RESEARCH BASE
Search 3,717 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence
195 results for "mutation rate" — page 7 of 10
T_5_01 — Sports Psychology and Performance
Sports psychology investigates the psychological factors that influence athletic performance, exercise behavior, and physical activity — applying principles from cognitive, social, and clinical psychology to optimize hum
D_1_01 — Göbekli Tepe
Göbekli Tepe (~9600–8000 BCE) in southeastern Turkey is the world's oldest known monumental architecture, predating agriculture, pottery, and settled civilization by millennia. Its T-shaped pillars (up to 5.5m tall, 16 t
D_5_19 — Optical Illusions, Entasis, and Perceptual Engineering in Ancient Architecture
Ancient architects across multiple civilizations independently discovered and exploited principles of human visual perception — engineering deliberate optical corrections and illusions into their most important structure
D_3_07 — Nan Madol — Megalithic City on the Reef
Nan Madol is a ruined megalithic city located off the southeast coast of Pohnpei (formerly Ponape), Federated States of Micronesia, in the western Pacific Ocean. Built on a series of ~92 artificial islets constructed on
D_3_01 — Serpent Mound & Effigy Mounds
The Great Serpent Mound in Adams County, Ohio is the largest surviving effigy mound in the world at 1,348 feet (411 m), depicting a sinuous serpent with seven undulating curves and an egg-shaped feature at its head. It c
B_2_05 — Alien Races & Non-Human Intelligences: Complete Taxonomy & Origins
This document examines Alien Races & Non-Human Intelligences: Complete Taxonomy & Origins, a topic within the Beings and Entities research area. Key areas of investigation include Government-Confirmed UAP Categories, The
ZD_3_18 — Optical Computing: Photonic Processors, All-Optical Logic & Speed-of-Light Computation
Optical computing — the use of photons instead of electrons to perform computation — has been pursued since the 1960s as a means to overcome the fundamental speed, bandwidth, and energy limitations of electronic processo
ZD_2_08 — Penrose and Computation: Non-Computability, Consciousness, and Gödel's Theorem
Roger Penrose (b. 1931), Nobel laureate in physics (2020, for demonstrating that black hole formation is a robust prediction of general relativity), has advanced an influential and controversial argument that human mathe
L_1_11 — Convergent Genetic Evolution — Same Solutions, Different Lineages
Convergent evolution — the independent evolution of similar features in species from different evolutionary lineages — is one of the most powerful demonstrations of natural selection's predictability and one of the deepe
L_2_02 — Population Genetics and Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium
Population genetics — the mathematical study of allele frequency change in populations — provides the quantitative framework underlying evolutionary biology. The Hardy-Weinberg principle (1908), independently derived by
L_2_16 — Genetic Diversity and Inbreeding: Population Health Across History
Genetic diversity — the total amount of genetic variation within a population — is a fundamental determinant of population health, adaptive potential, and long-term survival. The loss of diversity through inbreeding (mat
Y_4_21 — Fasting-Induced Altered States
Fasting-induced altered states of consciousness — visionary experiences, euphoria, time distortion, dissociation, and mystical-type experiences produced by prolonged food deprivation — represent one of humanity's oldest
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
Y_3_10 — Fasting, Asceticism, and Altered Consciousness
Fasting and ascetic practices — deliberate deprivation of food, sleep, comfort, or sensory input — have been used across virtually all religious and spiritual traditions to induce altered states of consciousness, visions
H_2_05 — History Rewriting and Textbook Controversies
The rewriting of history through state-controlled textbooks and curricula is one of the most persistent and globally consequential forms of knowledge suppression. This document examines four major case studies: the "Lost
H_2_14 — Funding Bias in Science: Who Pays, Who Decides, What Gets Studied
Scientific research is shaped not only by curiosity and methodology but by who funds it — and funders' priorities, interests, and incentive structures systematically influence what questions get asked, what methods are u
H_1_06 — Destruction of Pre-Islamic and Modern Cultural Heritage
The deliberate destruction of cultural heritage — from the Taliban's demolition of the Bamiyan Buddhas (2001) to ISIS's systematic obliteration of sites in Palmyra, Nimrud, Hatra, and the Mosul Museum (2014–2017) to the
H_1_07 — Nazi Cultural Theft and Book Burning
The Nazi regime conducted two parallel campaigns of cultural destruction and theft between 1933 and 1945: the public burning and censorship of books deemed "un-German" (undeutsch) beginning with the May 10, 1933 book bur
H_4_09 — Whistleblower Persecution and Institutional Retaliation
Throughout history, individuals who expose institutional wrongdoing — government illegality, corporate fraud, scientific misconduct, military atrocities — have faced severe retaliation despite acting in the public intere
H_4_00 — Modern Corporate Suppression: Subfolder Summary
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