RESEARCH BASE
Search 3,717 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence
188 results for "deep learning" — page 2 of 10
ZE_5_19 — Environmental Ethics & Deep Ecology
Environmental ethics is the branch of philosophy examining the moral relationship between humans and the natural environment — whether non-human entities (animals, plants, ecosystems, species, the biosphere) have intrins
R_5_12 — Deep-Sea Biology: Hadal Zone Life, Pressure, and Extreme Organisms
The deep sea — defined as depths below 200 meters (the photic zone boundary) — constitutes the largest habitat on Earth by volume, yet remains among the least explored. This vast realm is divided into depth zones: the me
R_5_05 — Bioluminescence: Evolution and Deep-Sea Adaptation
Bioluminescence — the production of light by living organisms through chemical reactions — is one of the most extraordinary and frequently convergent traits in evolution, having evolved independently at least 94 times ac
S_4_13 — Autonomous Vehicles: Self-Driving, LIDAR, and the Mobility Revolution
Autonomous vehicles (AVs) — automobiles, trucks, and shuttles that use sensors, artificial intelligence, and control systems to navigate without human intervention — represent one of the most anticipated (and overpromise
S_1_05 — Digital Archaeology — AI, LiDAR, Remote Sensing, and the Discovery Revolution
Digital technologies are revolutionizing archaeology at a pace unprecedented in the discipline's history. LiDAR (Light Detection and Ranging) surveys have revealed entire hidden urban landscapes beneath forest canopy — f
F_1_29 — Aboriginal Australian First Arrival & Deep-Time Heritage
The first arrival of humans in Australia represents the oldest known maritime colonization in human history and one of the most significant events in the story of Homo sapiens. Reaching the continent now called Australia
ZF_2_19 — Marine Bioluminescence: Light in the Deep Ocean
Bioluminescence — the production and emission of light by living organisms through chemical reactions — is the most widespread form of communication in the ocean and arguably the most common visible phenomenon on Earth,
ZF_2_14 — Marine Microbiology: Deep-Sea Viruses and Bacterial Ecology
The deep ocean harbors the largest and most diverse microbial ecosystem on Earth — a vast realm of bacteria, archaea, and viruses that drive global biogeochemical cycles, recycle organic matter, and sustain life in condi
ZF_4_07 — Deep Ocean Mining and Mineral Resources
Deep-sea mining — the extraction of mineral resources from the ocean floor at depths of 200–6,000 m — is one of the most consequential and contested environmental issues in contemporary oceanography. Three primary resour
ZF_4_15 — Ocean Sediments: Deep-Sea Cores, Proxy Records, and Paleoclimate
Ocean sediments are the Earth's most comprehensive climate archive — a continuous record of planetary conditions extending back over 200 million years, slowly accumulated grain by grain on the deep seafloor at rates of m
K_4_20 — Non-Neural Learning: Slime Molds, Plants, Bacterial Adaptation
Learning — modifying behavior based on experience — was long thought to require a nervous system. The last twenty years of basal-cognition research have empirically falsified this assumption. Single-celled slime molds (P
K_2_21 — Transcranial Brain Stimulation: tDCS, TMS, and Deep Brain Stimulation
Transcranial brain stimulation encompasses a family of techniques that modulate neural activity by delivering energy — magnetic pulses, electrical current, or implanted electrodes — to specific brain regions. The three p
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
O_3_04 — Bioluminescence — Deep Sea Light, Firefly Synchrony, and Cultural Significance
Bioluminescence — the production of light by living organisms — is among the most widespread and independently evolved traits in biology, having arisen at least 40 separate times across the tree of life. In the deep ocea
O_5_19 — Pacific Ocean Anomalies: Ring of Fire, Deep-Sea Mysteries, and Tectonic Frontiers
The Pacific Ocean — Earth's largest and deepest body of water — concentrates a disproportionate share of geological anomalies. The Ring of Fire encircles it with 75% of the world's active volcanoes and 90% of earthquakes
O_5_17 — Deep Time: Geological Chronology and the Scale of Earth History
Deep time is the concept that Earth's geological history extends across approximately 4.54 billion years — a scale so vast that human civilization occupies less than 0.00001% of it. First articulated by James Hutton in 1
T_1_09 — Psychology of Learning and Conditioning
Learning — relatively permanent changes in behavior or behavioral potential resulting from experience — is the foundational process of behavioral adaptation. Three paradigms dominate: classical conditioning (Pavlov, 1927
P_1_07 — Deep Time and Cognitive Limits
This document examines Deep Time and Cognitive Limits, a topic within the Philosophy Meaning research area. Key areas of investigation include Origins of the Concept, The Scale Problem, The "Human Line" Problem. The anal
ZE_3_01 — Environmental Ethics and Deep Ecology
Environmental ethics examines the moral relationship between humans and the natural environment — Do non-human entities have intrinsic value? Do we have moral obligations to ecosystems, species, and future generations? T
S_3_10 — Ocean Technology and Deep-Sea Exploration
The deep ocean remains Earth's most underexplored frontier — less than 25% of the ocean floor has been mapped at high resolution (>100 m), and only a tiny fraction has been directly observed or sampled. Human-occupied ve
BROWSE BY SECTION — 3717 documents across 34 fields