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Search 3,717 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence
185 results for "Van Valen" — page 7 of 10
ZD_4_12 — Quantum Computing — Architecture, Algorithms, and Implications
Quantum computing — computation that exploits the principles of quantum mechanics (superposition, entanglement, and interference) to process information in ways fundamentally different from classical computers — represen
L_1_02 — Interbreeding Events & Genetic Discontinuities
Ancient DNA has established that late human evolution was not a simple replacement story. Expanding populations of Homo sapiens interbred with Neanderthals and Denisovans, and at least one direct first-generation hybrid
L_1_01 — Ancient DNA & Population Genetics
Modern paleogenomics has shown that human evolution was shaped by interbreeding, population structure, and repeated demographic turnover rather than a simple single-line progression. Ancient DNA revealed previously unkno
L_1_10 — Neanderthal Genome and Legacy in Modern Humans
The sequencing of the Neanderthal genome ranks among the most significant achievements in modern biology. Beginning with the draft genome of Green et al. (2010) and refined by later high-coverage genomes from the Altai,
L_1_04 — Archaic Human Species Synthesis
The human evolutionary tree is far more complex than the older linear model suggested. Fossils, ancient DNA, and proteomics now show that Homo sapiens overlapped with several other hominin lineages, including Neanderthal
L_1_12 — Ghost DNA: Unknown Archaic Hominin Admixture
"Ghost DNA" refers to genetic signals — segments of the genome, deviations in allele frequency distributions, or anomalous phylogenetic patterns — that indicate admixture (interbreeding) between anatomically modern human
L_4_13 — Ancient DNA: Methods, Revelations, and Ethical Debates
Ancient DNA (aDNA) — genetic material recovered from biological remains thousands to hundreds of thousands of years old — has revolutionized our understanding of human evolution, migration, and population history. The fi
L_4_05 — Paleogenomics Methods and Ancient DNA
Paleogenomics — the study of ancient genomes — has transformed archaeology, anthropology, and evolutionary biology over the past two decades, recognized by the 2022 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine awarded to Svante
L_2_15 — Population Structure of the Ancient Near East: Farming Spread Genetics
The Neolithic Revolution — the independent invention of agriculture in the Fertile Crescent (~10,000-8,000 BCE) — was one of the most consequential transformations in human history, and ancient DNA has revealed that the
L_2_04 — Oceanian Genetics and Pacific Migration
The human settlement of Oceania represents the last major expansion of Homo sapiens across the globe, and the most remarkable feat of maritime exploration in human history. It occurred in two major phases separated by ~4
L_5_16 — Archaeogenetics: Ancient DNA and the Human Past
Archaeogenetics — the extraction and analysis of DNA from ancient human, animal, and plant remains — has transformed our understanding of human history since the field's breakthrough in 2010. Advances in next-generation
L_5_06 — Genetic Adaptation to Disease: Malaria, Plague, TB
Infectious disease has been the most powerful selective force on the human genome throughout history. Pathogens — particularly malaria, plague, tuberculosis, smallpox, and cholera — have killed more humans than all other
L_5_02 — Genetic Diseases and Founder Effect Populations
When a small group founds a new population and subsequently expands in relative isolation, genetic drift can amplify alleles that were rare in the ancestral population — including deleterious recessive disease alleles. T
Y_4_06 — Synesthesia and Cross-Modal Perception
Synesthesia — the involuntary, consistent experience of one sensory modality triggering perception in another (e.g., hearing colors, tasting shapes) — affects roughly 4% of the general population when broad subtype defin
Y_2_05 — Near-Death Experiences: Cross-Cultural Analysis
Near-death experiences (NDEs) — profound subjective experiences occurring during clinical death, cardiac arrest, or perceived proximity to death — have been reported across virtually all cultures and historical periods.
Y_3_16 — Vipassana: Insight Meditation Tradition
Vipassana (Pali: vipassanā, "clear seeing" or "insight") is one of the two primary modes of Buddhist meditation alongside samatha (calming/concentration), directed at cultivating direct experiential understanding of the
Y_3_11 — Biofeedback and Neurofeedback
Biofeedback is the process of using real-time monitoring of physiological signals — heart rate, muscle tension, skin conductance, brainwave patterns — to train voluntary control over processes normally considered involun
H_3_14 — Oral History Suppression: Favoring Text Over Voice
Academic historiography has systematically privileged written texts over oral sources — treating written documents as reliable evidence and oral traditions as unreliable, distorted, or "merely" mythological. This literac
P_3_09 — Nihilism, Absurdism, and Camus
Nihilism — from Latin nihil ("nothing") — is the philosophical position that life, existence, and values lack objective meaning, purpose, or intrinsic worth. It is not a single doctrine but a cluster of related positions
P_4_01 — Death and the Afterlife Across Cultures
Every known human culture has developed beliefs about what happens after death — making afterlife cosmology one of the most universal features of human thought. The major frameworks include: judgment and reward/punishmen
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