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Search 3,717 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence
130 results for "single path" — page 3 of 7
X_4_15 — Addiction Medicine & Substance Abuse
Addiction medicine is a medical subspecialty formally recognised by the American Board of Medical Specialties (ABMS) in October 2015, though its intellectual roots stretch to Dr. Benjamin Rush's 1784 description of alcoh
X_3_20 — Infectious Disease & Epidemiology
Infectious diseases have shaped human history more profoundly than any other biological force. The germ theory of disease, established by Louis Pasteur and Robert Koch in the 1860s–1880s, transformed medicine from specul
X_3_25 — Antibiotic Resistance Crisis
Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) — the ability of microorganisms to survive exposure to drugs that once killed them — is one of the most serious threats to global public health in the twenty-first century. [KEY FINDING] A
W_4_02 — Polynesian Navigation and Rapa Nui
The Polynesian settlement of the Pacific Ocean — the largest migration in human prehistory — colonized virtually every inhabitable island across 16 million km² of open ocean using non-instrument navigation techniques of
ZH_4_15 — Milky Way Mythology: Cultural Interpretations of the Galaxy Worldwide
The Milky Way — the luminous band of light stretching across the night sky, now understood as the disk of our home galaxy seen edge-on from within — has been one of humanity's most universally observed and mythologized c
ZH_3_02 — Polynesian Celestial Navigation: Star Compass and Wayfinding
The peoples of Polynesia — spread across the vast Polynesian Triangle (Hawaiʻi, Rapa Nui/Easter Island, Aotearoa/New Zealand), the largest ocean-spanning cultural region on Earth — accomplished the most remarkable feat o
ZH_3_16 — Polynesian Star Compass: Celestial Navigation of the Pacific
The Polynesian star compass represents one of humanity's most sophisticated non-instrument navigation systems — enabling deliberate, repeatable voyages across thousands of miles of open Pacific Ocean centuries before Eur
ZH_5_25 — Polynesian Star Navigation and Pacific Migration
Polynesian wayfinding — the ability to navigate thousands of kilometers of open ocean without instruments — represents one of humanity's supreme intellectual achievements. Between c. 3,000 BCE and 1250 CE, Austronesian-s
ZH_1_05 — Eclipse Records: Astronomical Dating and Historical Anchors
Eclipse records — observations of solar and lunar eclipses preserved in ancient and medieval texts — are among the most scientifically valuable artifacts of pre-modern astronomy. Because eclipses are precisely calculable
ZF_5_21 — Invasive Species: Ecological Disruption, Biosecurity, and Marine Invasions
Invasive species — organisms introduced outside their native range that cause ecological, economic, or health damage — represent one of the top five drivers of global biodiversity loss, alongside habitat destruction, ove
Z_5_14 — Spatial Transcriptomics: Gene Expression in Tissue Context
Spatial transcriptomics — technologies that measure gene expression while preserving the spatial location of transcripts within intact tissue sections — resolves a fundamental limitation of conventional single-cell RNA s
Z_3_13 — Horizontal Gene Transfer in Prokaryotes
Horizontal gene transfer (HGT) — the movement of genetic material between organisms outside of parent-to-offspring inheritance — is a dominant force shaping prokaryotic evolution, fundamentally challenging the traditiona
Z_2_08 — Prion Genetics and Misfolded Proteins
Prions are infectious agents composed entirely of misfolded protein — the only known pathogen that contains no nucleic acid (no DNA, no RNA). The protein-only hypothesis (Stanley Prusiner, 1982 — Nobel Prize 1997) states
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_2_11 — Genetics of Immunity and MHC Diversity
The major histocompatibility complex (MHC) — known as the human leukocyte antigen (HLA) system in humans — is the most polymorphic gene region in the human genome, encoding cell-surface glycoproteins essential for adapti
Z_2_07 — Genetics of Disease Resistance
Infectious disease has been the most powerful selective force shaping the human genome, leaving signatures across thousands of loci. The best-understood example is sickle cell disease (HbS, Glu6Val in HBB): heterozygous
Z_2_01 — HLA System & Archaic Immune Inheritance
The Human Leukocyte Antigen (HLA) system is the most polymorphic region of the human genome, encoding cell-surface proteins critical to adaptive immune function. Located on chromosome 6p21.3, the Major Histocompatibility
Z_4_18 — Protein Misfolding and Prion Diseases
Prion diseases — transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSEs) — are fatal neurodegenerative disorders caused by the misfolding and self-propagating aggregation of a normal cellular protein (PrPᶜ) into a pathological
Z_4_15 — Molecular Motors: Kinesin, Dynein, and Myosin
Molecular motors — protein machines that convert the chemical energy of ATP hydrolysis into directed mechanical work — are the engines of cellular life, responsible for transporting cargo within cells, driving cell divis
K_3_09 — Minimal Consciousness and the Threshold of Sentience
Where does consciousness begin? This question — the problem of the threshold of sentience — is one of the most challenging in consciousness studies because it requires identifying what KIND of physical system is minimall
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