RESEARCH BASE
Search 3,721 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence
3,633 are the core, quality-scored corpus (34 lettered sections — see How We Work); the remaining 88 are cross-corpus synthesis documents (68 InterDocs, 12 Connections, 8 Theories) also indexed here.
795 results for "speech act" — page 21 of 40
ZD_3_05 — Compiler Theory and Parsing
Compiler theory — the science of translating high-level programming languages into machine-executable code — is one of the most mathematically rigorous and practically impactful subfields of computer science. Compilers b
ZD_3_10 — Blockchain, Cryptocurrency, and Distributed Ledger Theory
Blockchain — a distributed, append-only data structure in which records (transactions) are grouped into blocks, each block is cryptographically linked to the previous one through a hash, and the resulting chain is replic
ZD_3_01 — Database Theory and Relational Model
Database theory provides the mathematical foundations for organizing, storing, querying, and managing structured data — one of the most practically consequential branches of computer science. Before the relational model,
ZD_4_12 — Quantum Computing — Architecture, Algorithms, and Implications
Quantum computing — computation that exploits the principles of quantum mechanics (superposition, entanglement, and interference) to process information in ways fundamentally different from classical computers — represen
ZD_2_04 — Computer Vision and Image Processing
Computer vision — enabling machines to interpret and understand visual information from the world — has progressed from hand-crafted feature engineering to the deep learning revolution that now approaches or exceeds huma
ZD_2_05 — Robotics and Control Theory
Robotics integrates mechanical engineering, electrical engineering, computer science, and control theory to design, build, and program machines that sense, reason, and act in the physical world. Control theory — the math
ZD_2_03 — Natural Language Processing
Natural language processing (NLP) — the computational analysis, understanding, and generation of human language — spans rule-based, statistical, and neural approaches across tasks including machine translation, text clas
ZD_2_09 — Recommender Systems: Collaborative Filtering, Content-Based, and Hybrid Approaches
Recommender systems (RecSys) are algorithms and architectures that predict user preferences and suggest relevant items — products, movies, music, news articles, social media posts, job listings, potential partners — from
L_1_11 — Convergent Genetic Evolution — Same Solutions, Different Lineages
Convergent evolution — the independent evolution of similar features in species from different evolutionary lineages — is one of the most powerful demonstrations of natural selection's predictability and one of the deepe
L_4_05 — Paleogenomics Methods and Ancient DNA
Paleogenomics — the study of ancient genomes — has transformed archaeology, anthropology, and evolutionary biology over the past two decades, recognized by the 2022 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine awarded to Svante
L_4_16 — Ancient Pathogen Genomics: Disease DNA from the Archaeological Record
Ancient pathogen genomics — the recovery and analysis of microbial DNA from archaeological remains — has revolutionized understanding of historical pandemics and pathogen evolution. The field was transformed when Johanne
L_4_12 — CRISPR Gene Drives and Population Genetics Ethics
CRISPR gene drives — genetic engineering systems that combine CRISPR-Cas9 gene editing with super-Mendelian inheritance to spread a modified gene through an entire wild population far faster than natural selection — repr
L_4_10 — Sex Chromosome Evolution
Sex chromosomes — the genetic elements that determine biological sex in many organisms — represent one of the most remarkable stories in genome evolution. In mammals, the XX/XY system prevails: females have two X chromos
L_2_07 — European Genetics and Three Ancestral Populations
The genetic history of Europe has been revolutionized by ancient DNA, revealing that most present-day Europeans can be modeled at a broad level as mixtures of three major ancestral components assembled over the past ~10,
L_3_06 — Genetics of Intelligence and Cognition
The genetics of intelligence — one of the most studied yet contentious areas in behavioral genetics — has established that cognitive ability, as measured by standardized tests, has a substantial heritable component (~50–
L_3_13 — Human Accelerated Regions: What Makes Us Genetically Unique
Human Accelerated Regions (HARs) are short segments of the genome that were highly conserved across millions of years of mammalian evolution — indicating strong functional constraint — but then underwent a burst of rapid
L_3_05 — Blood Type Genetics and the ABO System
Blood group genetics represents one of the earliest and most clinically important applications of Mendelian inheritance in human biology. Karl Landsteiner's discovery of the ABO blood group system (1900–1901) — which ear
L_3_11 — Genetics of Taste and Dietary Adaptation
Taste perception — the ability to detect sweet, salty, sour, bitter, and umami (savory) stimuli — is mediated by genetically encoded receptor proteins whose variation across individuals and populations reflects evolution
L_3_07 — Behavioral Genetics: Nature and Nurture
Behavioral genetics — the scientific study of how genetic and environmental factors contribute to individual differences in behavior — has transformed our understanding of human psychology over the past half-century. Thr
L_5_03 — Pharmacogenomics and Ancestral Medicine
Pharmacogenomics — the study of how genetic variation influences individual responses to drugs — bridges genetics, pharmacology, and clinical medicine. Humans carry extensive polymorphism in genes encoding drug-metaboliz
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