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80 results for "cortical development" — page 1 of 4
K_3_10 — Fetal and Infant Consciousness
The question of when consciousness emerges during human development — whether prenatally, at birth, or gradually through infancy — is one of the most consequential in consciousness studies, with direct implications for f
K_5_17 — Neuroplasticity, Cortical Reorganization, and Brain Self-Repair
Neuroplasticity — the brain's ability to reorganize its structure, function, and connections in response to experience, injury, or environmental demand — has transformed neuroscience from a static model ("the adult brain
T_1_17 — Educational Psychology: Learning, Development, and Instruction
Educational psychology — the scientific study of how humans learn and how instructional environments can be optimized to support learning — integrates cognitive psychology, developmental theory, motivation research, and
ZE_5_12 — Ethics of Children: Rights, Development, and Moral Status
The ethics of children addresses a fundamental puzzle: children are full human beings deserving of moral respect, yet they lack the autonomy, rationality, and experience that ground many standard moral and political righ
ZE_1_10 — Moral Psychology and Development
Moral psychology investigates how humans actually make moral judgments, develop moral capacities, and experience moral emotions — bridging empirical research and philosophical ethics. Developmental approaches: Jean Piage
R_3_17 — Neoteny & Heterochrony: Developmental Timing in Evolution
Heterochrony — evolutionary change in the timing or rate of developmental processes — is one of the most powerful mechanisms by which organisms evolve new morphologies without requiring entirely new genetic programs. The
Z_3_01 — Genetics of Brain Development — ASPM, Microcephalin, HAR1
The human brain is approximately three times larger than expected for a primate of our body size, with a vastly expanded cerebral cortex containing ~86 billion neurons. Identifying the genetic basis for this extraordinar
ZC_5_08 — Development Studies: Modernization, Dependency, and Post-Development
Development studies is an interdisciplinary field examining the economic, social, political, and cultural processes by which societies become "developed" — and critically interrogating what "development" means, who defin
T_1_04 — Developmental Psychology — From Piaget to Attachment Theory
Developmental psychology traces psychological changes across the human lifespan, from prenatal development through aging. Jean Piaget's cognitive stage theory, Lev Vygotsky's sociocultural approach, John Bowlby's attachm
T_1_06 — Cognitive Development — Piaget, Vygotsky, Theory of Mind
Cognitive development — how human minds grow in their capacity to think, reason, solve problems, and understand the world — has been dominated by two foundational theories: Jean Piaget's constructivist stage theory (1936
ZD_5_09 — Open Source: Free Software, Collaborative Development, and Commons-Based Production
Open source software (OSS) is software whose source code is publicly available, can be freely used, modified, and redistributed under licenses that preserve these freedoms. Open source is one of the most consequential mo
R_3_03 — Evo-Devo: Evolutionary Developmental Biology
Evolutionary developmental biology ("evo-devo") reveals one of biology's most profound discoveries: the same small set of "toolkit" genes (Hox, Pax6, Sonic hedgehog, BMP, Wnt, etc.) controls body plan development across
X_4_21 — Wound Healing & Human Regeneration Potential
Wound healing and regeneration represent one of biology's most tantalizing puzzles: why can a salamander regrow an entire limb, a zebrafish regenerate its heart, and a planarian reconstruct its entire body from a small f
ZG_4_08 — Language Acquisition: How Children Learn Language
The process by which children acquire their first language — apparently effortlessly, without formal instruction, and to a level of grammatical sophistication no adult second-language learner typically achieves — is one
ZB_1_12 — Animal Play Behavior
Play behavior — voluntary, seemingly purposeless activity involving modified versions of functional behaviors — is observed across mammals, many birds, and some reptiles, fish, and invertebrates, yet remains one of the m
ZC_4_07 — Childhood and the Anthropology of Growing Up
The anthropology of childhood — the cross-cultural study of how children are conceived of, raised, taught, disciplined, initiated, and transformed into culturally competent adults — challenges the assumption that childho
T_2_11 — Psychology of Aging and Gerontology
The psychology of aging examines cognitive, emotional, and social changes across the adult lifespan, integrating insights from developmental psychology, neuroscience, and gerontology. A central distinction in cognitive a
T_1_18 — Attachment Theory
Attachment theory — one of the most influential frameworks in developmental and clinical psychology — proposes that early bonds between infants and caregivers shape social, emotional, and cognitive development across the
L_4_17 — Transgenerational Epigenetic Trauma
Transgenerational epigenetic inheritance of trauma — the hypothesis that severe stress, famine, or psychological trauma experienced by one generation can alter the epigenetic marks (DNA methylation, histone modifications
L_3_13 — Human Accelerated Regions: What Makes Us Genetically Unique
Human Accelerated Regions (HARs) are short segments of the genome that were highly conserved across millions of years of mammalian evolution — indicating strong functional constraint — but then underwent a burst of rapid
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