Sign: ASK PROFESSOR SCIENCE
T-Rex: Once you've asked, I'LL go read his mail before he can answer!!
T-Rex: I'm almost CERTAIN I've got enough science training to do this!
T-Rex: Our first letter comes from Patty Cakes - an almost certainly fake name - who writes, "Dear Professor Science, I know movies work because when we see enough pictures in a rapid-enough sequence, they blur together to look like motion. Does this work for animals too, and do they need higher or lower framerates? P.S.: my name is real."
T-Rex: Oh dang I know nothing about animal vision!
Utahraptor: But I do!
Utahraptor: Dogs need 70+ frames per second to see motion instead of static images, while humans start to see it around 20 or so. So yeah, for some animals it is different.
T-Rex: Utahraptor! Who needs PROFESSOR SCIENCE when you've got friends who can speak authoritatively on any subject!
T-Rex: Also, weird that you'd compare dogs to HUMANS when we dinosaurs, with our well-understood vision whose capabilities are definitely fully understood, are right here.
Off panel: Yes