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.
1,985 results for "the Hum" — page 92 of 100
Z_3_00 — Evolutionary Population Genetics: Subfolder Summary
Z_3_08 — Genetics of Taste and Smell
Taste and smell perception are profoundly shaped by genetics, with variation in chemosensory receptor genes producing dramatically different sensory worlds between individuals. The olfactory receptor (OR) gene family — d
Z_3_04 — Comparative Genomics and Cross-Species Analysis
Comparative genomics — the systematic comparison of genome sequences across species — has become the primary tool for understanding genome evolution, identifying functionally important sequences, and reconstructing the T
Z_3_10 — Genetics of Athletic Performance
Athletic performance is a highly polygenic trait with substantial heritability — twin studies estimate heritability of VO2max (maximal oxygen uptake) at ~50% (Bouchard et al., 1999, HERITAGE Family Study), muscle fiber c
Z_3_11 — Genetic Mosaicism and Chimerism
A fundamental assumption of genetics — that every cell in an individual's body carries the same genome — is wrong. Genetic mosaicism (the presence of two or more genetically distinct cell populations within an individual
Z_3_05 — Viral Integration and Endogenous Retroviruses
Approximately 8% of the human genome consists of human endogenous retroviruses (HERVs) — the remnants of ancient retroviral infections that integrated into germline cells and were subsequently inherited vertically like a
Z_2_15 — Future of Genomics and Personalized Medicine
Genomics is undergoing a transition from research tool to clinical infrastructure. The cost of whole-genome sequencing (WGS) has plummeted from $2.7 billion (Human Genome Project, 1990–2003) to ~$200 per genome (Illumina
Z_2_19 — Senolytics & Geroscience: Targeting Cellular Senescence in Aging
Cellular senescence — the irreversible arrest of cell division first described by Leonard Hayflick and Paul Moorhead (1961, Experimental Cell Research) — has emerged as a central mechanism of aging and age-related diseas
Z_2_10 — Genetics of Aging and Progeria
Aging — the progressive decline in physiological function leading to increased vulnerability to disease and death — has a substantial genetic component: twin studies estimate heritability of human lifespan at ~25–30% (He
Z_2_03 — Pharmacogenomics & Ethnobotanical Genetics
Pharmacogenomics — the study of how genetic variation affects drug response — has revealed that enzymes governing drug metabolism, particularly the cytochrome P450 (CYP) superfamily, show extraordinary population-specifi
Z_2_12 — Genetics of Pain Perception
Pain perception — the subjective experience triggered by actual or potential tissue damage — varies enormously across individuals, with genetic factors accounting for 25–50% of the variance in pain sensitivity (twin stud
Z_2_04 — Genetic Disorders and Inborn Errors of Metabolism
Genetic disorders — diseases caused by mutations in single genes (monogenic) or chromosomal abnormalities — affect ~3–5% of live births and collectively represent thousands of distinct conditions catalogued in the Online
Z_2_06 — Nutrigenomics and Diet-Gene Interactions
Nutrigenomics — the study of how genetic variation influences nutritional requirements, dietary responses, and disease susceptibility — and its complement nutrigenetics (how diet influences gene expression) represent a r
Z_2_14 — Genetics of Longevity and Blue Zones
The genetics of human longevity — why some individuals live past 100 while most do not — is a field where heritability is modest, effect sizes are small, and environmental factors dominate, yet several genetic pathways h
Z_2_02 — Telomere Biology & Genetics of Aging
Telomeres — repetitive DNA sequences (TTAGGG)ₙ capping the ends of linear chromosomes — serve as protective buffers against chromosome degradation, end-to-end fusion, and the progressive DNA loss inherent in the end-repl
Z_2_00 — Medical Genetics Health: Subfolder Summary
Z_2_07 — Genetics of Disease Resistance
Infectious disease has been the most powerful selective force shaping the human genome, leaving signatures across thousands of loci. The best-understood example is sickle cell disease (HbS, Glu6Val in HBB): heterozygous
Z_1_06 — Sex Determination Genetics
Sex determination — the biological process that establishes whether an organism develops as male, female, or an alternative reproductive type — employs remarkably diverse mechanisms across the tree of life. In placental
Z_1_07 — Genetic Recombination and Crossing Over
Genetic recombination — the physical exchange of DNA segments between homologous chromosomes during meiosis — is a fundamental biological process that generates genetic diversity, ensures proper chromosome segregation, a
Z_1_08 — Transposons and Mobile Genetic Elements
Transposable elements (TEs, transposons) — segments of DNA that can move or copy themselves to new genomic locations — are among the most abundant and influential components of eukaryotic genomes. Discovered by Barbara M
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