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Cognitive immunology. Critical thinking. Defense against disinformation.

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  2. Scientific Databases: The Foundation of Evidence-Based Medicine and Research

Scientific Databases: The Foundation of Evidence-Based Medicine and ResearchλScientific Databases: The Foundation of Evidence-Based Medicine and Research

Systematized repositories of scientific publications providing access to peer-reviewed research, meta-analyses, and clinical data for evidence-based decision-making in medicine and science

Overview

Scientific databases are structured repositories of peer-reviewed research, systematic reviews, and clinical data. PubMed, Scopus, Web of Science 🧬 contain millions of articles that form the foundation of evidence-based medicine and allow us to distinguish verified facts from marketing claims. Understanding the hierarchy of evidence—from meta-analyses to individual case reports—is critically important for correct data interpretation and creating quality medical content.

🛡️
Laplace Protocol: All claims are based on sources from authoritative scientific databases with priority given to systematic reviews and meta-analyses as the highest level of evidence.
Navigation Matrix

Subsections

[biology-neuro]

Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses

Systematic reviews and meta-analyses represent the highest level of evidence, combining results from multiple studies through transparent, reproducible protocols to generate reliable clinical recommendations.

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[chemistry-group]

Chemistry

A fundamental natural science studying the properties, composition, and structure of substances, their transformations, and energy changes in chemical processes at the atomic and molecular level.

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[physics-group]

Physics and Meta-Analysis

An interdisciplinary collection combining educational physics materials with systematic reviews of medical research, demonstrating the application of the scientific method across different fields of knowledge.

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[space-earth]

Space and Earth

Exploring the gradual transition from Earth's atmosphere to outer space, the Kármán line, and our planet's place in the Solar System

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Protocol: Evaluation

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Articles

Research materials, essays, and deep dives into critical thinking mechanisms.

The Neurobiology of Rejection Sensitivity: Why Some People Fear Rejection More Than Others — And What to Do About It
🧠 Neuroscience

The Neurobiology of Rejection Sensitivity: Why Some People Fear Rejection More Than Others — And What to Do About It

Rejection sensitivity is the tendency to anxiously expect, readily perceive, and intensely react to signs of social rejection. Despite active research in psychology, the neurobiological mechanisms of this phenomenon remain insufficiently studied. Available data point to connections with social pain systems, dopaminergic regulation, and early attachment experiences, but direct neuroimaging studies are scarce. This article examines what is known about the neurobiology of rejection sensitivity, where knowledge gaps exist, and how to distinguish scientifically grounded conclusions from speculation.

Feb 26, 2026
The Plastic Recycling Myth: Why 91% of Waste Isn't Recycled and How the Industry Sold Us the Illusion of Sustainability
🌡️ Climate and Geology

The Plastic Recycling Myth: Why 91% of Waste Isn't Recycled and How the Industry Sold Us the Illusion of Sustainability

Plastic recycling is presented as a solution to the environmental crisis, but data shows otherwise: globally, less than 9% of plastic waste is recycled. The industry has promoted the myth of a circular economy for decades, concealing technical and economic barriers. Systematic reviews from 2024 link plastic-associated chemicals to diabetes, obesity, reproductive disorders, and cognitive deficits in children. This article dissects the mechanism of this misconception, demonstrates the actual level of evidence for harm, and provides a protocol for verifying environmental claims.

Feb 26, 2026
Sexual Selection in Humans: How Evolution Made Us Who We Are — and Why Science Still Debates It
🧬 Evolution and Genetics

Sexual Selection in Humans: How Evolution Made Us Who We Are — and Why Science Still Debates It

Sexual selection — an evolutionary mechanism where traits develop not for survival, but for reproductive success. In humans, its role remains scientifically debated: some researchers argue that sexual selection shaped our brain, social intelligence, and even sense of humor, while others point to the impossibility of separating it from natural selection and cultural factors. This article examines the evidence, conflicting data, and explains why there's still no definitive answer.

Feb 26, 2026
DMT and the Pineal Gland: Why the "Spirit Molecule" Myth from the Pineal Gland Turned Out to Be Science Fiction
🧠 Neuroscience

DMT and the Pineal Gland: Why the "Spirit Molecule" Myth from the Pineal Gland Turned Out to Be Science Fiction

N,N-dimethyltryptamine (DMT) — a powerful hallucinogen surrounded by a persistent myth about its mass production in the human pineal gland. Popular hypothesis links DMT to near-death experiences, mystical states, and "spiritual insights." However, systematic analysis of DMT pharmacokinetics and endogenous synthesis research shows: there is currently no evidence of significant DMT production in the human brain or pineal gland. We examine where this myth originated, what 2023–2025 data reveals, and how to distinguish scientific fact from neuromysticism.

Feb 24, 2026
Evolutionary Psychology: Why Beautiful Stories About the Past Are Often Science Fiction
🧬 Evolution and Genetics

Evolutionary Psychology: Why Beautiful Stories About the Past Are Often Science Fiction

Evolutionary psychology promises to explain human behavior through the lens of Stone Age adaptations, but often devolves into untestable "just-so stories"—plausible narratives without evidential foundation. Critics point to methodological pitfalls: the impossibility of falsifying hypotheses about events 100,000 years ago, the substitution of speculation for explanation, and the neglect of cultural variability. We examine where the boundary lies between science and storytelling, which cognitive biases make evo-psych so persuasive, and how to distinguish a well-founded hypothesis from an attractive fairy tale.

Feb 24, 2026
Mate Guarding and Jealousy: Evolutionary Adaptation or Toxic Control — What Science Says About Normal Boundaries
🧬 Evolution and Genetics

Mate Guarding and Jealousy: Evolutionary Adaptation or Toxic Control — What Science Says About Normal Boundaries

Mate guarding — an evolutionary strategy for protecting reproductive investments, manifested through jealousy and controlling behavior. Research shows sex differences in responses to infidelity threats, linked to attachment styles and biological mechanisms. The boundary between adaptive vigilance and destructive control is determined not by emotional intensity, but by behavioral patterns and their impact on partner autonomy. Evidence is limited primarily to observational studies and cross-cultural variations in manifestations.

Feb 24, 2026
Natural Selection: Mechanism, Phenomenon, or Philosophical Trap That's Changing Biology
🧬 Evolution and Genetics

Natural Selection: Mechanism, Phenomenon, or Philosophical Trap That's Changing Biology

Natural selection is the foundation of evolutionary theory, but debates about its nature persist. Is it a mechanism that causally explains change, or a statistical phenomenon describing patterns? Philosophers of biology in 2024-2025 are engaged in heated discussion: Wei argues that selection is a phenomenon, not a mechanism, while Pérez-González objects. We examine why conceptual clarity is critical for experimental biology, how populations and fitness fit into the mechanistic picture, and what myths about randomness and levels of selection still distort our understanding of evolution.

Feb 23, 2026
The Amygdala and Trust: Why "Turning Off the Amygdala" Is a Dangerous Oversimplification of Neuroscience
🧠 Neuroscience

The Amygdala and Trust: Why "Turning Off the Amygdala" Is a Dangerous Oversimplification of Neuroscience

The popular idea of "deactivating the amygdala" to reduce anxiety ignores its critical role in trust formation and social cognition. Research shows: the amygdala isn't just a "fear button," but a complex system with different subregions responsible for planning trusting behavior and evaluating outcomes. Complete suppression of the amygdala impairs the ability to discern who can be trusted, making a person vulnerable to manipulation. The goal isn't to "turn off" the amygdala, but to learn to balance its activity.

Feb 22, 2026
Creationism vs. Evolution: Why the Debate Has Lasted 150 Years and What Science Actually Says
🧬 Evolution and Genetics

Creationism vs. Evolution: Why the Debate Has Lasted 150 Years and What Science Actually Says

Creationism — the religious concept of divine creation — has opposed evolutionary theory for a century and a half. This conflict is often portrayed as a battle between science and faith, but reality is more complex: points of intersection exist, and the debate itself reveals fundamental questions about the nature of knowledge, evidence, and the boundaries of the scientific method. We examine the positions of both sides, the level of evidence, cognitive traps, and a self-assessment protocol for those who want to understand the essence of the conflict without ideological noise.

Feb 21, 2026
Limerence vs. Love: Why Your Brain Confuses Addiction with Feeling — and How to Test It in 60 Seconds
🧠 Neuroscience

Limerence vs. Love: Why Your Brain Confuses Addiction with Feeling — and How to Test It in 60 Seconds

Limerence is an obsessive attraction that masquerades as love but operates like addiction. Neurobiology shows that romantic love activates reward systems, but long-term attachment engages different mechanisms. Digital dating platforms exploit limerence through algorithms, turning partner search into a dopamine reinforcement loop. This article dissects the substitution mechanism, reveals the neural correlates of both states, and provides a self-diagnostic protocol.

Feb 20, 2026
The Serotonin Theory of OCD: Why Neurotransmitter Depletion Doesn't Explain Obsessions — and What's Actually Happening in the Brain
🧠 Neuroscience

The Serotonin Theory of OCD: Why Neurotransmitter Depletion Doesn't Explain Obsessions — and What's Actually Happening in the Brain

Obsessive-compulsive disorder has long been explained by serotonin deficiency, but current evidence shows this is an oversimplification. Serotonin-based medications work for only a subset of patients, and the neurobiology of OCD points to neural circuit dysfunction rather than a simple "drop" in a single neurotransmitter. We examine the evidence base, alternative theories (CRH-HCN), treatment efficacy from CBT to neurosurgery—and a protocol for verifying what you're told about OCD.

Feb 20, 2026
The Neurobiology of Long-Term Relationships: Why Your Brain Sabotages Love After Three Years — and How to Stop It
🧠 Neuroscience

The Neurobiology of Long-Term Relationships: Why Your Brain Sabotages Love After Three Years — and How to Stop It

Long-term relationships face neurobiological challenges: declining dopamine spikes, partner adaptation, conflict between novelty and attachment. Research shows the brain is not evolutionarily optimized for lifelong monogamy — but this isn't a death sentence. Understanding neuroplasticity mechanisms, oxytocin systems, and cognitive reappraisal enables a science-based protocol for maintaining connection, grounded in evidence rather than romantic illusions.

Feb 20, 2026
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Deep Dive

🔬Scientific Databases: From Specialized Archives to Global Megaplatforms

The modern scientific ecosystem comprises over 15,000 specialized databases. Choosing the right platform determines the completeness of literature reviews and methodological correctness of research — an inappropriate database leads to systematic sampling errors and distorted conclusions.

Understanding the architecture and specialization of databases becomes a critical skill in conditions of information abundance.

Multidisciplinary Platforms as Universal Entry Points

Scopus and Web of Science are the most authoritative multidisciplinary platforms, indexing over 70 million documents from all fields of science. Scopus covers approximately 25,000 journals since 1996, providing scientometric analysis tools and real-time citation tracking.

Web of Science, existing since 1964, provides unique depth of retrospective search and is considered the gold standard for assessing scientific impact, though it requires institutional subscriptions costing up to $100,000 per year.

Platform Coverage Limitation
Scopus 25,000 journals since 1996 English-language dominance
Web of Science Deep retrospective search Paid subscription, Western bias

A critical limitation of both platforms is English-language dominance and insufficient representation of regional journals, creating systematic bias toward Western science.

Subject-Specialized Databases as Sources of Expert Content

PubMed remains the irreplaceable tool for medical and biological research, indexing over 35 million articles using the controlled MeSH vocabulary of 29,000 terms. The platform provides free access to abstracts and full-text open access articles, integrating systematic reviews and meta-analyses from the Cochrane Library — the highest level of medical evidence.

ArXiv, created for physics and mathematics, contains over 2 million preprints, allowing tracking of scientific discoveries months before official publication. Requires critical evaluation since materials do not undergo peer review.

Specialized Indexing
Chemical Abstracts Service uses over 100 million unique chemical structures for search — a depth unattainable for universal platforms.
Advantage of Specialized Databases
Provide subject indexing that universal platforms cannot achieve.

Open Repositories and National Databases

CyberLeninka represents the largest Russian-language open repository with over 3 million scientific articles, providing access to regional research absent from international databases. The eLIBRARY.RU platform integrates scientometric functions with full-text access, indexing over 38 million publications.

National databases are critically important for interdisciplinary research requiring consideration of local context — epidemiological data or sociological surveys are often published only in regional journals.

Open repositories demonstrate variable quality control: while PubMed Central requires peer review, institutional repositories may accept any materials without verification.
Hierarchical diagram of scientific databases with division by coverage and specialization
The typology of scientific databases demonstrates an inverse relationship between breadth of coverage and depth of subject indexing — platform choice is determined by the balance between search completeness and result relevance

📊Hierarchy of Scientific Evidence: Why Not All Studies Are Created Equal

Evidence-based medicine establishes a strict pyramid of scientific evidence, where the methodological design of a study determines the reliability of its conclusions. Systematic reviews occupy the apex, synthesizing data from dozens of studies with combined samples of up to 100,000 patients, while case reports sit at the base due to their inability to be generalized.

Citing a single study instead of a systematic review can lead to erroneous clinical decisions with potentially lethal consequences.

Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses as the Gold Standard

Systematic reviews apply a rigorous protocol for searching, selecting, and analyzing all available studies on a specific question, minimizing the risk of systematic errors and publication bias. Meta-analysis complements systematic review by statistically combining results, increasing statistical power—an 8% reduction in mortality may only be statistically significant when pooling 20,000 patients.

A critical limitation of the method is dependence on the quality of source studies: a meta-analysis of poorly designed trials produces a precise but useless estimate of an incorrect effect.

The Cochrane Collaboration sets international standards for systematic reviews, requiring independent assessment by two reviewers, protocol registration before work begins, and mandatory updates every 2–3 years.

Randomized Controlled Trials as the Foundation of Causality

Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) use random allocation of participants between intervention and control groups, eliminating systematic differences and enabling establishment of causal relationships. Double-blind placebo-controlled RCTs are considered the most reliable design, as neither participants nor researchers know the group assignments.

  1. Large multicenter RCTs with samples exceeding 10,000 patients provide sufficient statistical power to detect even small effects.
  2. A 15% reduction in heart attack risk with aspirin use was proven in a study of 22,000 physicians.
  3. High cost (up to $50 million for pharmaceutical trials) limits scalability.
  4. Ethical constraints prevent study of harmful exposures.
  5. Low external validity due to strict inclusion criteria.

Cohort Studies and Case Reports in the Evidence Hierarchy

Cohort studies observe groups of people with different exposures over time, allowing investigation of rare outcomes and long-term effects unavailable to RCTs. The link between smoking and lung cancer was established in a 50-year observation of British physicians.

Prospective cohorts provide higher quality data than retrospective ones, but require decades of observation and million-dollar budgets. Case reports and case series sit at the base of the evidence pyramid because they lack control groups, but remain valuable for identifying new diseases or unexpected side effects.

The evidence hierarchy is not absolute—a well-designed cohort study with 100,000 participants may be more reliable than a poorly executed RCT with 50 patients and high risk of systematic errors.

🧭Effective Search Methodology: From Chaotic Browsing to Systematic Strategy

Professional searching in scientific databases requires a structured approach where each step is documented and can be reproduced by independent researchers. Suboptimal search strategies lead to two critical errors: missing relevant studies (low sensitivity) or retrieving thousands of irrelevant results (low specificity).

Systematic reviews require searching at least three databases using adapted strategies, since the overlap between PubMed and Embase results is only 50–60%.

Developing Search Strategies and Boolean Operators

An effective search strategy begins with formulating the research question in PICO format: Population, Intervention, Comparison, Outcome.

Example: "In patients with type 2 diabetes (P), does metformin (I) compared to placebo (C) reduce the risk of cardiovascular events (O)?"

PICO Component Synonyms and Variants Risk of Missing
Population diabetes mellitus type 2, non-insulin-dependent diabetes, NIDDM, adult-onset diabetes up to 30% of relevant articles
Intervention metformin, glucophage, biguanide drug name variants
Outcome cardiovascular events, heart attack, myocardial infarction, MI narrow terminology

Boolean operators combine search terms: OR expands the search within a concept (metformin OR glucophage), AND narrows between concepts (diabetes AND metformin), NOT excludes irrelevant results.

Using parentheses determines the order of operations: (diabetes OR "diabetes mellitus") AND (metformin OR glucophage) AND ("cardiovascular events" OR "heart attack" OR myocardial) ensures precise control over query logic.

Using MeSH Terms and Subject Headings

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH) is a controlled vocabulary of 29,000 terms organized in a hierarchical structure of 16 categories. Each article in PubMed is indexed with 10–15 of the most relevant descriptors.

Searching by MeSH terms ensures high precision because it automatically includes all subordinate terms—for example, searching "Neoplasms"[Mesh] will find articles indexed as "Breast Neoplasms", "Lung Neoplasms" and all 200+ tumor subtypes.

Qualifiers (subheadings)
Specify the aspect of study for a term. Example: "Diabetes Mellitus/drug therapy"[Mesh] limits results to only pharmacological treatment, excluding epidemiology and diagnosis.
Combined search
Combining MeSH search with text search in titles and abstracts provides optimal balance: ("Diabetes Mellitus"[Mesh] OR diabetes[tiab]) AND ("Metformin"[Mesh] OR metformin[tiab]) finds both indexed articles and recent publications not yet assigned MeSH terms.

Applying Filters and Search Limits

Publication type filters allow limiting results to systematic reviews and meta-analyses or RCTs—critically important for evidence-based medicine. In PubMed, the "Systematic Review"[pt] filter reduces 50,000 diabetes results to 3,000 of the most reliable sources.

Time limits should be applied with justification: for rapidly evolving fields, the last 3–5 years are relevant, whereas for fundamental questions, historical works remain current.

  1. Language filters create systematic bias—excluding non-English publications can lead to missing up to 10% of relevant data, especially in epidemiological studies of regional diseases.
  2. Documenting all applied filters is mandatory for reproducibility: "PubMed searched on 2024-01-15, filters: Systematic Review, Humans, English, 2019–2024, resulting in 247 articles".
  3. Methodological transparency enables independent researchers to update the search.
Knowledge Access Protocol

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

A scientific database is an electronic repository of scientific publications, articles, and research with search and analysis functions. It provides rapid access to verified information, helps find relevant sources, and tracks citations. Databases are critically important for evidence-based science and knowledge systematization.
PubMed specializes in medicine and biology, providing free access to 35+ million articles. Scopus and Web of Science are multidisciplinary platforms with paid access, covering all scientific fields and providing scientometric data. The choice depends on your discipline and the need for citation analysis.
No, not all articles are peer-reviewed. Databases like arXiv and bioRxiv contain preprints—articles before peer review, which accelerates knowledge exchange but requires critical evaluation. PubMed and Scopus predominantly index peer-reviewed journals, but always verify the publication status.
Use Boolean operators: AND (narrows search), OR (expands with synonyms), NOT (excludes terms). Apply quotation marks for exact phrases and special filters by date, publication type, and language. In PubMed, use MeSH terms for standardized medical searching.
A systematic review analyzes all available research on a topic following a strict protocol, representing the highest level of evidence. It minimizes bias, combines data from thousands of patients, and identifies common patterns. Meta-analysis additionally statistically combines results for precise conclusions.
Small sample sizes reduce statistical power and increase the risk of random results. Such studies are useful for rare diseases or pilot projects but require confirmation in larger works. Always evaluate sample size in the context of study design and the effect being studied.
Check the journal's peer review process, impact factor, and presence in authoritative databases (Scopus, WoS). Evaluate methodology: sample size, control groups, statistical analysis, and disclosure of conflicts of interest. Pay attention to the "Study Limitations" section—its presence is a sign of scientific integrity.
The h-index indicates that a scientist has h publications, each cited at least h times (h=20 means 20 articles with 20+ citations). It reflects productivity and impact but depends on the field: in medicine h=40 is excellent, in mathematics h=20 is already high. Consider the author's career stage.
Open repositories provide free access to scientific publications, overcoming barriers of paid subscriptions. arXiv specializes in physics, mathematics, and computer science, indexing 2+ million preprints. This is critically important for science popularization and knowledge accessibility globally.
No, that's a myth—age doesn't determine quality. Classic works remain relevant for decades, while new ones may contain errors or require replication. Evaluate methodology, sample size, and the number of confirming studies. Systematic reviews synthesize old and new data for objective conclusions.
No, this is a common misconception — different databases index different journals and have unique algorithms. Comprehensive searches require at least 2-3 databases: for example, PubMed + Scopus + Cochrane for medicine. This reduces the risk of missing important publications and increases the completeness of your literature review.
MeSH (Medical Subject Headings) is a controlled vocabulary of medical terms that standardizes article indexing. It automatically includes synonyms and related concepts, improving search completeness without listing all variations. Use the MeSH Database to select appropriate terms before conducting your main search.
Conflict of interest occurs when authors' funding or affiliations could influence results (e.g., pharmaceutical company sponsorship). Disclosure is mandatory in peer-reviewed journals and helps critically evaluate conclusions. Studies with conflicts aren't necessarily flawed, but require additional verification through independent research.
Preprints are non-peer-reviewed versions of articles posted before official publication for rapid data sharing. They accelerate scientific communication but may contain errors that are corrected during peer review. Use preprints cautiously, preferring final peer-reviewed versions for critical decisions.
Altmetrics track mentions in social media, news, blogs, and policy documents, showing a study's public impact. They complement citations, especially for new articles that haven't yet accumulated citations. However, altmetrics are more easily manipulated and don't replace academic recognition through citations.
Yes, Scopus and Web of Science cover all disciplines, enabling discovery of connections between fields. Google Scholar also indexes interdisciplinary content, though with less quality control. For specific intersections (e.g., bioinformatics), use combinations of specialized databases: PubMed + arXiv + IEEE Xplore.