RESEARCH BASE
Search 3,717 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence
40 results for "disorder" — page 2 of 2
ZB_5_18 — Insect Decline Crisis
The global insect decline — sometimes called the "insect apocalypse" in popular media — refers to accumulating evidence that insect populations, biomass, and diversity are decreasing at alarming rates across many regions
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
ZC_5_20 — Post-Truth & Misinformation
"Post-truth" — named Oxford Dictionaries' Word of the Year in 2016 and defined as "relating to circumstances in which objective facts are less influential in shaping public opinion than appeals to emotion and personal be
T_4_02 — Forensic Psychology and the Criminal Mind
Forensic psychology applies psychological science to legal and criminal justice systems — encompassing criminal behavior, courtroom processes, investigative methods, risk assessment, and rehabilitation.
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_07 — Psychology of Addiction
Addiction — compulsive engagement with a substance or behavior despite harmful consequences — is now understood as a chronic brain disorder involving neuroplastic changes in reward, motivation, memory, and executive cont
T_2_01 — Psychology of Grief, Loss, and Death Awareness
The psychology of grief, loss, and death awareness spans clinical bereavement research, existential psychology, and experimental social cognition. Elisabeth Kübler-Ross's five-stage model (1969), though culturally ubiqui
T_2_22 — Psychopathy Neuroscience
Psychopathy is a personality disorder characterized by persistent antisocial behavior, impaired empathy and remorse, bold and disinhibited traits, and often superficial charm — affecting an estimated 1% of the general po
T_2_12 — Psychology of Trauma and PTSD
Psychological trauma — exposure to events involving actual or threatened death, serious injury, or sexual violence — can produce lasting alterations in cognition, emotion, arousal, and behavior. Post-Traumatic Stress Dis
T_2_18 — Schizophrenia & Psychotic Disorders
Schizophrenia is a severe psychiatric disorder affecting approximately 24 million people worldwide (WHO, 2022), characterized by positive symptoms (hallucinations, delusions, disorganized thought), negative symptoms (anh
T_2_09 — Fear, Anxiety, and Phobias
Fear and anxiety are functionally distinct emotion systems: fear is a present-oriented defensive response to immediate threats (fight-flight-freeze), while anxiety is a future-oriented state of apprehension about potenti
T_1_19 — Depression: Neurobiology, Treatment Evolution & Cultural Perspectives
Major depressive disorder (MDD) — affecting approximately 280 million people worldwide (WHO, 2021) and ranking as the leading cause of disability globally — is a heterogeneous condition whose neurobiology remains incompl
T_3_04 — Sleep Psychology and Dreams
Sleep occupies approximately one-third of human life yet its functions remain among the most actively investigated questions in neuroscience and psychology.
T_5_06 — Digital Psychology and Screen Time
Digital psychology examines how digital technologies — smartphones, social media, video games, internet use — affect cognition, emotion, social behavior, and mental health. The field has become intensely debated since th
Y_4_12 — Psychosomatic Phenomena and the Placebo Effect
Psychosomatic phenomena — bodily changes produced by mental states — and the placebo effect — measurable physiological improvements following inert treatment — demonstrate that consciousness and belief can directly affec
Y_4_11 — Trance States Across Cultures
Trance — an altered state of consciousness characterized by narrowed or shifted attention, altered sense of self, reduced awareness of external surroundings, and modified responsiveness — is one of the most universal fea
Y_2_06 — Dissociation, Depersonalization, and Derealization
Dissociation — the disruption of normally integrated functions of consciousness, memory, identity, emotion, perception, behavior, and sense of self — represents one of the most revealing natural experiments for understan
Y_1_18 — Addiction Neurochemistry: Reward Circuits, Tolerance & Therapeutic Frontiers
Addiction — now formally termed substance use disorder (SUD, DSM-5) — is a chronic, relapsing brain disorder characterized by compulsive drug seeking despite harmful consequences, affecting approximately 35 million peopl
X_3_19 — Gastroenterology & Digestive Disorders
Gastroenterology encompasses the study and treatment of the entire gastrointestinal (GI) tract — from esophagus to rectum — along with the liver, pancreas, and biliary system. The human gut is the body's largest immune o
L_3_16 — Genomic Imprinting & Evolutionary Conflict
Genomic imprinting — the epigenetic phenomenon in which a subset of genes (~100–200 in mammals) are expressed from only one parental allele, with the other allele silenced by DNA methylation and histone modification esta
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