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535 results for "ain mallaha" — page 3 of 27
U_5_21 — Upper Paleolithic Art: Cave Painting, Portable Art, and Symbolic Cognition
Upper Paleolithic art — spanning approximately 45,000 to 10,000 years ago — represents the earliest unambiguous evidence of complex symbolic cognition in Homo sapiens. The corpus includes parietal (cave wall) art at over
X_5_18 — Binaural Beats: Auditory Processing, Brainwave Entrainment, and Therapeutic Claims
Binaural beats are an auditory perceptual phenomenon first described by Heinrich Wilhelm Dove in 1839: when two tones of slightly different frequencies are presented separately to each ear (e.g., 400 Hz left, 410 Hz righ
X_3_24 — Gastroenterology: Microbiome Therapeutics, IBD & Gut-Brain Axis
Gastroenterology — the study and treatment of the digestive system — has undergone a revolution driven by three transformative discoveries: the bacterial etiology of peptic ulcers, the gut microbiome's role in systemic h
W_2_05 — Jain Cosmology and Non-Violence Philosophy
Jainism is one of the world's oldest living religions, with roots extending to at least the 9th century BCE and traditional claims reaching far deeper into prehistory. Its cosmological system describes a vast, uncreated,
W_2_02 — Angkor Wat, Khmer Cosmology, and Hindu-Buddhist Temple Mountains
Angkor Wat is the largest religious monument ever built — a 162.6-hectare temple complex in northwestern Cambodia, constructed under King Suryavarman II (r. ~1113-1150 CE) as a Hindu temple dedicated to Vishnu. It repres
W_2_09 — Ainu Mythology and Bear Ceremonialism
The Ainu are the Indigenous people of Hokkaido (northern Japan), Sakhalin, and the Kuril Islands, whose cosmological system centers on the concept of kamuy — divine spirits that inhabit all natural phenomena and voluntar
C_1_13 — Sacred Mountains and the Cosmic Mountain
The sacred mountain is one of humanity's most enduring religious symbols — a vertical axis connecting earth and heaven that appears in virtually every major civilization. From Mount Meru at the center of Hindu-Buddhist-J
ZF_5_11 — Abyssal Plains: Earth's Flattest Terrain and Deep Sedimentation
Abyssal plains — vast, flat expanses of sea floor at depths of 3,000–6,000 meters — are the largest habitat on Earth, covering approximately 54% of the planet's surface (more than all continents combined), yet they remai
Z_3_01 — Genetics of Brain Development — ASPM, Microcephalin, HAR1
The human brain is approximately three times larger than expected for a primate of our body size, with a vastly expanded cerebral cortex containing ~86 billion neurons. Identifying the genetic basis for this extraordinar
Z_2_12 — Genetics of Pain Perception
Pain perception — the subjective experience triggered by actual or potential tissue damage — varies enormously across individuals, with genetic factors accounting for 25–50% of the variance in pain sensitivity (twin stud
Z_4_01 — Human Microbiome, Gut-Brain Axis, and the Holobiont Concept
The human microbiome — the ~38 trillion microbial cells (bacteria, archaea, fungi, viruses) inhabiting the human body — constitutes a co-evolved ecosystem that profoundly influences health, immunity, metabolism, developm
K_1_04 — Brain as Filter vs Generator
Two opposing models have dominated the consciousness debate for over a century:
K_2_06 — Neurofeedback and Brain Training
Neurofeedback — the real-time display of brain activity (typically EEG) to enable individuals to learn self-regulation of neural dynamics through operant conditioning — has been investigated since the pioneering work of
K_2_01 — Split-Brain Research and Divided Consciousness
Split-brain research — the study of patients whose corpus callosum has been surgically severed to treat intractable epilepsy — stands as one of neuroscience's most philosophically consequential experimental programs. Rog
K_5_02 — Pain, Consciousness, and the Nature of Suffering
Pain is one of the most philosophically revealing phenomena in consciousness studies: it is simultaneously a sensory detection system, an emotional experience, a cognitive evaluation, and a social communication — and the
K_5_13 — Integrated World Models: Bayesian Brain and Consciousness
The Bayesian brain hypothesis proposes that the brain is fundamentally a prediction machine — it constructs and maintains internal generative models of the world (including the body), uses these models to generate predic
K_5_09 — Consciousness and Time Perception: How the Brain Creates Now
Time is perhaps the most intimate dimension of consciousness: every conscious experience occurs in time, and our sense of temporal flow — the feeling that time "passes," that the present moment is real and moving forward
E_2_26 — Lake Agassiz: Drainage, Climate Disruption, and the Younger Dryas
Glacial Lake Agassiz was the largest proglacial lake in North American history — a vast freshwater body that existed from approximately 13,000 to 8,200 years ago at the southern margin of the retreating Laurentide Ice Sh
ZG_2_11 — Language Isolates: Basque, Ainu, Sumerian, Burushaski
A language isolate is a language that has no demonstrable genealogical (genetic) relationship with any other known language — it stands alone, unrelated to any language family, a sole surviving branch on the tree of huma
ZG_5_13 — Language and Law: Legal Language, Plain Language Movement, and Interpretation
Language and law — the intersection of linguistics and legal systems — encompasses the study of legal language as a distinctive register, the application of forensic linguistics (linguistic expertise in legal proceedings
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