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1,253 results for "chain of custody" — page 32 of 63
T_4_02 — Forensic Psychology and the Criminal Mind
Forensic psychology applies psychological science to legal and criminal justice systems — encompassing criminal behavior, courtroom processes, investigative methods, risk assessment, and rehabilitation.
T_4_06 — Cross-Cultural Psychology
Cross-cultural psychology investigates how culture shapes human thought, emotion, and behavior — and which psychological processes are universal versus culturally specific. The field distinguishes between etic approaches
T_4_03 — Group Psychology and Crowd Behavior
Group psychology examines how individuals' thoughts, feelings, and behaviors are influenced by the presence and actions of others — from small groups to mass crowds. Foundational research includes Gustave Le Bon's The Cr
T_4_18 — Forensic Psychology: Criminal Behavior, Assessment, and Justice
Forensic psychology — the application of psychological science to legal and criminal justice systems — encompasses criminal profiling, eyewitness testimony reliability, risk assessment of violence and recidivism, compete
T_2_09 — Fear, Anxiety, and Phobias
Fear and anxiety are functionally distinct emotion systems: fear is a present-oriented defensive response to immediate threats (fight-flight-freeze), while anxiety is a future-oriented state of apprehension about potenti
T_1_20 — Evolutionary Psychology Debate
Evolutionary psychology (EP) is the theoretical approach that applies principles of natural selection and adaptation to understand human psychological traits — arguing that the human mind, like the human body, is the pro
T_1_03 — Transpersonal Psychology — Beyond the Personal Self
Transpersonal psychology extends psychological inquiry beyond the individual ego to encompass states of consciousness, spirituality, and experiences transcending ordinary personal identity. Emerging in the late 1960s fro
T_1_17 — Educational Psychology: Learning, Development, and Instruction
Educational psychology — the scientific study of how humans learn and how instructional environments can be optimized to support learning — integrates cognitive psychology, developmental theory, motivation research, and
T_3_19 — Feral Children, Linguistic Deprivation, and Critical Period Evidence
Feral children — individuals who grew up with minimal or no human contact during their early years — provide the most compelling (and tragic) natural evidence for the critical period hypothesis in language acquisition. T
T_5_03 — Embodied and Social Cognition
Embodied cognition challenges the classical computational model of mind (cognition as abstract symbol manipulation, independent of the body) by proposing that cognitive processes are fundamentally shaped by the body's ph
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
D_2_08 — Mycenae: Lion Gate, Shaft Graves, and Bronze Age Greek Power
Mycenae, located in the northeastern Peloponnese, was the dominant political and cultural center of Late Bronze Age Greece (~1600–1100 BCE) and gave its name to the entire Mycenaean civilization. Heinrich Schliemann's 18
D_2_07 — Persepolis: Achaemenid Architecture, Apadana Reliefs, and Imperial Ideology
Persepolis (Old Persian: Pārsa; modern Takht-e Jamshid, Fars Province, Iran) was the ceremonial capital of the Achaemenid Persian Empire, constructed primarily under Darius I (r. 522–486 BCE) and his son Xerxes I (r. 486
D_2_02 — Pompeii and Herculaneum — Frozen in Volcanic Time
The Roman cities of Pompeii (~11,000 population) and Herculaneum (~5,000 population) were destroyed and simultaneously preserved by the catastrophic eruption of Mount Vesuvius in AD 79. The eruption (now dated to October
D_1_08 — Tiwanaku and Puma Punku Deep Dive
Tiwanaku, situated at 3,825m elevation on the Bolivian Altiplano near the shores of Lake Titicaca, was the highest-altitude imperial capital in the ancient world. Flourishing from approximately 300 to 1000 CE, its influe
D_1_10 — Petra — Rock-Cut Architecture and Hydrological Engineering
Petra, the ancient Nabataean capital hidden within the sandstone mountains of southern Jordan, represents one of the most extraordinary achievements in rock-cut architecture. Established as the Nabataean capital by the 4
D_1_25 — Ollantaytambo: Megalithic Engineering in the Sacred Valley
Ollantaytambo (Quechua: Ullantaytampu) is a monumental Inca archaeological site at 2,792 m elevation in the Sacred Valley (Urubamba Valley) of Peru, approximately 72 km northwest of Cusco. It served simultaneously as a r
D_1_06 — Carnac, Avebury, and European Megalithic Alignments
Europe's megalithic tradition extends from Portugal to Scandinavia and spans roughly 4800–1500 BCE, encompassing thousands of stone circles, standing stones (menhirs), stone rows, dolmens, and passage tombs. The Carnac a
D_1_09 — Newgrange, Knowth, and Passage Tomb Astronomy
Newgrange, constructed around 3200 BCE in the Boyne Valley (Brú na Bóinne) of County Meath, Ireland, is one of the most remarkable Neolithic structures in the world — older than the Egyptian pyramids by approximately 700
D_1_03 — Megalithic Impossible Engineering
Ancient megalithic construction worldwide features stone blocks of extraordinary size and precision that challenge conventional explanations. Baalbek's Trilithon uses three 800-tonne stones set 7 meters above ground; Sac
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