RESEARCH BASE
Search 3,717 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence
832 results for "computational social science" — page 28 of 42
E_3_08 — Dansgaard-Oeschger Events and Abrupt Climate Change
Dansgaard-Oeschger (DO) events are rapid climate oscillations during the last glacial period (c. 115,000–11,700 years ago) characterized by abrupt warming of 5–16°C in Greenland within decades — among the most dramatic a
E_2_09 — Heinrich Events and Bond Cycles: Millennial-Scale Climate Oscillations
Heinrich events are episodes of massive iceberg discharge from the Laurentide Ice Sheet through Hudson Strait into the North Atlantic, depositing distinctive layers of ice-rafted debris (IRD) across the ocean floor. Firs
E_4_13 — Milankovitch Cycles and Orbital Forcing
Milankovitch cycles are periodic variations in Earth's orbital geometry that modulate the distribution and intensity of solar radiation reaching Earth's surface, driving the glacial-interglacial cycles that have dominate
E_4_11 — The Holocene Climate Optimum and Mid-Holocene Transition
The Holocene Climate Optimum (also called the Holocene Thermal Maximum or Hypsithermal) designates a prolonged warm interval roughly spanning 9,000–5,000 years before present, during which Northern Hemisphere summer temp
E_4_14 — Stratigraphic Methods and Geological Timekeeping
Stratigraphy — the study of rock layers (strata) and their sequential relationships — is the foundational framework for understanding geological time and establishing the chronology of Earth's 4.54-billion-year history.
E_1_10 — Impact Crater Morphology and Effects
Hypervelocity impact cratering — the formation of craters by the collision of asteroids, comets, and meteoroids with planetary surfaces at speeds of 11–72 km/s — is one of the most fundamental geological processes in the
E_5_09 — Catastrophism vs Uniformitarianism: Geological Paradigm Debates
The catastrophism vs uniformitarianism debate shaped the foundations of modern geology and continues to evolve. Georges Cuvier (1769–1832) championed catastrophism — the idea that Earth's geological features were shaped
ZG_2_15 — Language Attrition: How First Languages Are Lost
Language attrition — the process by which a previously acquired language is gradually lost by an individual speaker due to reduced use and exposure — is one of the most fascinating and practically important phenomena in
ZG_5_17 — Neurolinguistics & Brain Imaging
Neurolinguistics — the study of the neural mechanisms underlying the comprehension, production, and acquisition of language — has been transformed by advances in neuroimaging technology since the 1990s, moving from a fie
ZG_5_15 — Language and Gender: Gendered Speech, Pronoun Reform, and Feminist Linguistics
Language and gender — one of the most active and ideologically charged subfields of sociolinguistics — investigates the bidirectional relationship between linguistic practice and gender: how gender shapes the way people
ZG_5_20 — Oracle Bones: Shang Dynasty Divination, Pyromancy, and the Origins of Chinese Writing
Oracle bones (jiǎgǔ 甲骨) are pieces of ox scapula and turtle plastron used for pyromantic divination during the Shang dynasty (c. 1600–1046 BCE), primarily at the royal capital Yinxu (殷墟) near modern Anyang, Henan Provinc
ZG_5_08 — Neurolinguistics: Broca, Wernicke, Imaging, and the Language Brain
Neurolinguistics — the study of the neural basis of language — investigates how the brain represents, processes, produces, and comprehends language, drawing on evidence from brain lesions (aphasia studies), electrophysio
ZG_5_16 — Machine Translation and Semantic Loss: What Gets Lost Between Languages
Machine translation (MT) — the use of computational systems to translate text or speech from one language to another — has undergone revolutionary transformation since the 2010s through the advent of neural machine trans
ZG_5_07 — Discourse Analysis: Conversation Structure, Coherence, and Power
Discourse analysis — the study of language in use beyond the sentence — investigates how sequences of sentences, utterances, and texts are organized, how they create coherence and meaning, and how they relate to social s
ZG_5_23 — Undeciphered Scripts: The World's Unsolved Writing Systems
Despite the successful decipherment of Egyptian hieroglyphs (Champollion, 1822), Mesopotamian cuneiform (Rawlinson et al., 1850s), Linear B (Ventris, 1952), and Maya glyphs (Knorozov et al., 1952–1980s), dozens of ancien
ZG_5_19 — Marija Gimbutas: Old Europe, Goddess Archaeology, and the Kurgan Hypothesis
Marija Gimbutas (1921–1994) was a Lithuanian-American archaeologist whose "Kurgan hypothesis" and "Old Europe" thesis fundamentally reshaped Indo-European studies and Neolithic archaeology. Working at UCLA from 1963 unti
ZG_5_09 — Machine Translation: Rule-Based, Statistical, and Neural Approaches
Machine Translation (MT) — the use of computers to translate text or speech from one natural language to another — has been a central problem of computational linguistics and artificial intelligence since the earliest da
ZG_5_03 — Pragmatics: Context, Implicature, and Speech Acts
Pragmatics is the study of how context contributes to meaning — how speakers use language to accomplish actions, how listeners infer intended meanings beyond what is literally said, and how the social, physical, and disc
ZG_1_05 — History of Decipherment — Champollion, Ventris, Kober
The decipherment of ancient scripts ranks among the greatest intellectual achievements of the modern era — systematically recovering the ability to read languages that had been silent for centuries or millennia. The disc
ZG_1_01 — Origin of Language — When Did Humans First Speak?
The origin of human language — the capacity for open-ended, recursive, symbolic communication — remains one of the most debated questions in science, lying at the intersection of linguistics, paleoanthropology, genetics,
BROWSE BY SECTION — 3717 documents across 34 fields