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243 results for "field linguistics" — page 11 of 13
ZG_3_04 — Gesture and Body Language in Communication
Gesture and body language constitute a fundamental dimension of human communication that operates alongside, independently of, and sometimes in contradiction to spoken language. Research in kinesics (the study of body mo
ZB_1_10 — Sound Communication and Animal Vocalization
Sound communication is one of the most versatile and widespread signaling modalities in the animal kingdom, spanning frequencies from infrasound (elephants: ~14 Hz, traveling kilometers through air and ground) to ultraso
ZC_0_00 — Social Science & Anthropology: Section Summary
ZC_1_00 — Psychology Behavior: Subfolder Summary
ZC_1_03 — Cross-Cultural Psychology — Universal vs Culture-Specific Mind
Cross-cultural psychology investigates how cultural contexts shape psychological processes and whether any mental phenomena are truly universal. The central tension—between universal human nature (etic perspective) and c
ZC_1_02 — Cult Psychology — Manipulation, Totalism, and Recovery
Cult psychology examines how high-demand groups employ systematic influence techniques to recruit, retain, and control members. Key frameworks include Robert Jay Lifton's eight criteria of thought reform, Steven Hassan's
G_2_14 — Information Theory Applied to Ancient Scripts and Codes
Information theory — founded by Claude Shannon (1948) — provides a mathematical framework for quantifying the information content, redundancy, and statistical structure of communication systems. When applied to ancient s
T_3_19 — Feral Children, Linguistic Deprivation, and Critical Period Evidence
Feral children — individuals who grew up with minimal or no human contact during their early years — provide the most compelling (and tragic) natural evidence for the critical period hypothesis in language acquisition. T
T_5_02 — Psychology of Music
Music psychology investigates how humans perceive, produce, respond emotionally to, and are transformed by music — drawing on cognitive psychology, auditory neuroscience, developmental psychology, and clinical applicatio
T_5_00 — Applied Specialized: Subfolder Summary
D_5_09 — Ancient Writing Systems Compared
The invention of writing — the transition from oral to literate civilization — is among humanity's most consequential technological achievements. Yet its origins remain debated: was writing invented once and diffused, or
B_2_03 — Underground Creatures and Myths
Virtually every ancient civilization across the globe has myths and legends about beings living underground. These stories span continents, cultures, and millennia — often with striking similarities despite no known cont
ZD_1_00 — Foundations Theory: Subfolder Summary
ZD_1_06 — Boolean Algebra and Logic Gates: The Mathematics of Digital Systems
Boolean algebra, formalized by George Boole in 1854, reduces logical reasoning to algebraic manipulation of binary values (TRUE/FALSE, 1/0). This seemingly simple mathematical system became the foundation of the entire d
ZD_1_10 — Automata Theory and Formal Languages
Automata theory studies abstract computational machines and the classes of languages they recognize, forming the mathematical backbone of computer science. The Chomsky hierarchy (1956–59) classifies formal languages into
ZD_0_00 — Information & Computation: Section Summary
ZD_5_03 — Semiotics: Signs, Symbols, and Meaning Theory
Semiotics (also semiology) — the study of signs, symbols, and meaning-making processes — is a foundational discipline that bridges linguistics, philosophy, cultural studies, communication theory, visual arts, and informa
L_1_00 — Human Evolution Species: Subfolder Summary
L_1_06 — Human Migration Synthesis — DNA, Language, and Culture
The synthesis of genetic, linguistic, and archaeological evidence has transformed understanding of human migration over the past three decades.
Y_4_10 — Glossolalia, Xenoglossy, and Altered Language States
Glossolalia — commonly known as "speaking in tongues" — is a cross-cultural phenomenon in which individuals produce fluent, seemingly language-like vocalizations that do not correspond to any known natural language. Prac
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