RESEARCH BASE

Search 3,721 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence

3,721 documents 34 sections 43,623 citations 34,854 keywords indexed 4 evidence tiers

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.

1,314 results for "Eye of Africa" — page 56 of 66

T_3_05 Psychology & Social

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

motivation psychology drive theory intrinsic motivation extrinsic motivation self-determination theory Deci
T_3_08 Verified Psychology & Social

T_3_08 — Psychology of Language and Bilingualism

Psycholinguistics — the study of psychological processes underlying language production, comprehension, and acquisition — spans one of the deepest questions in cognitive science: how do humans acquire, process, and use l

psycholinguistics bilingualism Sapir-Whorf linguistic relativity language acquisition Chomsky
T_5_11 Credible Psychology & Social

T_5_11 — Self-Deception: Motivated Ignorance, Cognitive Dissonance, and the Limits of Self-Knowledge

Self-deception — the process by which individuals maintain beliefs, self-images, or narratives that are contradicted by available evidence, often without conscious awareness of doing so — sits at the intersection of phil

self-deception cognitive dissonance Festinger motivated reasoning confabulation self-serving bias
T_5_02 Psychology & Social

T_5_02 — Psychology of Music

Music psychology investigates how humans perceive, produce, respond emotionally to, and are transformed by music — drawing on cognitive psychology, auditory neuroscience, developmental psychology, and clinical applicatio

music psychology music cognition music emotion absolute pitch amusia auditory perception
T_5_12 Credible Psychology & Social

T_5_12 — Media Psychology: Screen Effects, Social Media, and the Psychology of Digital Life

Media psychology — the study of how media (television, film, video games, social media, smartphones) affect cognition, emotion, behavior, and well-being — has become one of the most publicly debated areas of psychology,

media psychology social media screen time attention dopamine addiction
T_5_08 Credible Psychology & Social

T_5_08 — The Psychology of Awe and Wonder: Vastness, Self-Diminishment, and Transformative Experience

Awe — the emotion arising from encounters with vast, powerful, or complex phenomena that exceed one's current mental frameworks and demand cognitive accommodation (schema revision) — has emerged since the early 2000s as

awe wonder vastness self-diminishment small self Keltner
T_5_23 Credible Psychology & Social

T_5_23 — Psychogeography: Environment, Perception, and the Politics of Space

Psychogeography — the study of how geographic environments affect emotions, behavior, and perception — originated as a radical political and artistic practice within the Situationist International of the 1950s–60s, led b

psychogeography dérive situationist guy debord urban exploration flâneur
D_2_05 Sites & Artifacts

D_2_05 — Troy (Hisarlik): Schliemann, Stratigraphy, and the Birth of Field Archaeology

Troy (modern Hisarlik, northwestern Turkey) is one of the most famous archaeological sites in the world, identified with the legendary city of Homer's Iliad. The mound contains at least nine major stratigraphic layers sp

Troy Hisarlik Schliemann Dörpfeld Blegen Korfmann
D_1_18 Verified Sites & Artifacts

D_1_18 — Taş Tepeler: Pre-Pottery Neolithic Ritual Network of Southeastern Turkey

Taş Tepeler ("Stone Hills") is a Turkish government-sponsored archaeological research program and site network encompassing at least 12 Pre-Pottery Neolithic (PPN) sites in the Şanlıurfa Province of southeastern Turkey,

Taş Tepeler Stone Hills Göbekli Tepe Karahan Tepe Sayburç Harbetsuvan Tepesi
D_1_26 Verified Sites & Artifacts

D_1_26 — Ajanta and Ellora: Rock-Cut Temple Complexes of India

Ajanta and Ellora are two UNESCO World Heritage rock-cut cave complexes in the Sahyadri hills of Maharashtra, western India, approximately 100 km apart. Together they span over 1,000 years of continuous religious art and

Ajanta Ellora rock-cut architecture cave temples Maharashtra India
D_1_11 Sites & Artifacts

D_1_11 — Machu Picchu — Royal Estate of Pachacuti

Machu Picchu, located at 2,430 m asl on a narrow ridge between the peaks of Machu Picchu and Huayna Picchu in Peru's Vilcanota/Urubamba Valley, is the best-preserved Inca settlement and one of the most significant archae

Machu Picchu Pachacuti Inca Intihuatana solstice alignment ashlar masonry
D_3_23 Verified Sites & Artifacts

D_3_23 — Mohenjo-Daro: Unsolved Mysteries of the Indus Metropolis

Mohenjo-Daro (Sindhi: "Mound of the Dead") — located in the Larkana District of Sindh, Pakistan, on the right bank of the Indus River — was one of the two largest cities (alongside Harappa, ~600 km to the north) of the I

Mohenjo-Daro Indus Valley Harappan Sindh Pakistan Great Bath
D_3_08 Sites & Artifacts

D_3_08 — Çatalhöyük: Neolithic Urbanism and the Origins of Settled Life

Çatalhöyük is a Neolithic and Chalcolithic settlement located on the Konya Plain of central Anatolia, Turkey, occupied from approximately 7500 to 5700 BCE. At its peak the site housed an estimated 3,000–8,000 inhabitants

Çatalhöyük Neolithic proto-city Konya Plain Turkey wall paintings
D_3_14 Verified Sites & Artifacts

D_3_14 — Rock-Hewn Churches of Tigray: Beyond Lalibela

While Lalibela's eleven rock-hewn churches are world-famous, a far more extensive but less-known tradition of rock-cut church architecture extends across the Tigray Region of northern Ethiopia (and neighboring Eritrea) —

Tigray rock-hewn churches Ethiopia Aksumite Zagwe sandstone
D_3_03 Sites & Artifacts

D_3_03 — Moai of Rapa Nui — Transport, Engineering, and Cultural Context

The moai of Rapa Nui (Easter Island) are among the most recognizable monumental sculptures on Earth: 887 statues carved from compressed volcanic tuff at the Rano Raraku quarry, averaging 4m tall and 12.5 tonnes, with the

moai Rapa Nui Easter Island Rano Raraku pukao ahu
D_3_00 Sites & Artifacts

D_3_00 — Americas Africa Asia Sites: Subfolder Summary

D_4_04 Sites & Artifacts

D_4_04 — Ellora and Ajanta Caves — Rock-Cut Masterworks of India

The Ajanta and Ellora cave complexes in Maharashtra, western India, represent the zenith of Indian rock-cut architecture — a tradition spanning over a millennium. Ajanta (c. 2nd century BCE – 5th century CE) comprises 30

Ellora Ajanta Kailasa Temple rock-cut architecture Buddhist caves Hindu caves
D_4_08 Verified Sites & Artifacts

D_4_08 — Underwater City of Pavlopetri: Bronze Age Submerged Site

Pavlopetri — a submerged settlement lying at shallow depths (1–4 m) just offshore of the Pounta headland in Vatika Bay, southern Laconia (Peloponnese, Greece), near the island of Elafonisos — is the oldest known submerge

Pavlopetri submerged city underwater archaeology Bronze Age Mycenaean Minoan
B_5_12 Credible Beings & Entities

B_5_12 — Cognitive Science of Monster Concepts: Why Humans Invent Creatures

Why do all human cultures independently generate remarkably similar monster concepts — predatory hybrids, shape-shifters, reanimated corpses, giant serpents, invisible watchers? Cognitive science offers a compelling fram

monster concepts cognitive science agency detection predator detection minimally counterintuitive Pascal Boyer
B_5_05 Beings & Entities

B_5_05 — Megafaunal Fossil Misidentification and the Origins of Monster Traditions

The field of geomythology — a term coined by geologist Dorothy Vitaliano in 1968 — investigates how ancient peoples interpreted fossils, geological formations, and megafaunal remains, and how those interpretations genera

fossil mythology Adrienne Mayor geomythology griffin origins cyclops skulls dragon bones