RESEARCH BASE
Search 3,717 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence
584 results for "One Health" — page 17 of 30
ZB_1_04 — Venom Evolution: Nature's Chemical Arsenal
Venom — a cocktail of bioactive molecules actively injected into another organism through specialized apparatus — has evolved independently in over 100 animal lineages, from cnidarians and cone snails to snakes, spiders,
ZB_1_11 — Predator-Prey Dynamics and Coevolution
Predator-prey dynamics are among the most fundamental processes structuring ecological communities, driving evolutionary arms races, and shaping biodiversity. The Lotka-Volterra equations (Lotka, 1925; Volterra, 1926) pr
ZB_5_11 — Chemical Ecology: The Language of Molecules
Chemical ecology investigates the role of naturally produced chemical compounds — allelochemicals, pheromones, volatile organic compounds (VOCs), and secondary metabolites — in mediating interactions between organisms, e
ZB_5_01 — Biological Rhythms Beyond Circadian
While circadian (~24-hour) rhythms are the best-studied biological oscillations (2017 Nobel Prize to Hall, Rosbash, Young), life is permeated by rhythms operating across all timescales — from millisecond neural oscillati
ZB_5_04 — Epigenetics in Ecology and Evolution
Epigenetics — heritable changes in gene expression that do not involve changes to the DNA sequence — has transformed understanding of how organisms respond to environmental conditions, develop, and potentially transmit a
ZB_5_30 — Phosphorus Cycle: Biogeochemistry, Eutrophication, and the Coming Scarcity Crisis
Phosphorus (P) is the rate-limiting nutrient for life on Earth — essential to DNA, RNA, ATP (the universal energy currency), cell membranes (phospholipids), and bone (hydroxyapatite), yet available in nature only through
ZB_4_08 — Rewilding and Ecological Restoration
Rewilding is an emerging approach to conservation that aims to restore self-sustaining, self-regulating ecosystems by reintroducing missing species — particularly large vertebrates and ecological engineers — and allowing
ZB_4_02 — Extremophiles and Extreme Biology
Extremophiles are organisms that thrive in conditions lethal to most life — extreme heat, cold, acidity, radiation, pressure, salinity, or desiccation. Their discovery has fundamentally expanded understanding of life's b
ZB_3_04 — Ecological Succession
Ecological succession — the process of community change over time following a disturbance or the creation of new habitat — is one of ecology's oldest and most studied concepts. Primary succession occurs on newly exposed
ZB_3_08 — Freshwater Ecology
Freshwater ecosystems — rivers, streams, lakes, ponds, wetlands, and groundwater systems — cover only ~0.8% of Earth's surface and contain ~0.01% of the world's water, yet they support a disproportionate ~6% of all descr
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_11 — Psychology of Time
The psychology of time encompasses how humans perceive duration, orient themselves across past-present-future, and how temporal cognition influences decision-making, memory, motivation, and well-being.
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
ZC_2_16 — Social Capital
Social capital — the networks of relationships, norms of reciprocity, and trust that facilitate collective action and cooperation within and between groups — emerged as one of the most influential and contested concepts
ZC_2_20 — Social Capital Theory — Putnam
Social capital — the networks of relationships, norms of reciprocity, and trust that facilitate cooperation among individuals and groups — became one of the most influential and contested concepts in social science follo
ZC_2_02 — Collective Memory and Cultural Transmission of Myth
Collective memory — the shared pool of knowledge and information held by a group — is the mechanism by which myths, traditions, and historical narratives are transmitted across generations. This document surveys the scho
G_4_23 — Technological Singularity Theories
The technological singularity hypothesis proposes that the creation of artificial superintelligence (ASI) — defined as machine intelligence surpassing all human cognitive capabilities — will trigger an "intelligence expl
G_4_11 — Archaeoastronomy Methods and Systematic Evidence
Archaeoastronomy — the study of how past civilizations understood, observed, and used astronomical phenomena — has matured from a field plagued by speculative alignment claims into a rigorous interdisciplinary discipline
G_4_15 — Acoustic Archaeology — How Ancient Spaces Were Designed for Sound
Acoustic archaeology (archaeoacoustics) is the scientific study of how ancient built environments and natural spaces shaped sound and how sound was used in ritual, communication, and performance in the past. The field co
G_1_04 — Isotope Analysis and Provenance Studies
Isotope analysis — the measurement of ratios of stable or radiogenic isotopes preserved in human bone, tooth enamel, animal remains, ceramics, metals, and organic residues — has become one of the most powerful tools in m
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