RESEARCH BASE

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

392 results for "developmental biology" — page 15 of 20

ZB_3_01 Ecology & Biology

ZB_3_01 — Pollination Ecology: Plant-Pollinator Coevolution and Seed Dispersal

The mutualism between flowering plants and their pollinators is one of the most consequential partnerships in the history of life. Approximately 87.5% of wild flowering plants and 75% of food crops depend on animal polli

pollination pollinators bees butterflies hummingbirds wind pollination
G_0_00 Modern Frameworks

G_0_00 — Modern Frameworks: Section Summary

G_4_18 Verified Modern Frameworks

G_4_18 — Biogeography and Ancient Distribution Patterns

Biogeography — the study of the spatial distribution of organisms across the planet, both present and past — is one of the most powerful frameworks for understanding Earth history, evolutionary processes, and the mechani

biogeography Wallace Line island biogeography MacArthur-Wilson vicariance dispersal
G_3_11 Verified Modern Frameworks

G_3_11 — Information Theory and Biological Complexity

Information theory, founded by Claude Shannon (1948, A Mathematical Theory of Communication), provides a rigorous mathematical framework for quantifying information content, communication capacity, and complexity — conce

information theory Shannon entropy Kolmogorov complexity algorithmic information biological information DNA information content
G_3_00 Modern Frameworks

G_3_00 — Theoretical Frameworks: Subfolder Summary

G_3_13 Verified Modern Frameworks

G_3_13 — Self-Organization from Atoms to Civilizations

Self-organization is the process by which ordered, complex structures emerge spontaneously from simpler components without centralized control or external direction — driven by local interactions among parts that collect

self-organization emergence dissipative structures Prigogine Kauffman autocatalysis
G_2_10 Verified Modern Frameworks

G_2_10 — Zooarchaeology — Animal Bones as Cultural Evidence

Zooarchaeology (also called archaeozoology) is the study of animal remains — primarily bones, teeth, antler, horn, and shell — recovered from archaeological sites, to reconstruct past human-animal relationships, includin

zooarchaeology faunal analysis animal bone archaeozoology taphonomy butchery
O_2_07 Credible Earth Anomalies

O_2_07 — Anomalous Animal Behavior Before Earthquakes and Storms

Reports of anomalous animal behavior preceding earthquakes and severe weather events span millennia and cultures: the earliest known written account dates to 373 BCE (Diodorus Siculus describing rats, weasels, snakes, an

animal behavior earthquake prediction pre-seismic animal warning toad snake
O_3_12 Verified Earth Anomalies

O_3_12 — Cenote and Sinkhole Ecology — Surface-Groundwater Connections

Cenotes (from the Maya ts'onot) and sinkholes — natural depressions or holes formed by the dissolution of soluble bedrock (limestone, dolostone, gypsum) in karst landscapes — are far more than geological curiosities. The

cenote sinkhole karst groundwater aquifer Yucatán
O_5_04 Verified Earth Anomalies

O_5_04 — Soil Science — Underground Biogeochemistry and Human Health

Soil — a thin veneer of biologically active, chemically complex material covering most of Earth's land surface — is arguably the most under-appreciated and misunderstood component of the Earth system. Far from inert "dir

soil science pedology edaphology soil microbiome mycorrhiza rhizosphere
O_5_00 Earth Anomalies

O_5_00 — Climate Records Ecology: Subfolder Summary

O_5_02 Verified Earth Anomalies

O_5_02 — Soil Biomes and Underground Ecosystems

Beneath every terrestrial landscape lies one of Earth's most complex and least understood ecosystems — the soil biome, a living matrix containing an estimated 25% of all species on Earth (Decaëns et al., 2006) and proces

soil biome mycorrhizae mycorrhizal networks soil microbiome pedosphere rhizosphere
T_1_13 Credible Psychology & Social

T_1_13 — Object Relations Theory: Internal Worlds, Attachment, and the Relational Self

Object relations theory — the most influential post-Freudian psychoanalytic tradition — shifted the focus of psychoanalysis from Freud's drive theory (instinctual drives seeking discharge) to the primacy of relationships

object relations Melanie Klein Winnicott Fairbairn Bion Kernberg
T_1_17 Verified Psychology & Social

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

educational-psychology piaget vygotsky scaffolding zone-of-proximal-development constructivism
T_3_19 Verified Psychology & Social

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

feral children linguistic deprivation critical period Genie Wiley Victor of Aveyron Kaspar Hauser
ZD_4_16 Credible Information & Computation

ZD_4_16 — Swarm Intelligence & Self-Organizing Systems: Decentralized Problem-Solving

Swarm intelligence (SI) — the emergent collective behavior of decentralized, self-organized systems in which simple agents following local rules produce globally intelligent, adaptive solutions without central control —

swarm-intelligence self-organization ant-colony-optimization particle-swarm emergent-behavior stigmergy
ZD_4_13 Verified Information & Computation

ZD_4_13 — Network Science: Graph Theory, Small Worlds, and Scale-Free Networks

Network science is the study of complex systems represented as networks (graphs) — collections of nodes (vertices) connected by edges (links) — encompassing social networks (people connected by friendships, collaboration

network science graph theory small-world scale-free Barabási Watts-Strogatz
ZD_4_00 Information & Computation

ZD_4_00 — Applied Interdisciplinary: Subfolder Summary

L_1_11 Verified Genetics & Origins

L_1_11 — Convergent Genetic Evolution — Same Solutions, Different Lineages

Convergent evolution — the independent evolution of similar features in species from different evolutionary lineages — is one of the most powerful demonstrations of natural selection's predictability and one of the deepe

convergent evolution parallel evolution molecular convergence homoplasy adaptation natural selection
L_1_12 Verified Genetics & Origins

L_1_12 — Ghost DNA: Unknown Archaic Hominin Admixture

"Ghost DNA" refers to genetic signals — segments of the genome, deviations in allele frequency distributions, or anomalous phylogenetic patterns — that indicate admixture (interbreeding) between anatomically modern human

ghost DNA archaic admixture unknown hominin introgression ancient DNA aDNA