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221 results for "neural network" — page 9 of 12
Y_2_17 — Barrier Gating and Altered States of Consciousness
Altered states of consciousness — produced by psychedelics, anesthetics, hypnagogic and hypnopompic transitions, near-death events, deep meditation, breathwork, and sensory deprivation — share a common functional signatu
Y_3_02 — Meditation, Neuroplasticity, and Contemplative Neuroscience
Meditation — the systematic training of attention and awareness — has been practiced for at least 3,000-5,000 years (earliest evidence: Indus Valley seal of a seated figure in meditation posture, ~2600 BCE; earliest text
Y_3_05 — Contemplative Neuroscience
Contemplative neuroscience — the scientific study of meditation, contemplative practices, and their effects on brain, body, and behavior — has matured from a fringe topic into a rigorous interdisciplinary field over 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
Y_3_20 — Enlightenment Neuroscience: Satori, Samadhi & Mystical States
Enlightenment — known as satori or kensho in Zen Buddhism, samadhi in Hindu yogic traditions, fana in Sufism, theosis in Eastern Orthodox Christianity, and unio mystica in the Western mystical tradition — refers to state
Y_3_09 — Prayer, Contemplation, and the Neuroscience of Religious Experience
The neuroscientific study of prayer and religious experience — sometimes termed neurotheology (d'Aquili & Newberg, 1999) — has moved from philosophical speculation to empirical investigation using neuroimaging, EEG, and
Y_3_06 — Awe, Wonder, and Transcendent Emotions
Awe — the emotional response to perceived vastness that requires accommodation (cognitive restructuring of existing mental schemas) — has emerged as a frontier topic in affective neuroscience, positive psychology, and ph
Y_3_07 — Music, Consciousness, and Altered States
Music is one of the most powerful modulators of conscious experience available without pharmacological intervention. Neuroimaging reveals that music engages an extraordinarily distributed network: auditory cortex (superi
Y_3_18 — Sensory Deprivation and Float Tank Research
Sensory deprivation — the deliberate reduction of external sensory stimulation — and its modern therapeutic form, flotation-REST (Restricted Environmental Stimulation Technique), have been studied since the 1950s as a me
Y_1_04 — Psychedelic Renaissance — Clinical Research and Consciousness
The psychedelic renaissance — a resurgence of rigorous scientific research on psychedelic substances after decades of prohibition — has produced some of the most significant findings in 21st-century psychiatry and consci
Y_1_06 — Psychedelic Research — Modern Science and Ancient Entheogen Parallels
Psychedelic research has undergone a dramatic revival since ~2006, with major studies at Johns Hopkins, Imperial College London, NYU, and MAPS demonstrating the therapeutic potential of psilocybin, MDMA, and ayahuasca/DM
P_1_01 — The Hard Problem of Consciousness
The Hard Problem of Consciousness, defined by philosopher David Chalmers in 1995, asks: Why does physical processing in the brain give rise to subjective experience? We can explain HOW neurons fire (the "easy problems")
ZE_3_14 — Neuroethics: Brain Scanning, Cognitive Liberty, and Moral Enhancement
Neuroethics — a field formalized in the early 2000s — addresses the ethical, legal, and social implications of neuroscience and neurotechnology. As brain imaging, neural interfaces, pharmacological interventions, and com
ZE_3_21 — Neuroethics and Memory Manipulation
Neuroethics — the study of ethical, legal, and social implications of neuroscience and neurotechnology — has emerged as a critical discipline as advances in brain imaging, neuropharmacology, and neurostimulation create u
N_5_03 — Underground Railroad and Coded Knowledge Systems
The Underground Railroad (c. 1780s–1865) — the clandestine network of routes, safe houses, and individuals that assisted enslaved African Americans in escaping to freedom in the northern United States, Canada, Mexico, an
N_4_03 — Skull and Bones and Ivy League Secret Societies
Skull and Bones is a senior secret society at Yale University, founded in 1832 by William Huntington Russell and Alphonso Taft. It selects ("taps") 15 new members each year from the junior class, who then meet in a windo
R_4_03 — Nervous System Evolution: From Nerve Nets to Brains
The nervous system — the most complex organ system in animals — evolved once (possibly twice) from electrically excitable cells in the common ancestor of bilaterians and cnidarians, approximately 600–700 million years ag
R_3_07 — Embryology and Morphogenesis: How Bodies Take Shape
Embryology — the study of how a single fertilized cell becomes a complex multicellular organism — is one of biology's most profound mysteries. From the discovery by Karl Ernst von Baer (1828) that embryos of different sp
R_3_05 — Coevolution — Arms Races, Mutualisms, and Red Queens
Coevolution — reciprocal evolutionary change between interacting species — is one of the most powerful engines of biological diversity. Leigh Van Valen's Red Queen hypothesis (1973) captured its essence: species must con
R_3_03 — Evo-Devo: Evolutionary Developmental Biology
Evolutionary developmental biology ("evo-devo") reveals one of biology's most profound discoveries: the same small set of "toolkit" genes (Hox, Pax6, Sonic hedgehog, BMP, Wnt, etc.) controls body plan development across
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