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208 results for "network flow" — page 4 of 11
X_1_23 — Meditation Neuroscience
Meditation neuroscience — the scientific study of how contemplative practices alter brain structure and function — has undergone explosive growth since the early 2000s, moving from a fringe topic to a rigorous subfield o
X_4_18 — Fractal Physiology: The Mathematics of Healthy Life
The body is a fractal machine. From capillaries that branch like river deltas to the 70 m² of lung surface packed into a 4-litre chest cavity, and from the beat-to-beat complexity of a healthy heart to the trabecular sca
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
W_4_13 — Aztec Empire: Tenochtitlan, Sacrifice, and Cosmovision
The Aztec Empire — more precisely the Mexica-led Triple Alliance (c. 1428–1521 CE) of Tenochtitlan, Texcoco, and Tlacopan — was the dominant political and military power in Mesoamerica at the time of the Spanish arrival.
W_1_19 — Hanseatic League: Medieval Trade Networks and Urban Power
The Hanseatic League (die Hanse) — a confederation of merchant guilds and market towns in northwestern and central Europe — dominated Baltic and North Sea trade from the mid-12th through the mid-17th century, at its peak
W_1_28 — Bronze Age Collapse: The 1177 BCE Systems Failure and Mediterranean Civilizational Crisis
The Bronze Age Collapse (c. 1200–1150 BCE) destroyed or severely diminished every major civilization in the eastern Mediterranean within approximately 50 years — the Hittite Empire, Mycenaean Greece, the Egyptian New Kin
W_2_13 — Sogdian Civilization: Silk Road Merchants and Cultural Brokers
The Sogdians — an Eastern Iranian people centered in the fertile valleys of the Zerafshan and Kashkadarya rivers (modern Uzbekistan and Tajikistan — the cities of Samarkand and Bukhara) — were the quintessential merchant
W_2_16 — Srivijaya Maritime Empire
Srivijaya (c. 650–1377 CE) was a Malay Buddhist thalassocracy centered on the island of Sumatra (modern Indonesia) that dominated maritime trade across the Strait of Malacca and the South China Sea for over 500 years. At
ZF_5_19 — Coral Restoration Technology
Coral restoration technology — the active intervention to repair, regenerate, and enhance degraded coral reef ecosystems — has rapidly evolved from small-scale transplantation efforts into a multi-billion-dollar global e
Z_3_09 — Conservation Genetics and Endangered Species
Conservation genetics applies population genetics, genomics, and molecular biology to the preservation of biological diversity. At its core is the recognition that genetic diversity — the raw material for adaptation to c
Z_1_04 — Gene Expression and Regulation
Gene expression regulation — the molecular mechanisms controlling when, where, and how much each gene is active — is the central process that enables a single genome to produce ~200 distinct cell types, orchestrate embry
Z_1_11 — Polyploidy and Genome Duplication
Polyploidy — the possession of more than two complete sets of chromosomes — is a major force in genome evolution, particularly in plants and some animal lineages. Susumu Ohno (1970) proposed that whole genome duplication
Z_4_06 — Psychedelic Neurochemistry: 5-HT2A, Tryptamines, and Molecular Mechanisms
Psychedelic neurochemistry — the molecular-level study of how psychedelic compounds alter brain function to produce their characteristic effects (visual hallucinations, synesthesia, ego dissolution, mystical-type experie
K_3_15 — Anesthesia and the Mechanisms of Consciousness Loss
General anesthesia — the reversible abolition of consciousness through pharmacological agents — is one of the most remarkable phenomena in medicine: it routinely eliminates subjective experience in millions of patients d
K_1_04 — Brain as Filter vs Generator
Two opposing models have dominated the consciousness debate for over a century:
K_1_08 — Higher-Order Theories of Consciousness
Higher-order (HO) theories of consciousness propose that a mental state becomes conscious not by virtue of its intrinsic properties but because it is the target of a higher-order mental representation — a thought, percep
K_4_17 — Plant and Fungal Consciousness: Intelligence without Neurons
The question of whether plants and fungi possess forms of consciousness, intelligence, or cognition has moved from philosophical speculation to active scientific investigation. Plants exhibit sophisticated information pr
K_4_19 — Plant Bioelectricity and Distributed Cognition
Plants generate, propagate, and respond to electrical signals via mechanisms that are biophysically homologous to neuronal action potentials, despite lacking a brain or central nervous system. Action potentials in Mimosa
K_2_04 — Attention and Awareness
Attention and awareness are intimately linked yet dissociable aspects of consciousness. Attention — the selective processing of some information at the expense of other information — is a fundamental bottleneck in human
K_2_15 — Glial Cells and the Tripartite Synapse: The Brain's Other Half
Glial cells (neuroglia) — comprising astrocytes, oligodendrocytes, microglia, and NG2 glia in the central nervous system, plus Schwann cells and satellite cells in the peripheral nervous system — constitute approximately
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