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Search 3,717 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence

3,717 documents 34 sections 47,686 citations 34,596+ keywords indexed 4 evidence tiers

54 results for "disaster response" — page 1 of 3

ZC_5_10 Verified Social Science

ZC_5_10 — Sociology of Disaster: Vulnerability, Resilience, and Social Amplification of Risk

The sociology of disaster studies the social dimensions of catastrophic events — earthquakes, floods, hurricanes, pandemics, industrial accidents, nuclear meltdowns, wildfires, and increasingly, climate-driven extreme ev

disaster sociology vulnerability resilience social amplification of risk Quarantelli climate disasters
ZC_5_18 Credible Social Science

ZC_5_18 — Disaster Resilience & Cultural Recovery: Anthropological Perspectives

Disaster resilience — the capacity of communities to absorb, adapt to, and recover from catastrophic events while maintaining essential functions and identity — is increasingly understood not as a property of infrastruct

disaster-resilience cultural-recovery disaster-anthropology community-resilience social-capital disaster-response
E_3_16 Verified Cataclysms & Chronology

E_3_16 — Urban Fire and Civilizational Destruction: Rome, London, Chicago

Urban fires have been among the most recurrent and devastating agents of civilizational destruction throughout recorded history, repeatedly leveling major cities and reshaping their physical layouts, governance structure

Great Fire urban conflagration Rome fire London fire Chicago fire civilizational destruction
ZC_4_19 Credible Social Science

ZC_4_19 — Disaster Resilience Anthropology: Cultural Adaptation to Catastrophe

Disaster anthropology — the study of how human societies prepare for, experience, respond to, and recover from catastrophic events — emerged as a distinct subfield through the work of Anthony Oliver-Smith (University of

disaster anthropology resilience cultural adaptation vulnerability hazard risk perception
K_5_22 Verified Consciousness

K_5_22 — Frequency Following Response (FFR)

The Frequency Following Response (FFR) is a sustained, phase-locked far-field electrophysiological response that tracks the periodicity of acoustic stimuli with sub-millisecond precision, generated primarily in the audit

frequency following response FFR auditory brainstem response neural entrainment envelope tracking phase locking
ZD_5_13 Verified Information & Computation

ZD_5_13 — Digital Forensics: Computer Evidence, Incident Response, and Cyber Investigation

Digital forensics is the application of scientific methods and techniques to the identification, collection, preservation, examination, analysis, and presentation of digital evidence from computers, networks, mobile devi

digital forensics computer forensics evidence acquisition chain of custody malware analysis incident response
ZF_3_15 Credible Oceanography

ZF_3_15 — Tsunami Cultural Memory: Indigenous Oral Records and Ancient Warnings

Tsunami cultural memory reveals that indigenous and traditional communities have preserved remarkably accurate records of catastrophic ocean events — sometimes for centuries or millennia — through oral traditions, storie

tsunami cultural memory oral tradition indigenous knowledge geomythology seismic history
X_2_01 Medicine & Healing

X_2_01 — Psychosomatic Medicine and Placebo Science

The placebo effect — measurable physiological change resulting from the belief or expectation of treatment rather than the treatment's pharmacological action — is among the most replicated and least understood phenomena

psychosomatic medicine placebo effect nocebo psychoneuroimmunology mind-body medicine stress response
X_5_22 Verified Medicine & Healing

X_5_22 — Paracelsus & the Birth of Chemical Medicine

Philippus Aureolus Theophrastus Bombastus von Hohenheim (1493–1541), self-named Paracelsus, was a Swiss-German physician-alchemist who revolutionized European medicine by rejecting Galenic humoral theory and introducing

Paracelsus iatrochemistry toxicology dose-response alchemy chemical medicine
X_5_18 Verified Medicine & Healing

X_5_18 — Binaural Beats: Auditory Processing, Brainwave Entrainment, and Therapeutic Claims

Binaural beats are an auditory perceptual phenomenon first described by Heinrich Wilhelm Dove in 1839: when two tones of slightly different frequencies are presented separately to each ear (e.g., 400 Hz left, 410 Hz righ

binaural beats brainwave entrainment auditory beat stimulation theta waves alpha waves frequency following response
X_5_01 Verified Medicine & Healing

X_5_01 — Venom, Toxicology, and Poison Medicine

Toxicology — the study of the adverse effects of chemical, physical, or biological agents on living organisms — and the medical management of poisoning and envenomation have ancient roots and a rich history intertwining

toxicology venom poison antivenom Mithridates arsenic
X_5_09 Verified Medicine & Healing

X_5_09 — Pharmacology: The Science of Drugs and Their Actions

Pharmacology — the science of drugs — investigates how chemical substances interact with biological systems to produce therapeutic, toxic, or other effects. The discipline encompasses pharmacokinetics (what the body does

pharmacology drug receptor pharmacokinetics pharmacodynamics clinical trials
Verified

INTERDOC_70 — Ancient Knowledge as Encoded Discovery of Biophysically Significant Parameters

The standard framing pits ancient wisdom against modern science, as if they are competing epistemologies. The evidence across ID1, ID2, and ID4 demolishes this framing by showing that the same biophysically significant p

ancient knowledge biophysical parameters sacred geometry acoustic tuning frequency-following response mechanotransduction
Credible

INTERDOC_68 — Entity Categories as Attractors in Consciousness State-Space

A recurring mystery across the corpus: why do DMT users, shamanic practitioners, near-death experiencers, medieval monks, ancient temple visitors, and modern abduction reporters describe the same limited set of entity ty

entity encounters consciousness state-space attractors DMT entities NDE beings shamanic entities
Z_3_12 Molecular Biology

Z_3_12 — Genetics of Alcohol Metabolism

The genetics of alcohol metabolism provides one of the clearest examples of how specific genetic variants influence behavior and disease risk at a population scale. Ethanol is metabolized primarily through a two-step oxi

alcohol metabolism ADH1B ALDH2 acetaldehyde Asian flush alcohol dehydrogenase
Z_2_12 Molecular Biology

Z_2_12 — Genetics of Pain Perception

Pain perception — the subjective experience triggered by actual or potential tissue damage — varies enormously across individuals, with genetic factors accounting for 25–50% of the variance in pain sensitivity (twin stud

pain genetics nociception SCN9A Nav1.7 congenital insensitivity to pain TRPV1
Z_1_13 Verified Molecular Biology

Z_1_13 — DNA Repair Mechanisms and Genome Stability

Every human cell sustains an estimated 10,000–100,000 DNA lesions per day from endogenous sources alone — oxidative metabolism, spontaneous hydrolysis, replication errors, and reactive metabolites — while environmental m

DNA repair base excision repair nucleotide excision repair mismatch repair double-strand break homologous recombination
Z_4_03 Molecular Biology

Z_4_03 — Forensic Genetics and DNA Identification

Forensic genetics uses DNA analysis to identify individuals, establish biological relationships, and solve criminal cases — a revolution that began when Sir Alec Jeffreys (1984, University of Leicester) discovered DNA fi

forensic genetics DNA fingerprinting STR profiling short tandem repeat CODIS combined DNA index system
Z_4_22 Verified Molecular Biology

Z_4_22 — Protein Chaperone Systems

Molecular chaperones are a diverse group of proteins that assist other proteins in achieving and maintaining their correct three-dimensional structures — preventing misfolding, aggregation, and toxic accumulation of non-

chaperone heat shock protein Hsp70 Hsp90 GroEL GroES
K_3_06 Consciousness

K_3_06 — Disorders of Consciousness: Coma, Vegetative State, and Minimal Consciousness

Disorders of consciousness (DoC) — coma, vegetative state (now termed unresponsive wakefulness syndrome/UWS), and minimally conscious state (MCS) — represent some of the most challenging clinical and philosophical proble

disorders of consciousness coma vegetative state UWS unresponsive wakefulness syndrome minimally conscious state locked-in syndrome