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.

2,695 results for "de natura deorum" — page 70 of 135

Z_4_09 Verified Molecular Biology

Z_4_09 — Protein Folding: From Anfinsen's Dogma to AlphaFold

Protein folding — the process by which a linear chain of amino acids spontaneously adopts its specific three-dimensional structure — is one of the most fundamental problems in molecular biology and has been called the "s

protein folding Anfinsen AlphaFold Levinthal paradox chaperones folding funnel
Z_4_12 Verified Molecular Biology

Z_4_12 — Autophagy: The Cell's Self-Eating Recycling System

Autophagy (from Greek auto "self" + phagein "to eat") — the process by which cells degrade and recycle their own components — is a fundamental cellular quality control and survival mechanism conserved from yeast to human

autophagy Ohsumi lysosome mTOR autophagosome protein degradation
Z_4_23 Verified Molecular Biology

Z_4_23 — Memory as Physical and Molecular Phenomenon

What is a memory made of? The question has driven neuroscience from Santiago Ramón y Cajal's 1894 hypothesis that learning strengthens connections between neurons, through Donald Hebb's 1949 postulate that "neurons that

molecular memory memory engram synaptic plasticity long-term potentiation LTP Eric Kandel
Z_4_04 Molecular Biology

Z_4_04 — RNA Biology: Types and Functions

RNA (ribonucleic acid) — once considered merely a passive intermediary between DNA and protein — is now recognized as the most functionally diverse class of biological macromolecules, performing roles in catalysis, gene

RNA biology RNA types messenger RNA mRNA transfer RNA tRNA
Z_4_22 Verified Molecular Biology

Z_4_22 — Protein Chaperone Systems

Molecular chaperones are a diverse group of proteins that assist other proteins in achieving and maintaining their correct three-dimensional structures — preventing misfolding, aggregation, and toxic accumulation of non-

chaperone heat shock protein Hsp70 Hsp90 GroEL GroES
K_3_09 Consciousness

K_3_09 — Minimal Consciousness and the Threshold of Sentience

Where does consciousness begin? This question — the problem of the threshold of sentience — is one of the most challenging in consciousness studies because it requires identifying what KIND of physical system is minimall

minimal consciousness sentience threshold consciousness markers biological consciousness single cell behavior bacterial cognition
K_3_02 Consciousness

K_3_02 — Embodied Cognition

Embodied cognition is a broad research program challenging the classical cognitive science view that the mind is essentially a computer processing abstract symbols in the brain. Instead, embodied cognition holds that thi

embodied cognition 4E cognition embedded enacted extended embodied
K_3_10 Consciousness

K_3_10 — Fetal and Infant Consciousness

The question of when consciousness emerges during human development — whether prenatally, at birth, or gradually through infancy — is one of the most consequential in consciousness studies, with direct implications for f

fetal consciousness infant consciousness neonatal consciousness prenatal awareness fetal pain cortical development
K_3_14 Credible Consciousness

K_3_14 — Consciousness in Octopuses and Distributed Nervous Systems

Octopuses (Octopus vulgaris, O. bimaculoides, Abdopus aculeatus, and ~300 other species in order Octopoda) represent perhaps the most profound natural experiment in the evolution of consciousness: they are the most cogni

octopus cephalopod consciousness distributed nervous system invertebrate cognition mollusc
K_3_08 Consciousness

K_3_08 — Intention, Volition, and Motor Consciousness

The neural basis of voluntary action and the timing of conscious intention relative to brain activity has become one of the most productive — and philosophically consequential — research programs in consciousness studies

free will neuroscience volition Bereitschaftspotential readiness potential Libet experiment Benjamin Libet
K_3_15 Verified Consciousness

K_3_15 — Anesthesia and the Mechanisms of Consciousness Loss

General anesthesia — the reversible abolition of consciousness through pharmacological agents — is one of the most remarkable phenomena in medicine: it routinely eliminates subjective experience in millions of patients d

anesthesia consciousness-loss general-anesthesia neural-correlates propofol sevoflurane
K_3_11 Verified Consciousness

K_3_11 — Animal Consciousness and Sentience

The question of whether non-human animals possess conscious experience — subjective awareness, felt pain, emotions, and self-recognition — has moved from philosophical speculation to a major neuroscientific research prog

animal consciousness sentience Cambridge Declaration mirror test Gallup pain perception
K_3_07 Consciousness

K_3_07 — Evolution of Consciousness

The question of when, how, and why consciousness evolved is one of the deepest unsolved problems at the intersection of biology, neuroscience, and philosophy. Two major recent proposals have attempted to identify the evo

evolution of consciousness consciousness origins sentience evolution Cambrian consciousness nervous system evolution neural correlates evolution
K_3_04 Consciousness

K_3_04 — Anesthesia and Consciousness

General anesthesia — the reversible, drug-induced abolition of consciousness — is one of medicine's greatest achievements and, paradoxically, one of its least understood. Approximately 350 million surgical procedures per

anesthesia general anesthesia consciousness propofol sevoflurane ketamine
K_3_18 Verified Consciousness

K_3_18 — Bioelectricity and Consciousness Transitions

Conscious experience tracks specific patterns of bioelectric activity in neural tissue, and every clinically validated method of producing unconsciousness — general anesthesia, deep sleep, hypothermic circulatory arrest,

bioelectricity consciousness transitions anesthesia mechanism ion channels membrane potential neural decoherence
K_3_03 Consciousness

K_3_03 — Memory and Consciousness

Memory and consciousness are deeply intertwined — memory provides the continuity of experience that creates a sense of self persisting through time, while consciousness provides the subjective context within which memori

memory consciousness working memory episodic memory autobiographical memory amnesia
K_1_13 Credible Consciousness

K_1_13 — Enactivism: Consciousness Through Action and Interaction

Enactivism is a radical approach to cognition and consciousness that rejects the traditional computational model of the mind (the brain as information-processing computer operating on internal representations of the exte

enactivism embodied cognition autopoiesis sense-making Varela Thompson
K_1_17 Verified Consciousness

K_1_17 — Integrated Information Theory: Phi, Axioms & Empirical Tests

Integrated Information Theory (IIT), developed primarily by Giulio Tononi (University of Wisconsin–Madison) from 2004 to the present, proposes that consciousness is identical to integrated information — a quantity denote

integrated-information-theory iit phi giulio-tononi consciousness-axioms qualia-space
K_1_03 Consciousness

K_1_03 — Free Energy Principle and Predictive Processing

The Free Energy Principle (FEP), developed by neuroscientist Karl Friston (2006-present), is one of the most ambitious theoretical frameworks in 21st-century science: it attempts to explain the EXISTENCE, BEHAVIOR, and C

free energy principle FEP Karl Friston predictive processing predictive coding active inference
K_1_06 Consciousness

K_1_06 — Predictive Processing and Consciousness

Predictive processing (PP) is a unifying framework in cognitive neuroscience proposing that the brain is fundamentally a prediction machine — it continuously generates top-down predictions of incoming sensory input and u

predictive processing predictive coding Bayesian brain Karl Friston Andy Clark Jakob Hohwy