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Search 3,717 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence

3,717 documents 34 sections 47,686 citations 34,596+ keywords indexed 4 evidence tiers

262 results for "contemplative neuroscience" — page 7 of 14

K_5_10 Credible Consciousness

K_5_10 — Theories of Self: No-Self, Minimal Self, Narrative Self

The self — the sense of being a unified, continuous subject of experience — is one of the most fundamental yet puzzling features of consciousness. Who or what is the "I" that sees, thinks, remembers, and acts? Theories o

self no-self anatta minimal self narrative self personal identity
K_5_06 Verified Consciousness

K_5_06 — Dreaming and Consciousness: Why We Dream

Dreaming — the experience of structured hallucinatory consciousness during sleep — is one of the most remarkable features of the human mind and a central challenge for any theory of consciousness. Every night, for a tota

dream REM sleep consciousness lucid dream Hobson activation-synthesis
K_5_08 Verified Consciousness

K_5_08 — Metacognition: Thinking About Thinking

Metacognition — literally "cognition about cognition" or "thinking about thinking" — refers to the human capacity to monitor, evaluate, and regulate one's own cognitive processes. When you realize you don't understand a

metacognition metamemory meta-awareness thinking about thinking monitoring control
K_5_12 Verified Consciousness

K_5_12 — Interoception: Body Signals and Conscious Experience

Interoception — the perception of the internal physiological state of the body — encompasses the sensing and central processing of signals from the heart (cardiac rhythm, blood pressure), lungs (breathing), gut (satiety,

interoception body signals insular cortex anterior insula visceral heartbeat
K_5_17 Verified Consciousness

K_5_17 — Neuroplasticity, Cortical Reorganization, and Brain Self-Repair

Neuroplasticity — the brain's ability to reorganize its structure, function, and connections in response to experience, injury, or environmental demand — has transformed neuroscience from a static model ("the adult brain

neuroplasticity cortical reorganization brain plasticity synaptic plasticity Hebbian learning critical period
K_5_13 Credible Consciousness

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

Bayesian brain predictive processing predictive coding free energy principle Friston Helmholtz
K_5_15 Verified Consciousness

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

neural fractals edge of chaos brain criticality neuronal avalanches Beggs and Plenz 1/f EEG noise
K_5_09 Credible Consciousness

K_5_09 — Consciousness and Time Perception: How the Brain Creates Now

Time is perhaps the most intimate dimension of consciousness: every conscious experience occurs in time, and our sense of temporal flow — the feeling that time "passes," that the present moment is real and moving forward

time perception temporal consciousness specious present subjective time chronesthesia time dilation
K_5_05 Credible Consciousness

K_5_05 — Consciousness and Information Integration: Phi and Its Critics

Integrated Information Theory (IIT), developed primarily by neuroscientist Giulio Tononi (b. 1960) at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, with significant contributions from Christof Koch (Allen Institute for Brain Scie

integrated information theory IIT phi Tononi Koch consciousness
K_5_11 Credible Consciousness

K_5_11 — Synaesthesia and Consciousness: Cross-Modal Binding

Synaesthesia (British spelling; "synesthesia" in American English) is a neurological condition in which stimulation of one sensory or cognitive pathway automatically triggers an involuntary experience in a second, unstim

synaesthesia synesthesia cross-modal grapheme-color sound-color chromesthesia
K_5_03 Consciousness

K_5_03 — Psychosomatic Medicine and Mind–Body Interaction

Psychosomatic medicine investigates the bidirectional relationship between psychological processes and physical health — how mental states, emotions, beliefs, and social contexts influence bodily disease, and how physica

psychosomatic medicine mind-body interaction somatization functional somatic syndromes psychoneuroimmunology PNI
K_5_01 Consciousness

K_5_01 — Neurophenomenology and First-Person Science

Neurophenomenology — the research program proposed by Francisco Varela (1996) — seeks to bridge the "explanatory gap" between objective neuroscience and subjective experience by integrating rigorous first-person phenomen

neurophenomenology first-person methods Francisco Varela phenomenology Husserl lived experience
K_5_00 Consciousness

K_5_00 — Perception Phenomenology: Subfolder Summary

K_5_21 Verified Consciousness

K_5_21 — Entoptic Phenomena: Neural Basis of Universal Visual Patterns

Entoptic phenomena are visual experiences generated within the eye or visual nervous system rather than by external stimuli. They include phosphenes (light flashes from pressure on the eye or electrical stimulation), for

entoptic phosphene form constants geometric hallucination cave art neural pattern
ZG_5_17 Verified Linguistics & Communication

ZG_5_17 — Neurolinguistics & Brain Imaging

Neurolinguistics — the study of the neural mechanisms underlying the comprehension, production, and acquisition of language — has been transformed by advances in neuroimaging technology since the 1990s, moving from a fie

neurolinguistics Broca's area Wernicke's area fMRI language brain aphasia
ZG_5_08 Verified Linguistics & Communication

ZG_5_08 — Neurolinguistics: Broca, Wernicke, Imaging, and the Language Brain

Neurolinguistics — the study of the neural basis of language — investigates how the brain represents, processes, produces, and comprehends language, drawing on evidence from brain lesions (aphasia studies), electrophysio

neurolinguistics Broca's area Wernicke's area aphasia Broca's aphasia Wernicke's aphasia
ZG_1_01 Verified Linguistics & Communication

ZG_1_01 — Origin of Language — When Did Humans First Speak?

The origin of human language — the capacity for open-ended, recursive, symbolic communication — remains one of the most debated questions in science, lying at the intersection of linguistics, paleoanthropology, genetics,

language origins protolanguage speech evolution vocal tract FOXP2 gestural theory
ZG_4_08 Verified Linguistics & Communication

ZG_4_08 — Language Acquisition: How Children Learn Language

The process by which children acquire their first language — apparently effortlessly, without formal instruction, and to a level of grammatical sophistication no adult second-language learner typically achieves — is one

language acquisition first language child language babbling one-word stage two-word stage
ZG_4_00 Linguistics & Communication

ZG_4_00 — Applied Sociolinguistics: Subfolder Summary

ZG_4_06 Verified Linguistics & Communication

ZG_4_06 — Multilingualism and Bilingual Cognition

Multilingualism — the use of two or more languages by an individual or community — is the global norm, not the exception: at least half the world's population is bilingual or multilingual, and monolingualism is a relativ

multilingualism bilingualism bilingual cognition executive function code-switching language acquisition