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2,523 results for "w parameter" — page 6 of 127
C_5_26 — World Age Doctrine: Cycles of Creation and Destruction
The World Age Doctrine — the belief that cosmic time is divided into successive ages or epochs, each ending in destruction and giving way to the next — is one of the most widespread cosmological frameworks in human thoug
C_2_14 — Rainbow Serpent Across Cultures: A Cross-Cultural Comparative Analysis
The Rainbow Serpent is arguably the most geographically widespread and temporally deep mythological motif in human culture, appearing as a primordial water/creation deity across Australian Aboriginal traditions (where ro
ZF_3_06 — Polynesian and Indigenous Ocean Knowledge
Indigenous and Pacific Islander communities have accumulated millennia of empirical ocean knowledge — encompassing navigation, marine ecology, fisheries management, weather prediction, tidal patterns, and ocean-land rela
ZF_3_16 — Underwater Cultural Heritage: Submerged Archaeology and Maritime History
Underwater cultural heritage encompasses the vast archaeological record preserved beneath the world's oceans, seas, rivers, and lakes — estimated to include over 3 million shipwrecks worldwide, along with submerged settl
ZF_3_15 — Tsunami Cultural Memory: Indigenous Oral Records and Ancient Warnings
Tsunami cultural memory reveals that indigenous and traditional communities have preserved remarkably accurate records of catastrophic ocean events — sometimes for centuries or millennia — through oral traditions, storie
ZF_3_02 — Maritime Archaeology: Shipwrecks, Sunken Cities, and Submerged Structures
Maritime archaeology — the study of human interaction with the sea through material remains — has matured from treasure-hunting salvage into a rigorous scientific discipline that applies the same stratigraphic principles
ZF_5_18 — Wave & Tidal Energy
Wave and tidal energy — the extraction of electrical power from ocean surface waves and gravitational tidal flows — represent a vast but largely untapped renewable energy resource: the International Energy Agency (IEA) e
ZF_5_05 — UNCLOS and Ocean Governance: Maritime Law, EEZ, and High Seas
The United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), adopted in 1982 and entering into force in 1994, is the comprehensive legal framework governing all uses of the world's oceans — often called the "Constitutio
ZF_4_03 — Desalination and Ocean Water Resources
Desalination — the removal of dissolved salts from seawater or brackish water to produce freshwater — has become an increasingly critical technology as global freshwater demand rises and climate change intensifies drough
ZF_1_11 — Rogue Waves, Freak Seas, and Extreme Ocean Events
Rogue waves (also called freak waves, abnormal waves, or episodic waves) are individual ocean surface waves that are at least twice the significant wave height (H_s — the average height of the highest one-third of waves
Z_1_21 — Riboswitches and RNA Thermometers
Riboswitches are structured RNA elements typically found in the 5' untranslated regions (5' UTRs) of bacterial messenger RNAs that directly sense and bind specific small-molecule metabolites — changing their three-dimens
Z_1_20 — RNA World Hypothesis
The RNA World hypothesis proposes that life on Earth passed through an early stage in which RNA molecules served as both the carriers of genetic information AND the catalysts of chemical reactions — performing the dual r
K_2_12 — Neural Oscillations and Brainwave Consciousness
Neural oscillations — rhythmic fluctuations in the electrical activity of neuronal populations — are among the most prominent features of brain activity, measurable by electroencephalography (EEG) since Hans Berger's fir
K_2_11 — Default Mode Network: Brain at Rest and Self-Referential Consciousness
The Default Mode Network (DMN) is a large-scale brain network that is most active when a person is not focused on the external environment — during mind-wandering, daydreaming, self-referential thought, autobiographical
K_2_09 — Neuroscience of Free Will
The neuroscience of free will centers on experiments testing whether conscious intention precedes or follows the neural preparation for action. Benjamin Libet's landmark 1983 experiments showed that the brain's "readines
K_2_13 — Attention Networks: Dorsal, Ventral, and Salience Systems
Attention — the selective allocation of processing resources to particular stimuli, locations, or tasks — is among the most studied phenomena in cognitive neuroscience and is intimately linked to consciousness: what we a
K_5_13 — Integrated World Models: Bayesian Brain and Consciousness
The Bayesian brain hypothesis proposes that the brain is fundamentally a prediction machine — it constructs and maintains internal generative models of the world (including the body), uses these models to generate predic
K_5_15 — Neural Fractals & the Edge of Chaos: Brain Criticality and Complexity
The brain is poised at a critical point between order and chaos — and its fractality is not an accident but a functional necessity. In 2003, John Beggs and Dietmar Plenz published one of neuroscience's landmark papers: t
ZG_5_13 — Language and Law: Legal Language, Plain Language Movement, and Interpretation
Language and law — the intersection of linguistics and legal systems — encompasses the study of legal language as a distinctive register, the application of forensic linguistics (linguistic expertise in legal proceedings
ZG_5_16 — Machine Translation and Semantic Loss: What Gets Lost Between Languages
Machine translation (MT) — the use of computational systems to translate text or speech from one language to another — has undergone revolutionary transformation since the 2010s through the advent of neural machine trans
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