mostly repeated the same threads of logic from decades earlier,
like using cats as a way to avoid ethical concerns if their test subjects got hurt or
died, which did happen.
RIP some cats.
But from the research angle, cat brains process sound similarly to human brains,
integrating information from both ears and having pretty clear pathways from auditory nerves in the
cochlea to auditory nerves in the brain. So they could glean useful data and apply their findings
pretty directly to human ear systems. So maybe it's just because domestic cats were nearby and had keen ears,
or maybe because the scientists secretly knew that cats shared a lot of DNA with humans,
they became key players in understanding how we hear,
from mapping auditory nerve pathways to testing cochlear implant technology.
Thank you, cats.
And we only had to cut open their brains.
And put electric wires in them and be like,
can you hear me now?
Well, now I have
to award the winner
the crown. And usually
Hank's been doing it, but we'll make a better
TikTok. I guess we could do that same
metric. But, you know,
actually, I can't stand by a fact where cats' brains are getting cut open.
That's very cool.
I figured.
I figured it would make you too sad.
It's spooky, though.
Ooh, brains.
You can't hurt them.
You can only mildly trick them, which is why, Jaboki, you are the winner of Fact Off.
And thus the winner of the entire show with a score of one to
zero that's true your fact is also really really cool yeah i just don't want to think about their
little brains getting cut open come on that's fair all right and now it is time to ask the
science couch where we ask listener questions to our creepy couch of devious scientific minds
this week's question is from elisa mayor who asks do cats move their tails on purpose and why i don't
know my cat just sits there and it swishes all around randomly i can never divine any kind of
intentionality or like emotion from what it's doing but then sometimes she taps it and that
always freaks me out yeah isn't there't there like an angry cat tail tap?
Oh, is that an anger thing?
I thought so.
I mean, if it's not, I'm going to revise a lot of things.
Oh, no.
We lose angry a lot then because she just sits there and does that like all the time.
I mean, presumably it's like any other kind of communication then where maybe it's an individual thing.
I think that's it so in in the way that cats use tails for social signals i think it's a case-by-case
basis because your cat communicates in the way that it has learned to and has received feedback
from but generally uh from what i was reading if it's thumping its tail, then it's some sort of like very focused
or grumpy or like thinking about something. And if it's like swishing more lazily, then that's
like relaxed thinking in the same way that we might tap our fingers or scratch our heads when
we're thinking. So despite how much we would want to know about this question or like the
average person would think about their cat communicating, there isn't a lot of formal
scientific literature on it. And that's not to say that people aren't looking into it. It's just like
my usual ways of researching the Ask the Science Couch question were kind of tapped as far as like using peer-reviewed research but i did learn about one type of
voluntary movement so cats moving their tails on purpose with respect to balance like we would move
our arms to get grab something or uh like to provide a counterweight. So there was one study where they had cats,
they described it as like climbing on beams
and things like that.
And when they were walking normally,
they wouldn't use their tail.
Their tail would just like move involuntarily,
swishing around.
But if they jostled the beam to throw the cat off balance,
then their tail would go in the opposite direction that they were falling to like provide a counterweight so that they could catch their balance.
There was also another study on falling cats, falling a safe distance, but they would rotate their tail in the opposite direction that their body is rotating to like help provide a counterweight as they're
flipping around to land on their feet. Pretty smart. Yeah. So there is moving their tails on
purpose for balance reasons. Also probably moving their tails on purpose for communication reasons.
But then there's also probably a bucket of involuntary, absent-minded tail movement.
And it's actually very strange to me that we haven't studied cat tails more.
And maybe I just don't know anatomy very well.
But I looked into the anatomy of a tail to see if I could glean anything from that.
But there are 18 to 23 vertebrae or bones.
They're bigger at the base and get smaller towards the tip.
So like the tail tapers. But there are six tail muscles on each side of the tail for very precise movements like to go back and forth or to curl up or to curl down or to rotate and that seems like a lot of muscles
so i feel like there is a lot in cat tails that we don't understand and for some reason haven't looked into, probably because behavioral research is really tricky.
When the extent of studies you can do is like, does my cat look confused as it's pouring out at like the scientific can?
But they're capable of very strong and very precise movements of their tail.
So, yes,
they move it on purpose and we don't know why all the time.
And that's okay.
If you want to ask the science couch,
follow us on Twitter at SciShowTangents,
where we'll tweet out the topics for upcoming episodes every week.
Thank you to at Myrthalia,
at Cabler Kirby,
and everyone else who tweeted us your questions for this episode.
Deboki,
thank you so much for being here.
We've been saving the cat episode for you for like a year or something, I feel like.
Thank you for having me. Thank you for saving this episode for me.
Yes, of course. I hope you enjoyed yourself. Do you have anything to plug?
Yeah, I had a podcast series that came out in the month of August. It's like a four episode
little pop-up series for Scientific American's Science Talk podcast. And I talked about some science books that I've been reading
and just kind of like talked about the science I learned and some other things. So if you want to
check that out again, you can just go to Science Talk and look for the Summer of Science Reading
pop-up series. Do you use your Murder Mystery podcast voice? It's a little less murdery, but
still, hopefully at least a little
mysterious.
And of course, you can see and hear more
Deboki at Journey to the Microcosmos,
the YouTube channel. Oh, and also
Crash Course Organic Chemistry. Yes,
you're all over the place. Yeah, Deboki's a
much harder get than Hank, so
this is why we have to save special episode
topics. And also, Hank isn't here, like I said earlier, because it's Pizzamas. So you can go to D than Hank. So this is why we have to save special episode topics. And also Hank isn't here
like I said earlier because it's Pizza Miss.
So you can go to DFTBA.com
to find all kinds of Pizza Miss merchandise
that you can buy that has Hank's
brother John's face on it with
a mustache that says pizza underneath.
And people love it. And you will too.
So go check out Pizza Miss. If you like this show
and you want to help us out, it's really easy to do that.
First you can go to Patreon.com slash SciSoo Tangents to become a patron and get access to
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Now I have to include piss in my story.
Second, leave us a review wherever you listen.
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Thank you for joining us.
I have been Sam Schultz.
I've been Sari Reilly.
And I've been Deboki Chakrabarty.
SciShow Tangents is created by all of us
and produced by Caitlin Hoffmeister and me, Sam Schultz,
who edits a lot of these episodes
along with the horrible Hiroko Matsushima,
our scary social media organizers,
Paola Garcia Prieto.
I forgot I put the scary words in here.
Editorial assistant is Deboki Chakrabarty.
Didn't give you a scary one.
I already said a scary one for you earlier.
Our sound design is by joseph buna medish and we couldn't make any of this without our putrid patrons on patreon thank you and remember the mind is not a coffin to be filled but a
jack-o'-lantern to be lighted But one more thing.
Cats can get stressed in new environments, but there's ways to help them through it, like giving them a box.
environments, but there's ways to help them through it, like giving them a box. Researchers have found that cats with a box to hide in during the first few weeks in a new space have a lower
urine-cortisol-creatine ratio, which is a biomarker of lower stress levels. And if they don't have a
hiding box, some cats will flip over their litter box to make one. So by giving your new cat something
calming to put its butt in you might
have an easier time cleaning what comes out of it if it fits it sits and it doesn't shits
i'm really trying to get that stinger at the end i think you i think you did it i think that's all
we need that was great