RESEARCH BASE
Search 3,721 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence
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.
2,371 results for "Temple of the Feathered Serpent" — page 83 of 119
T_4_03 — Group Psychology and Crowd Behavior
Group psychology examines how individuals' thoughts, feelings, and behaviors are influenced by the presence and actions of others — from small groups to mass crowds. Foundational research includes Gustave Le Bon's The Cr
T_4_18 — Forensic Psychology: Criminal Behavior, Assessment, and Justice
Forensic psychology — the application of psychological science to legal and criminal justice systems — encompasses criminal profiling, eyewitness testimony reliability, risk assessment of violence and recidivism, compete
T_4_17 — Parasocial Relationships: One-Sided Bonds with Media Figures
Parasocial relationships — the one-sided emotional bonds that audiences form with media personalities, fictional characters, and public figures — were first described by sociologists Donald Horton and Richard Wohl in the
T_2_06 — Health Psychology and Stress
Health psychology investigates how psychological, behavioral, and social factors influence health, illness, and healthcare — integrating biological and psychosocial perspectives within the biopsychosocial model (Engel, 1
T_2_04 — Positive Psychology & Wellbeing Science
Positive psychology — the scientific study of what makes life worth living — was formally launched by Martin Seligman in his 1998 APA presidential address, shifting psychology's traditional focus from pathology and dysfu
T_2_19 — Eating Disorders
Eating disorders (EDs) — including anorexia nervosa (AN), bulimia nervosa (BN), binge eating disorder (BED), and avoidant/restrictive food intake disorder (ARFID) — affect an estimated 9% of the global population over th
T_2_13 — Placebo and Nocebo Effects
The placebo effect — a measurable physiological or psychological improvement in response to an inert treatment — is one of the most robust and well-documented phenomena in medicine and psychology, while the nocebo effect
T_2_17 — Depression & Mood Disorders
Major Depressive Disorder (MDD) affects an estimated 280 million people worldwide (WHO, 2023) and is the leading cause of disability globally. The neurobiological understanding of depression has undergone a paradigm shif
T_2_05 — Clinical Psychology: History and Foundations
Clinical psychology — the assessment, diagnosis, and treatment of mental disorders — evolved from ancient supernatural explanations of madness through institutional reform, the psychoanalytic revolution, behavioral and c
T_1_10 — Psychometrics and Intelligence Testing
Intelligence testing is among the oldest and most psychometrically robust enterprises in psychology. Spearman's g factor (1904) — a general mental ability extracted through factor analysis — remains one of the strongest
T_1_19 — Depression: Neurobiology, Treatment Evolution & Cultural Perspectives
Major depressive disorder (MDD) — affecting approximately 280 million people worldwide (WHO, 2021) and ranking as the leading cause of disability globally — is a heterogeneous condition whose neurobiology remains incompl
T_1_05 — Moral Psychology — Haidt, Kohlberg, Moral Foundations
Moral psychology — the empirical study of how humans make moral judgments and develop moral understanding — has undergone a revolution over the past two decades, shifting from Lawrence Kohlberg's rationalist stage theory
T_3_04 — Sleep Psychology and Dreams
Sleep occupies approximately one-third of human life yet its functions remain among the most actively investigated questions in neuroscience and psychology.
T_3_01 — Cognitive Biases & Heuristics
Cognitive biases are systematic deviations from rational judgment that arise from the brain's use of mental shortcuts (heuristics) to process complex information under uncertainty.
T_5_22 — Heuristics & Cognitive Biases: Systematic Errors in Human Judgment
Heuristics are mental shortcuts that enable fast, efficient decision-making under conditions of uncertainty — and cognitive biases are the systematic errors that result when those shortcuts misfire. The heuristics-and-bi
T_5_24 — Time Perception: Chronobiology, Subjective Duration, and Temporal Consciousness
Time perception — how organisms experience, measure, and represent temporal duration — is one of neuroscience's most fundamental yet poorly understood phenomena. Unlike vision or hearing, there is no dedicated sensory or
T_5_06 — Digital Psychology and Screen Time
Digital psychology examines how digital technologies — smartphones, social media, video games, internet use — affect cognition, emotion, social behavior, and mental health. The field has become intensely debated since th
D_2_11 — Abu Simbel: Ramesses II and Solar Engineering
Abu Simbel — twin rock-cut temples on the western bank of the Nile in southern Egypt (Nubia), near the modern border with Sudan — represents the apex of pharaonic monumental engineering and one of the most spectacular so
D_2_08 — Mycenae: Lion Gate, Shaft Graves, and Bronze Age Greek Power
Mycenae, located in the northeastern Peloponnese, was the dominant political and cultural center of Late Bronze Age Greece (~1600–1100 BCE) and gave its name to the entire Mycenaean civilization. Heinrich Schliemann's 18
D_2_21 — Black Sea Deluge: Archaeological Evidence for Rapid Flooding
The Black Sea Deluge Hypothesis proposes that the Black Sea — now a large saline body connected to the Mediterranean via the Bosporus Strait — was once a significantly smaller, lower freshwater lake during the Last Glaci
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