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551 results for "CIA" — page 2 of 28
O_2_13 — Isostatic Rebound: Post-Glacial Land Rise and Coastal Change
Glacial isostatic adjustment (GIA, commonly called isostatic rebound or post-glacial rebound) is the ongoing process by which Earth's crust and mantle adjust to the removal of the immense weight of continental ice sheets
O_5_06 — Subglacial Lakes: Vostok, Whillans, and Antarctic Hidden Water
Beneath the Antarctic ice sheet — Earth's largest body of ice, up to ~4.8 km thick — lies a vast network of more than 400 subglacial lakes, bodies of liquid water maintained by geothermal heat from the underlying bedrock
T_4_07 — Social Identity Theory and Prejudice
Social Identity Theory (SIT) explains how individuals derive self-concept from group memberships and how this drives intergroup behavior — including prejudice, discrimination, and conflict. Developed by Henri Tajfel and
T_4_14 — Social Comparison Theory: Festinger, Upward/Downward Comparison, and Social Media
Social comparison theory, introduced by Leon Festinger (1954), proposes that humans have a fundamental drive to evaluate their abilities and opinions — and in the absence of objective, non-social standards, they do so by
T_4_10 — Conformity and Obedience: Asch, Milgram, and the Social Psychology of Compliance
The study of conformity (adjusting one's behavior or beliefs to match a group) and obedience (following directives from an authority figure) produced some of the most famous — and disturbing — experiments in the history
T_4_17 — Parasocial Relationships: One-Sided Bonds with Media Figures
Parasocial relationships — the one-sided emotional bonds that audiences form with media personalities, fictional characters, and public figures — were first described by sociologists Donald Horton and Richard Wohl in the
T_2_03 — Attachment Theory — Bowlby, Ainsworth & Social Bonds
Attachment theory, developed by John Bowlby (1958, 1969) and empirically validated by Mary Ainsworth (1978), proposes that humans are biologically predisposed to form close emotional bonds with caregivers — and that the
T_2_15 — Gratitude and Forgiveness: Prosocial Emotions, Health Benefits, and Psychological Resilience
Gratitude and forgiveness — two central topics in positive psychology — represent prosocial emotional responses that profoundly influence interpersonal relationships, mental health, and physical well-being. Gratitude — t
T_5_10 — The Psychology of Money: Behavioral Economics, Financial Decision-Making, and Wealth Psychology
The psychology of money explores how cognitive biases, emotional responses, social pressures, and personality traits systematically distort financial decision-making — departing dramatically from the "rational economic a
T_5_03 — Embodied and Social Cognition
Embodied cognition challenges the classical computational model of mind (cognition as abstract symbol manipulation, independent of the body) by proposing that cognitive processes are fundamentally shaped by the body's ph
T_5_12 — Media Psychology: Screen Effects, Social Media, and the Psychology of Digital Life
Media psychology — the study of how media (television, film, video games, social media, smartphones) affect cognition, emotion, behavior, and well-being — has become one of the most publicly debated areas of psychology,
D_3_10 — Derinkuyu and Cappadocian Underground Cities
Derinkuyu — the deepest known underground city in Cappadocia, central Turkey — extends approximately 85 meters (280 feet) below the surface across 18 recognized levels (8 fully excavated and open to visitors), with the c
ZD_4_14 — Computational Social Science: Agent-Based Modeling, Digital Trace Data, and Social Simulation
Computational social science (CSS) is the interdisciplinary field that applies computational methods — agent-based modeling, social network analysis, natural language processing, machine learning, simulation, and large-s
ZD_4_11 — Social Network Analysis — Granovetter, Small Worlds, Influence
Social network analysis (SNA) — the study of social structures through the use of graph theory and network science, where individuals (or organizations, nations, etc.) are represented as nodes and their relationships (fr
ZD_2_02_Artificial_Intelligence_Foundations
Artificial intelligence (AI) — the field devoted to creating machines that exhibit intelligent behavior — was formally founded at the Dartmouth Conference (1956) organized by John McCarthy, Marvin Minsky, Nathaniel Roche
ZD_2_07 — Artificial General Intelligence — Architectures and Challenges
Artificial General Intelligence (AGI) — a hypothetical AI system capable of performing any intellectual task that a human can, with the same flexibility, generality, and ability to learn and transfer knowledge across dom
Y_1_17 — Ketamine Therapy and Dissociative Medicine
Ketamine — a dissociative anesthetic synthesized by Calvin Stevens at Parke-Davis in 1962 and first used clinically by Edward Domino and Guenter Corssen in 1966 — has emerged as a revolutionary treatment for treatment-re
P_1_17 — Artificial Intelligence and the Consciousness Question
The question of whether artificial systems can possess consciousness — genuine subjective experience, phenomenal awareness, or "something it is like" to be that system (Thomas Nagel, 1974) — has moved from philosophical
ZE_5_15 — Ethics of Disability: Social Models, Access, and Inclusion
The ethics of disability has been transformed over the past five decades by the shift from the medical model — which defines disability as individual pathology to be cured or managed — to the social model — which defines
ZE_5_02 — Ethics of Cultural Appropriation: Borrowing, Theft, and Appreciation
Cultural appropriation — the adoption of elements (dress, music, cuisine, religious symbols, hairstyles, language) from one culture by members of another, typically from a marginalized or minority culture by members of a
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