RESEARCH BASE
Search 3,721 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence
3,633 are the core, quality-scored corpus (34 lettered sections — see How We Work); the remaining 88 are cross-corpus synthesis documents (68 InterDocs, 12 Connections, 8 Theories) also indexed here.
3,050 results for "hi no tama" — page 55 of 153
O_3_18 — Rogue Waves: Extreme Ocean Dynamics and Nonlinear Wave Physics
Rogue waves (also called freak waves, killer waves, or extreme waves) are individual ocean waves whose height exceeds twice the significant wave height ($H > 2H_s$) of their surrounding sea state, appearing without warni
O_3_09 — Lake Anomalies and Limnic Eruptions
Limnic eruptions (also called "lake overturns") are rare but catastrophic events in which dissolved carbon dioxide (CO₂) erupts suddenly from deep lake water, forming a dense gas cloud that displaces oxygen and can asphy
O_3_07 — Coral Reefs as Ancient Climate Archives
Coral skeletons serve as high-resolution natural archives of past ocean and climate conditions, recording temperature, salinity, ocean chemistry, and volcanic events in their calcium carbonate growth bands — much like tr
O_5_14 — Ocean Acoustic Anomalies: Bloop, Julia, Upsweep, and SOSUS
Since the end of the Cold War, the repurposing of the US Navy's SOSUS (Sound Surveillance System) — a network of fixed underwater hydrophone arrays originally deployed across the Atlantic and Pacific ocean floors during
T_4_10 — Conformity and Obedience: Asch, Milgram, and the Social Psychology of Compliance
The study of conformity (adjusting one's behavior or beliefs to match a group) and obedience (following directives from an authority figure) produced some of the most famous — and disturbing — experiments in the history
T_4_17 — Parasocial Relationships: One-Sided Bonds with Media Figures
Parasocial relationships — the one-sided emotional bonds that audiences form with media personalities, fictional characters, and public figures — were first described by sociologists Donald Horton and Richard Wohl in the
T_2_08 — Neuropsychology and Brain Damage
Neuropsychology studies the relationship between brain structure/function and behavior — using patterns of cognitive impairment following brain damage to infer how the intact brain organizes mental processes.
T_2_06 — Health Psychology and Stress
Health psychology investigates how psychological, behavioral, and social factors influence health, illness, and healthcare — integrating biological and psychosocial perspectives within the biopsychosocial model (Engel, 1
T_2_10 — Psychology of Resilience and Post-Traumatic Growth
The dominant narrative — that trauma inevitably causes lasting psychological damage — is contradicted by extensive research. Resilience — the ability to maintain or quickly recover stable psychological functioning after
T_2_19 — Eating Disorders
Eating disorders (EDs) — including anorexia nervosa (AN), bulimia nervosa (BN), binge eating disorder (BED), and avoidant/restrictive food intake disorder (ARFID) — affect an estimated 9% of the global population over th
T_1_13 — Object Relations Theory: Internal Worlds, Attachment, and the Relational Self
Object relations theory — the most influential post-Freudian psychoanalytic tradition — shifted the focus of psychoanalysis from Freud's drive theory (instinctual drives seeking discharge) to the primacy of relationships
T_1_15 — Schema Theory: Cognitive Frameworks, Scripts, and Knowledge Organization
Schema theory — the idea that the mind organizes knowledge into structured mental frameworks (schemas) that guide perception, memory, and reasoning — is one of the foundational concepts in cognitive psychology, linking w
T_1_11 — History of Psychology
Psychology's formal history as an independent discipline spans approximately 150 years — from Wilhelm Wundt's founding of the first experimental psychology laboratory in Leipzig (1879) to the present day. The discipline
T_1_16 — Positive Psychology: The PERMA Model and Human Flourishing
Positive psychology — the scientific study of optimal human functioning, well-being, and the conditions enabling individuals and communities to flourish — was formally launched as a distinct movement by Martin Seligman d
T_1_07 — Emotion Theory and Affect
Emotion theory addresses one of psychology's most fundamental and contested questions: What are emotions, where do they come from, and how many are there?
T_3_18 — Anomalistic Psychology
Anomalistic psychology is the scientific study of extraordinary human experiences — including apparent telepathy, precognition, ghost sightings, alien abduction reports, near-death experiences, and other phenomena tradit
T_3_05 — Psychology of Motivation and Drive
Motivation — the processes that initiate, direct, and sustain goal-directed behavior — is one of psychology's most extensively studied domains, with applications spanning education, workplace productivity, health behavio
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_16 — Psychoacoustics, Binaural Beats, and Sound-Mind Interaction
Psychoacoustics — the scientific study of how humans perceive sound — reveals that hearing is not a passive recording of air pressure changes but an active, constructive neural process shaped by attention, expectation, e
T_5_10 — The Psychology of Money: Behavioral Economics, Financial Decision-Making, and Wealth Psychology
The psychology of money explores how cognitive biases, emotional responses, social pressures, and personality traits systematically distort financial decision-making — departing dramatically from the "rational economic a
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