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.
3,721 results for "i ching" — page 98 of 187
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_11 — Psychology of Aging and Gerontology
The psychology of aging examines cognitive, emotional, and social changes across the adult lifespan, integrating insights from developmental psychology, neuroscience, and gerontology. A central distinction in cognitive a
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_01 — Psychology of Grief, Loss, and Death Awareness
The psychology of grief, loss, and death awareness spans clinical bereavement research, existential psychology, and experimental social cognition. Elisabeth Kübler-Ross's five-stage model (1969), though culturally ubiqui
T_2_22 — Psychopathy Neuroscience
Psychopathy is a personality disorder characterized by persistent antisocial behavior, impaired empathy and remorse, bold and disinhibited traits, and often superficial charm — affecting an estimated 1% of the general po
T_2_14 — Hypnosis: Suggestion, Trance, and the Science of Hypnotic Phenomena
Hypnosis — a procedure involving an induction (typically relaxation and focused attention instructions) followed by suggestions for changes in perception, sensation, emotion, thought, or behavior — has oscillated between
T_2_18 — Schizophrenia & Psychotic Disorders
Schizophrenia is a severe psychiatric disorder affecting approximately 24 million people worldwide (WHO, 2022), characterized by positive symptoms (hallucinations, delusions, disorganized thought), negative symptoms (anh
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_16 — Body Dysmorphic Disorder
Body dysmorphic disorder (BDD) is a psychiatric condition characterized by persistent, distressing preoccupation with perceived defects or flaws in physical appearance that are not observable or appear slight to others.
T_2_15 — Gratitude and Forgiveness: Prosocial Emotions, Health Benefits, and Psychological Resilience
Gratitude and forgiveness — two central topics in positive psychology — represent prosocial emotional responses that profoundly influence interpersonal relationships, mental health, and physical well-being. Gratitude — t
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_2_09 — Fear, Anxiety, and Phobias
Fear and anxiety are functionally distinct emotion systems: fear is a present-oriented defensive response to immediate threats (fight-flight-freeze), while anxiety is a future-oriented state of apprehension about potenti
T_1_04 — Developmental Psychology — From Piaget to Attachment Theory
Developmental psychology traces psychological changes across the human lifespan, from prenatal development through aging. Jean Piaget's cognitive stage theory, Lev Vygotsky's sociocultural approach, John Bowlby's attachm
T_1_06 — Cognitive Development — Piaget, Vygotsky, Theory of Mind
Cognitive development — how human minds grow in their capacity to think, reason, solve problems, and understand the world — has been dominated by two foundational theories: Jean Piaget's constructivist stage theory (1936
T_1_08 — Personality Psychology and the Big Five
Personality psychology seeks to understand individual differences in characteristic patterns of thinking, feeling, and behaving — and why these patterns remain relatively stable across time and situations.
T_1_13 — Object Relations Theory: Internal Worlds, Attachment, and the Relational Self
Object relations theory — the most influential post-Freudian psychoanalytic tradition — shifted the focus of psychoanalysis from Freud's drive theory (instinctual drives seeking discharge) to the primacy of relationships
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_14 — Self-Determination Theory: Autonomy, Competence, Relatedness, and Intrinsic Motivation
Self-Determination Theory (SDT) — developed by Edward Deci and Richard Ryan (University of Rochester, 1985–present) — is one of the most influential and empirically supported theories of human motivation, proposing that
T_1_15 — Schema Theory: Cognitive Frameworks, Scripts, and Knowledge Organization
Schema theory — the idea that the mind organizes knowledge into structured mental frameworks (schemas) that guide perception, memory, and reasoning — is one of the foundational concepts in cognitive psychology, linking w
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
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