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Search 3,717 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence
243 results for "neuroscience" — page 3 of 13
T_5_19 — Empathy: Neuroscience, Mirror Neurons & Moral Development
Empathy — the capacity to share, understand, and respond to others' emotional and cognitive states — is a multi-component phenomenon with deep evolutionary roots, distinct neural substrates, and profound implications for
Y_4_07 — Hypnosis — History, Neuroscience, and Therapeutic Application
Hypnosis has evolved from Franz Mesmer's "animal magnetism" theory (1770s) through James Braid's neurological reframing (1843) and James Esdaile's surgical applications in India to Milton Erickson's indirect hypnotherapy
Y_5_19 — Congenital Insensitivity to Pain: SCN9A, Nociception, and the Neuroscience of Painlessness
Congenital insensitivity to pain (CIP) encompasses a group of rare inherited conditions in which individuals are born with absent or severely diminished pain perception while retaining other sensory modalities (touch, pr
Y_3_04 — Mystical Experience — Neuroscience of the Numinous
Mystical experiences — characterized by unity consciousness, noetic quality, ineffability, transcendence of time and space, and deep positive affect — have been reported across every known culture and religious tradition
U_2_02 — Cave Art — Lascaux, Chauvet & World's Oldest Paintings
Cave art constitutes the oldest known evidence of symbolic visual expression by Homo sapiens (and possibly Neanderthals), with the earliest confirmed figurative painting — a Sulawesi warty pig — dated to at least 45,500
X_2_13 — Pain Science: Nociception, Perception, and the Biopsychosocial Model
Pain is one of the most universal human experiences — and one of the most complex phenomena in medicine and neuroscience. The International Association for the Study of Pain (IASP) defines pain as "an unpleasant sensory
X_2_00 — Mind Body Alternative: Subfolder Summary
X_2_01 — Psychosomatic Medicine and Placebo Science
The placebo effect — measurable physiological change resulting from the belief or expectation of treatment rather than the treatment's pharmacological action — is among the most replicated and least understood phenomena
X_2_03 — Psychedelic Medicine: Clinical Evidence and Renaissance
The psychedelic renaissance — the resurgence of clinical research into psychedelic compounds after decades of prohibition — represents one of the most significant paradigm shifts in modern psychiatry. Psilocybin for trea
X_2_02 — Sound and Vibrational Medicine
Sound as a healing modality spans from well-validated clinical applications (neurologic music therapy for stroke rehabilitation, ultrasound for tissue healing, vibroacoustic therapy for pain) to cultural healing traditio
X_2_06 — Sleep Medicine and Chronobiology
Sleep medicine — the diagnosis and treatment of sleep disorders — and chronobiology — the study of biological rhythms — are relatively young scientific fields that address a phenomenon that occupies roughly one-third of
X_4_19 — Parasites & Behavior Modification
Parasitic behavior manipulation — in which parasites alter their host's behavior to enhance their own transmission — is one of the most remarkable phenomena in biology, challenging our assumptions about free will, consci
X_3_26 — Chronobiology & Circadian Medicine
Chronobiology — the study of biological rhythms — has emerged from a niche curiosity to a Nobel Prize–winning discipline with profound implications for medicine, metabolism, and mental health. [KEY FINDING] The 2017 Nobe
X_0_00 — Medicine & Healing: Section Summary
INTERDOC_72 — The Psychedelic Entropy Paradox: Coherence Through Anarchy
The "Entropic Brain" hypothesis, pioneered by Robin Carhart-Harris (Imperial College London), demonstrates that under the influence of classic psychedelics (psilocybin, LSD, DMT), the brain's Default Mode Network (DMN) d
INTERDOC_67 — Consciousness as Substrate-Independent Coherence Across Biological, Acoustic, and Artificial Domains
Three independent research streams are converging on the same conclusion:
C_5_01 — Cognitive Anthropology of Serpent Archetypes
This document examines the evolutionary and cognitive science explanations for why serpent beings appear in virtually every human culture. Snake Detection Theory (Isbell, 2009) proposes that primates evolved superior vis
C_5_00 — Regional Analytical Traditions: Subfolder Summary
ZF_2_11 — Cephalopod Intelligence and Biology
Cephalopods — the class Cephalopoda (~800 living species, including octopuses, squids, cuttlefish, and nautiluses) — are among the most cognitively sophisticated invertebrates on Earth and represent a remarkable case of
Z_3_14 — Behavioral Genetics and the Genetics of Aggression
Behavioral genetics investigates the relative contributions of genetic and environmental factors to variation in behavior — including aggression, impulsivity, risk-taking, anxiety, sociability, and cognitive traits. Twin
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