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458 results for "Core 7" — page 15 of 23
ZB_2_17 — Mycology: Kingdom Fungi
Kingdom Fungi — the second-largest kingdom of eukaryotes after animals, with an estimated 2.2–3.8 million species (only ~150,000 described) — encompasses organisms that obtain nutrition by absorbing dissolved organic mol
ZB_1_17 — Cognitive Ecology and Animal Decision-Making
Cognitive ecology — the study of how animals' cognitive abilities (perception, learning, memory, decision-making) have been shaped by the ecological challenges they face — bridges behavioral ecology, comparative psycholo
ZB_1_07 — Echolocation: Biological Sonar in Bats, Dolphins, and Beyond
Echolocation — the ability to perceive the environment by emitting sounds and analyzing returning echoes — has evolved independently in bats, toothed whales (dolphins, porpoises, sperm whales), some birds (oilbirds, swif
ZB_5_07 — Chronobiology: Biological Clocks and Temporal Ecology
Chronobiology — the study of biological rhythms and their underlying molecular, physiological, and ecological mechanisms — reveals that nearly all living organisms, from cyanobacteria to humans, possess endogenous biolog
ZB_5_17 — Constructal Law & Flow Architecture: Why Nature Branches the Way It Does
Most fractal descriptions of nature are descriptive: they observe that rivers branch like blood vessels, blood vessels branch like trees, trees branch like lightning bolts, and lightning bolts branch like river deltas. A
ZB_5_27 — Human Microbiome: Gut-Brain Axis and Microbial Ecology
The human body hosts approximately 38 trillion microbial cells — roughly equal to the number of human cells — comprising ~3,000 species of bacteria, archaea, fungi, and viruses, collectively termed the microbiome. The Hu
ZB_4_07 — Deep-Time Ecology: Ecosystems across Geological History
Deep-time ecology reconstructs the structure, function, and dynamics of ecosystems over geological time — from the earliest microbial mats of the Archean (>3.5 Ga) through the emergence of complex life in the Ediacaran-C
ZB_3_07 — Keystone Species and Trophic Cascades
A keystone species exerts an ecological influence disproportionate to its abundance — its removal causes cascading structural changes through the ecosystem. The concept was introduced by Robert Paine (1966, 1969) based o
ZB_3_17 — Invasive Species Ecology and Biological Invasions
Biological invasions — the introduction, establishment, spread, and impact of species outside their native range — are among the most significant drivers of global biodiversity loss, ecosystem change, and economic damage
ZC_3_17 — Algorithmic Bias & Surveillance Capitalism
Algorithmic bias and surveillance capitalism represent two interrelated dimensions of how digital technology concentrates power and perpetuates inequality. Algorithmic bias — systematic and repeatable errors in computer
ZC_3_07 — Disability Studies
Disability studies is an interdisciplinary field examining disability as a social, cultural, and political phenomenon rather than a purely medical one. The foundational distinction is between the medical model (disabilit
ZC_5_07 — Sociology of Knowledge: Social Construction, Paradigms, and Epistemic Communities
The sociology of knowledge investigates how social conditions — class position, institutional setting, cultural context, historical period, and power relations — shape the production, content, validation, and distributio
ZC_5_17 — Ritual Efficacy Mechanisms: How Ritual Produces Real-World Effects
Ritual — formalized, repetitive, symbolic action that is culturally prescribed and often marked as distinct from ordinary behavior — is a universal feature of human societies, found in religious ceremonies, civic commemo
ZC_1_07 — Behavioral Economics — Nudge Theory & Decision-Making
Behavioral economics integrates psychological insights into economic models of human decision-making, challenging the neoclassical assumption of perfectly rational "Homo economicus" and documenting systematic deviations
ZC_1_17 — Conspiracy Theory Epidemiology: Why People Believe and How Conspiracism Spreads
Conspiracy theories — explanatory frameworks that attribute significant events to the secret machinations of powerful, malevolent groups — are not a modern pathology but a recurring feature of human cognitive and social
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
ZC_4_17 — Food Anthropology: Culture, Identity, and Power at the Table
Food anthropology examines how the production, preparation, distribution, and consumption of food encode cultural meaning, reinforce social hierarchies, and express identity. Claude Lévi-Strauss proposed the "culinary tr
ZC_2_17 — Institutional Change Theory: How Organizations, States, and Systems Transform
Institutional change theory — the study of how formal and informal rules, norms, and organizations originate, persist, transform, and collapse — is central to understanding political, economic, and social development. Th
ZC_2_07 — Sociology of Health and Illness
Medical sociology (or the sociology of health and illness) examines how social structures, institutions, and relationships shape health outcomes, health behaviors, and the organization of healthcare. Foundational concept
G_4_07 — Memetics — Cultural Evolution as Darwinian Process
Memetics proposes that cultural information — ideas, behaviors, styles, skills — evolves through a Darwinian process analogous to biological evolution, with the "meme" as the cultural replicator paralleling the gene. Coi
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