RESEARCH BASE
Search 3,717 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence
1,346 results for "method of loci" — page 17 of 68
Z_4_05 — Synthetic Biology and Minimal Genomes
Synthetic biology aims to design, construct, and engineer biological systems and organisms with novel functions not found in nature — or to redesign existing biological systems for useful purposes. The field's landmark a
K_3_13 — Coma, Vegetative State, and Minimally Conscious State: Clinical Boundaries
Disorders of consciousness (DoC) — clinical conditions in which awareness (the content of consciousness — perception, thought, experience) and/or arousal (the level of wakefulness — eyes open, sleep-wake cycles) are seve
ZG_2_06 — Historical Linguistics and Language Family Classification
Historical linguistics is the scientific study of how languages change over time, how they are related to each other, and how they can be grouped into language families descended from common ancestors. The discipline's c
ZG_2_05 — Sacred Languages — Sanskrit, Hebrew, Arabic, Latin
Across civilizations, certain languages have been elevated above the ordinary functions of communication to the status of sacred or liturgical languages — vehicles believed to possess special power by virtue of their con
ZG_3_05 — Language and Thought: Cognitive Semantics
The relationship between language and thought — whether the language we speak shapes, constrains, or determines how we perceive, categorize, and reason about the world — is one of the oldest and most debated questions in
ZG_3_01 — Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis — Does Language Shape Thought?
The Sapir-Whorf hypothesis — more precisely, the principle of linguistic relativity — proposes that the structure of a language influences or determines the habitual thought patterns, perception, and worldview of its spe
Q_4_25 — Time Crystals: Wilczek and Experimental Realization
A time crystal is a phase of matter that spontaneously breaks time-translation symmetry, exhibiting periodic motion in its ground state or steady state without energy input — the temporal analogue of how ordinary crystal
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_4_09 — Visual Anthropology: Ethnographic Film and Image as Evidence
Visual anthropology — the study of human societies through visual media (photography, film, video, digital platforms) and the anthropological analysis of visual systems — occupies a unique position at the intersection of
G_4_27 — Schumann Resonance and Human Physiology: Evidence Assessment
The Schumann resonance — a global electromagnetic phenomenon at ~7.83 Hz fundamental and harmonics ~14.3, 20.8, 27.3, 33.8 Hz — is real, well-measured, and physically explained by lightning-driven oscillations in the Ear
G_4_17 — Microbiome Archaeology — Ancient Gut and Soil Microbes
Microbiome archaeology — the extraction and analysis of ancient microbial communities from archaeological materials (dental calculus, coprolites, mummified remains, soil sediments, ceramics) — has emerged since ~2012 as
G_1_06 — Paleoproteomics — Ancient Proteins Beyond DNA
Paleoproteomics is the extraction, identification, and analysis of ancient proteins from archaeological and paleontological materials — an emerging molecular method that extends biological identification far beyond the t
G_3_22 — Science and Technology Studies (STS)
Science and Technology Studies (STS) is an interdisciplinary field that examines how society, politics, culture, and economics shape scientific research and technological innovation — and how science and technology in tu
G_3_12 — Morphic Resonance and Formative Causation
Morphic resonance is a hypothesis proposed by Rupert Sheldrake (1981, A New Science of Life) that posits the existence of morphic fields — non-local, non-energetic fields that carry information about the habits (forms an
G_2_06 — Landscape Archaeology and Spatial Analysis
Landscape archaeology — the study of how past peoples shaped, inhabited, and understood their physical environments at scales beyond the individual site — has evolved from early settlement-pattern surveys into a sophisti
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
ZD_1_14 — Type Theory: Lambda Calculus, Dependent Types, and the Curry-Howard Correspondence
Type theory is a foundational framework in mathematics, logic, and computer science that classifies values and expressions into types — categories that determine what operations are valid: a natural number can be added t
Y_5_17 — Astral Projection Laboratory Research
Astral projection — the subjective experience of consciousness separating from the physical body and traveling independently — has been reported across virtually all human cultures throughout history, from ancient Egypti
H_2_14 — Funding Bias in Science: Who Pays, Who Decides, What Gets Studied
Scientific research is shaped not only by curiosity and methodology but by who funds it — and funders' priorities, interests, and incentive structures systematically influence what questions get asked, what methods are u
H_2_07 — Radiocarbon Dating Controversies and Calibration Disputes
Radiocarbon dating — the measurement of the radioactive isotope ¹⁴C in organic materials to determine their age — is archaeology's single most important chronological tool, having revolutionized the discipline since Will
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