Classifications are the field’s structural buckets: the explicit taxonomies and type-systems that say “this is one kind of thing, that is another, and different rules apply.” They partition entities, processes, and relations into categories (e.g., laminar vs turbulent, Mendelian vs complex trait, ferromagnet vs paramagnet, democracy vs autocracy) so that laws, mechanisms, and pathways can be stated by class, not just in the abstract. In the SAT, this row captures the formal grammar of types each discipline relies on—its standard families, regimes, phases, architectures, and system-types—so we can compare how different sciences carve their worlds and where those carvings line up or clash.


All scientific disciplines – from physics and biology to sociology and mathematics – develop classification systems as a fundamental part of organizing knowledge. Scientists categorize the entities, phenomena, and relationships in their domain to bring order and clarity to complex reality. Despite the diversity of subject matter, there are striking commonalities in how different fields classify things. Below, we summarize key patterns that recur across virtually all sciences.

Hierarchies and Multi-Level Categories

One universal pattern is the use of hierarchical classification. Knowledge in science is often organized in tiers: broad groups subdivide into narrower subgroups in multiple layers. For example, biology classifies life hierarchically (Domain → Kingdom → Phylum → … → Species), and geology categorizes rocks into classes, types, and sub-types. Many scientific taxonomies follow this tree-like structure, with high-level divisions comprising numerous specialized subtypes. This layered approach appears in every discipline – one finds it in chemical classifications (e.g. grouping compounds into families), in mathematics (e.g. number sets containing subsets), and in social sciences (e.g. societies classified by broad types then by specific forms). Such hierarchies allow scientists to handle complexity by grouping a multitude of objects or processes into a limited number of nested categories. Crucially, learning these category systems is considered fundamental to scientific reasoning and education across fields.

Binary Dichotomies and Conceptual Oppositions

Another common theme is the reliance on binary or contrasting categories to distinguish fundamental properties. Across sciences, one frequently encounters conceptual dichotomies such as:

These are just a few examples – similar oppositions (causal vs non-causal, reversible vs irreversible, digital vs analog, etc.) abound across disciplines. By using dichotomies, scientists carve conceptual space into contrasting regimes, which aids in reasoning and communication. The same “X vs Y” pattern (e.g. ideal vs real, ordered vs disordered, explicit vs implicit, etc.) recurs in nearly every field’s theoretical vocabulary.

Scale and Context Dependence

A subtle but important commonality is that scientific classifications are often scale-dependent and context-dependent. What category something falls into can change when you zoom in or out, or when considering different aspects of the system. For example, at the nuclear scale two isotopes are different (different neutron numbers), but at the chemical scale they are classified as the same element because their chemical behavior is identical. In general, scientists recognize that patterns of similarity or difference may emerge or vanish at different scales. All fields confront this: a biologist might classify organisms differently at the genetic level than by outward anatomy; a geologist’s rock categories might shift when examining mineral composition microscopically versus in hand samples. Likewise, social scientists find that broad social categories can fragment into subcategories when viewed at a finer community level. Across sciences, there is an awareness that the appropriate classification scheme depends on the scale or perspective of observation. Most disciplines maintain multiple classification frameworks for different scales (e.g. micro vs macro, atomic vs continuum, individual vs population), ensuring that descriptions remain relevant to the context. This flexibility is a common pattern: classifications are not one-size-fits-all but are tuned to the level of detail and the purpose of analysis.

Structure vs. Function (Entities vs. Processes)

Scientific classification schemes commonly address two complementary facets of reality: the static structure of entities and the dynamic function or behavior of processes. All sciences tend to classify both what things are (their form, composition, or structural type) and what things do (their function, interaction, or behavior patterns). For instance:

This reflects a broad pattern: objects and events are both classified, often by observing recurring patterns in forms and in actions. Scientists group things based on shared visible or microscopic features or on shared functions and behaviors. The two kinds of classification (by structure and by function) complement each other. Together, they allow a more complete understanding – one set of categories describes the components of a system, while another set describes how those components act and change. Across all fields, we see this dual classification approach: a material perspective (what something is) and a dynamic perspective (what something does).

Universal Role of Classification

Underlying these common patterns is a recognition that classification is a powerful, crosscutting tool in science. By identifying patterns of similarity and difference, scientists can organize diverse observations into meaningful groups. This makes it easier to communicate, to infer properties of new or unknown cases, and to build further theories. Crucially, the act of classifying is not just labeling – it often reveals deeper relationships. The presence of similar classification schemes (like hierarchies, binary regimes, etc.) in every discipline suggests that regardless of domain, scientists face analogous challenges of complexity and variability. They respond by developing structured vocabularies to codify relationships and impose order on phenomena. In sum, while the specific categories differ from one science to another, the patterns of classification – hierarchical grouping, oppositional categories, scale-aware groupings, and dual emphasis on structure and function – are truly universal across the sciences. These shared approaches help unify scientific understanding by allowing knowledge to be organized in a coherent, systematic way across very different domains.


Element
Scope Category
Sub-ItemClassifications
Science Name LinkBranch Name LinkField Name LinkDefinitionTaxonomies, categories, or typologies that organize entities and relations.
Natural SciencesPhysicsClassical PhysicsClassical MechanicsTaxonomies such as particle vs rigid body; translational vs rotational motion; conservative vs non-conservative forces; constrained vs unconstrained systems; many-body vs two-body systems.
Natural SciencesPhysicsClassical PhysicsClassical ElectromagnetismField regimes (electrostatics, magnetostatics, electrodynamics, radiation); material types (conductors, insulators, dielectrics); wave types (transverse EM waves, polarized waves); near-field vs far-field behavior.
Natural SciencesPhysicsClassical PhysicsClassical ThermodynamicsCategories such as reversible vs irreversible processes, equilibrium vs non-equilibrium states, open/closed/isolated systems, phases and phase transitions, and intensive vs extensive quantities.
Natural SciencesPhysicsClassical PhysicsStatistical Mechanics (Classical)Types of ensembles (microcanonical, canonical, grand canonical), interacting vs non-interacting systems, integrable vs chaotic dynamics, ideal vs real gases, and equilibrium vs non-equilibrium regimes.
Natural SciencesPhysicsClassical PhysicsOptics (Classical Wave Theory)Coherent vs incoherent waves; plane, spherical, and cylindrical waves; TE/TM modes; polarization types (linear, circular, elliptical); isotropic vs anisotropic media; near-field vs far-field diffraction regimes.
Natural SciencesPhysicsClassical PhysicsAcousticsLongitudinal vs transverse waves, free-field vs reverberant field, plane/spherical/cylindrical waves, structural vs fluid acoustics, modal vs propagating behavior, linear vs nonlinear acoustics.
Natural SciencesPhysicsClassical PhysicsContinuum MechanicsCategories such as elastic vs plastic materials, Newtonian vs non-Newtonian fluids, isotropic vs anisotropic solids, compressible vs incompressible continua, laminar vs turbulent flow, and small-strain vs large-strain behavior.
Natural SciencesPhysicsClassical PhysicsClassical Field TheoryCategories such as scalar fields, vector fields, tensor fields, linear vs nonlinear fields, conservative vs non-conservative fields, static vs dynamic fields, and local vs extended field distributions.
Natural SciencesPhysicsClassical PhysicsPre-Relativistic FrameworksCategories include inertial vs non-inertial frames, particle vs wave phenomena, force-based vs potential-based descriptions, mechanical vs electromagnetic effects, and motion relative to ether vs motion relative to material media.
Natural SciencesPhysicsModern & Fundamental PhysicsQuantum MechanicsCategories such as pure vs mixed states, fermions vs bosons, bound vs unbound states, discrete vs continuous spectra, isolated vs open quantum systems, and integrable vs chaotic quantum systems.
Natural SciencesPhysicsModern & Fundamental PhysicsRelativistic Quantum MechanicsCategories include spinor vs scalar particles, positive vs negative energy branches, free vs interacting relativistic systems, bound vs scattering states, and relativistic corrections vs fully relativistic behavior.
Natural SciencesPhysicsModern & Fundamental PhysicsSpecial RelativityClassification of intervals as timelike, lightlike, or spacelike; frames as inertial or non-inertial; motions as relativistic or non-relativistic; and transformations as Galilean or Lorentzian depending on domain.
Natural SciencesPhysicsModern & Fundamental PhysicsGeneral RelativityCategories include weak-field vs strong-field regimes, static vs dynamic spacetimes, vacuum vs matter-filled spacetimes, timelike vs spacelike vs lightlike intervals, and rotating vs non-rotating solutions.
Natural SciencesPhysicsModern & Fundamental PhysicsQuantum Field Theory (QFT)Classification into scalar, spinor, and vector fields; fermions vs bosons; gauge fields vs matter fields; renormalizable vs non-renormalizable theories; perturbative vs non-perturbative regimes; global vs local symmetries.
Natural SciencesPhysicsModern & Fundamental PhysicsParticle Physics (High-Energy Physics)Classification into fermions and bosons, quarks and leptons, fundamental vs composite particles, charged vs neutral states, stable vs unstable species, and strong vs weak vs electromagnetic interaction channels.
Natural SciencesPhysicsModern & Fundamental PhysicsNuclear PhysicsClassification into light, medium, and heavy nuclei; stable vs radioactive isotopes; fissionable vs non-fissionable materials; neutron-rich vs proton-rich nuclei; allowed vs forbidden decay transitions.
Natural SciencesPhysicsModern & Fundamental PhysicsQuantum Statistical PhysicsClassification into bosonic vs fermionic systems, condensed vs normal phases, superfluid vs nonsuperfluid regimes, strongly interacting vs weakly interacting many-body systems, ordered vs disordered states, and gapped vs gapless excitation spectra.
Natural SciencesPhysicsModern & Fundamental PhysicsQuantum OpticsClassification into single-photon vs multi-photon regimes, classical vs nonclassical light, cavity vs free-space systems, continuous-variable vs discrete-variable states, weak vs strong coupling, and dissipative vs coherent dynamics.
Natural SciencesPhysicsModern & Fundamental PhysicsQuantum Information ScienceClassifications include physical vs logical qubits, coherent vs incoherent operations, error types (bit-flip, phase-flip), fault-tolerant vs non-fault-tolerant systems, discrete-variable vs continuous-variable encodings, and classical vs quantum communication protocols.
Natural SciencesPhysicsTheoretical & Mathematical PhysicsSymmetry & Group TheoryClassifications include Abelian vs non-Abelian groups, continuous vs discrete symmetries, internal vs spacetime symmetries, global vs local symmetries, finite vs infinite groups, and reducible vs irreducible representations.
Natural SciencesPhysicsTheoretical & Mathematical PhysicsGauge TheorySystems classified by gauge group type, representation category, interaction strength, symmetry structure, and whether the theory is abelian or non-abelian.
Natural SciencesPhysicsTheoretical & Mathematical PhysicsString TheoryClassifies structures by type of string theory, type of brane, dimensionality, choice of compactification, presence or absence of supersymmetry, and type of duality relating theories.
Natural SciencesPhysicsTheoretical & Mathematical PhysicsDifferential Geometry in PhysicsClassifies objects by type of manifold, dimension, curvature sign, connection type, coordinate system, and structural properties such as symmetry or topology.
Natural SciencesPhysicsTheoretical & Mathematical PhysicsStatistical Field TheoryClassifies systems by symmetry type, dimensionality, interaction structure, noise characteristics, equilibrium vs non-equilibrium behavior, and membership in universality classes.
Natural SciencesPhysicsCondensed Matter & Materials PhysicsMathematical Foundations of Quantum MechanicsClassifies objects into states, operators, observables, transformations, measurement types, operator classes, and algebraic types such as commutative vs noncommutative structures.
Natural SciencesPhysicsCondensed Matter & Materials PhysicsGeneral Mathematical PhysicsClassifies systems by equation type, symmetry class, dimensionality, boundary conditions, stability properties, algebraic structures, and topological categories.
Natural SciencesPhysicsCondensed Matter & Materials PhysicsSolid-State PhysicsSystems classified by crystal type, band type, degree of order, dimensionality, symmetry class, magnetic behavior, and transport regime.
Natural SciencesPhysicsCondensed Matter & Materials PhysicsSemiconductor PhysicsClassifies materials as intrinsic, n-type, p-type, direct-gap, indirect-gap, degenerate, wide-gap, narrow-gap, crystalline, or amorphous depending on band structure and doping level.
Natural SciencesPhysicsCondensed Matter & Materials PhysicsMagnetism & Spin PhysicsClassifications include ferromagnetic, antiferromagnetic, ferrimagnetic, paramagnetic, spin glass, and classifications based on dimensionality or anisotropy.
Natural SciencesPhysicsCondensed Matter & Materials PhysicsSuperconductivitySystems classified as type I or type II, s-wave vs unconventional pairing types, low vs high critical temperature, clean vs dirty limit materials, and thin film vs bulk behavior.
Natural SciencesPhysicsCondensed Matter & Materials PhysicsSoft Matter PhysicsClassifies systems by material type (polymers, colloids, gels, foams, liquid crystals), deformation regime (elastic, viscous, viscoelastic), microstructure (isotropic, anisotropic, ordered), and interaction type.
Natural SciencesPhysicsCondensed Matter & Materials PhysicsNanomaterials & NanostructuresClassifies nanosystems by dimensionality (zero, one, two, and three dimensional structures), composition (metallic, semiconductor, oxide), surface chemistry, shape categories, and structural order.
Natural SciencesPhysicsCondensed Matter & Materials PhysicsStrongly Correlated Electron SystemsClassifies systems as Mott insulators, heavy fermion compounds, spin liquids, charge ordered materials, correlated metals, and unconventional superconductors based on interaction strength and emergent order.
Natural SciencesPhysicsCondensed Matter & Materials PhysicsTopological MatterClassifies materials into topological insulators, topological superconductors, quantum Hall systems, Weyl and Dirac materials, and symmetry protected phases, using symmetry and topological index criteria.
Natural SciencesPhysicsCondensed Matter & Materials PhysicsMaterials Science (Physical Perspective)Classifies materials as metals, ceramics, polymers, composites, semiconductors, functional materials, and subclasses based on microstructure, bonding, or performance characteristics.
Natural SciencesPhysicsAstrophysics & CosmologyStellar AstrophysicsClassifies stars by mass, spectral type, luminosity class, evolutionary phase, variability type, and remnant outcome such as white dwarf or neutron star.
Natural SciencesPhysicsAstrophysics & CosmologyGalactic AstrophysicsClassifies galaxies by morphology, star formation activity, gas content, stellar population age, kinematic structure, and halo properties.
Natural SciencesPhysicsAstrophysics & CosmologyExtragalactic AstrophysicsClassifies galaxies by morphology, star formation activity, mass, redshift, environment, and nuclear activity; also classifies clusters and filaments by mass and density.
Natural SciencesPhysicsAstrophysics & CosmologyCosmologyClassifies models by curvature type, energy content, expansion history, inflation type, structure growth regime, and galaxy or cluster formation pathways.
Natural SciencesPhysicsAstrophysics & CosmologyHigh-Energy AstrophysicsClassifies sources as pulsars, magnetars, black hole binaries, gamma ray burst sources, supernova remnants, active nuclei, jets, and shock dominated regions.
Natural SciencesPhysicsAstrophysics & CosmologyGravitational AstrophysicsClassifies planets by size, mass, composition, atmosphere type, orbital regime, habitability potential, and by categories such as terrestrial, gas giant, ice giant, sub Neptune, and hot Jupiter.
Natural SciencesPhysicsAstrophysics & CosmologyPlanetary Science & ExoplanetsClassifies planets by size, mass, composition, atmosphere type, orbital regime, temperature regime, and by categories such as terrestrial, gas giant, ice giant, sub Neptune, hot Jupiter, or super Earth.
Natural SciencesPhysicsAstrophysics & CosmologyAstrochemistry & Interstellar Medium PhysicsClassifies ISM into diffuse atomic gas, diffuse molecular gas, dense molecular clouds, photodissociation regions, HII regions, hot ionized medium, and shocked or turbulent zones.
Natural SciencesPhysicsAstrophysics & CosmologyAstrobiologyClassifies environments as habitable, marginally habitable, or uninhabitable; life forms as microbial or multicellular analogs; and chemical environments by solvent type, radiation exposure, or energy availability.
Natural SciencesPhysicsPlasma & Fluid PhysicsFluid DynamicsClassifies flows as laminar, transitional, or turbulent; incompressible or compressible; viscous or inviscid; internal or external; steady or unsteady; subsonic, transonic, or supersonic.
Natural SciencesPhysicsPlasma & Fluid PhysicsHydrodynamics (Ideal Fluids)Classifies flows as ideal or resistive, high beta or low beta, laminar or turbulent, incompressible or compressible, and distinguishes wave modes, reconnection regimes, and plasma confinement types.
Natural SciencesPhysicsPlasma & Fluid PhysicsMagnetohydrodynamics (MHD)Classifies plasmas as ideal or resistive, high or low beta, laminar or turbulent, incompressible or compressible, and identifies distinct MHD regimes such as reconnection dominated, wave dominated, or turbulence dominated.
Natural SciencesPhysicsPlasma & Fluid PhysicsPlasma Physics (General)Classifies plasmas as collisional or collisionless, magnetized or unmagnetized, high or low beta, thermal or nonthermal, fluid or kinetic, and distinguishes specific structures such as sheaths, filaments, and double layers.
Natural SciencesPhysicsPlasma & Fluid PhysicsSpace & Astrophysical PlasmasClassifies plasmas as collisionless or collisional, magnetized or unmagnetized, high or low beta, wave dominated or turbulence dominated, steady or transient, and distinguishes structures such as shocks, sheets, filaments, and boundary layers.
Natural SciencesPhysicsPlasma & Fluid PhysicsFusion Plasma PhysicsClassifies plasmas by confinement mode, heating method, collisionality, impurity content, magnetic configuration, turbulence regime, and stability characteristics.
Natural SciencesPhysicsPlasma & Fluid PhysicsComputational Fluid & Plasma PhysicsClassifies simulations by method (finite difference, finite volume, finite element, spectral, particle in cell, hybrid), by regime (fluid, MHD, kinetic), by geometry (2D, 3D, axisymmetric), and by application (turbulence, shocks, reconnection, waves).
Natural SciencesPhysicsPlasma & Fluid PhysicsNon-Newtonian & Complex FluidsClassifies fluids as viscoelastic, shear-thinning, shear-thickening, yield-stress, thixotropic, granular, colloidal, polymeric, micellar, or biological; and classifies flow regimes such as laminar, shear-banded, or jammed.
Natural SciencesPhysicsPlasma & Fluid PhysicsHigh-Energy-Density Physics (HEDP)Classifies regimes as strong-shock, weak-shock, radiative-shock, warm dense matter, fully ionized plasma, partially ionized plasma, optically thin or thick, and inertial confinement fusion implosion phases.
Natural SciencesPhysicsInterdisciplinary & Applied PhysicsBiophysicsClassifies systems by structural level (molecular, cellular, tissue), by mechanism (mechanical, electrical, chemical), by dynamics (elastic, viscoelastic, stochastic), and by interaction type (binding, transport, signaling, motor activity).
Natural SciencesPhysicsInterdisciplinary & Applied PhysicsMedical PhysicsClassifies imaging modalities (CT, MRI, PET, SPECT, ultrasound, radiography), radiation types (photons, electrons, protons, neutrons), interaction processes (absorption, scatter, decay), treatment systems (linear accelerators, proton therapy), and tissue response models.
Natural SciencesPhysicsInterdisciplinary & Applied PhysicsGeophysicsClassifies wave types (P waves, S waves, surface waves), tectonic regimes (convergent, divergent, transform), crustal types (continental, oceanic), geomagnetic features, hydrologic reservoirs, and Earth layers (crust, mantle, core).
Natural SciencesPhysicsInterdisciplinary & Applied PhysicsOptics & PhotonicsClassifies systems by optical regime (geometric, wave, quantum), by device type (laser, waveguide, fiber, resonator, interferometer), by coherence level, by nonlinear process type, and by signal modality (continuous wave, pulsed, ultrafast).
Natural SciencesPhysicsInterdisciplinary & Applied PhysicsComputational PhysicsClassifies methods by numerical family (finite-difference, finite-volume, finite-element, spectral, particle-in-cell, Monte Carlo), by equation type (elliptic, parabolic, hyperbolic), by scale (atomistic, mesoscopic, continuum), and by solver type (explicit, implicit, hybrid).
Natural SciencesPhysicsInterdisciplinary & Applied PhysicsEngineering PhysicsClassifies systems as mechanical, electrical, thermal, optical, fluidic, or hybrid; linear or nonlinear; static or dynamic; open-loop or closed-loop; and classical or quantum-enabled engineering devices.
Natural SciencesPhysicsInterdisciplinary & Applied PhysicsChemical PhysicsClassifies systems by bonding type, molecular symmetry, reaction mechanism (radical, ionic, pericyclic), phase (gas, liquid, solid), interaction type (dispersion, dipole, hydrogen bonding), and dynamical regime (classical, quantum, semiclassical).
Natural SciencesPhysicsInterdisciplinary & Applied PhysicsEnvironmental & Climate PhysicsClassifies systems by atmospheric layers, ocean layers, climate zones, circulation cells, forcing types (natural vs anthropogenic), feedback classes (positive, negative, nonlinear), timescale regimes (weather, seasonal, decadal, millennial), and variability modes (ENSO, NAO, PDO).
Natural SciencesPhysicsInterdisciplinary & Applied PhysicsApplied Materials PhysicsClassifies materials into metals, ceramics, polymers, semiconductors, composites, magnetic materials, optical materials, superconductors, and functional nanomaterials; classifies microstructures by grain size, phase fraction, morphology, and defect type.
Natural SciencesChemistryPhysical ChemistryQuantum ChemistryOrbital types (s, p, d, f), term symbols, spin states, molecular point groups, bonding types (σ, π, δ), excitation classes (singlet, triplet).
Natural SciencesChemistryPhysical ChemistryStatistical MechanicsEnsembles (microcanonical, canonical, grand canonical), phases, universality classes, equilibrium vs. nonequilibrium systems.
Natural SciencesChemistryPhysical ChemistryThermodynamicsTypes of systems (open, closed, isolated), types of processes (reversible, irreversible), phases, thermodynamic cycles, equilibrium categories.
Natural SciencesChemistryPhysical ChemistryKinetics & Reaction DynamicsElementary vs. composite mechanisms, chain reactions, catalytic mechanisms, unimolecular/bimolecular classes, thermal vs. photochemical reactions.
Natural SciencesChemistryPhysical ChemistrySpectroscopyAbsorption vs emission, elastic vs inelastic scattering, one-photon vs multiphoton, linear vs nonlinear, IR/Raman/NMR/UV-Vis/X-ray categories.
Natural SciencesChemistryPhysical ChemistryElectrochemistryGalvanic vs electrolytic systems, diffusion-controlled vs activation-controlled processes, homogeneous vs heterogeneous electron transfer, reversible vs irreversible systems.
Natural SciencesChemistryPhysical ChemistrySurface & Interface ScienceSurface types (terraces, steps, defects), interface classes (solid–gas, solid–liquid, solid–solid), adsorption types (physisorption vs chemisorption), surface phases and reconstructions.
Natural SciencesChemistryPhysical ChemistryColloid & Solution ChemistrySolutions, colloids, emulsions, suspensions, gels, micellar systems, polyelectrolytes, electrolytes, surfactant assemblies, aggregate morphologies (spheres, rods, bilayers).
Natural SciencesChemistryPhysical ChemistryChemical PhysicsScattering types (elastic, inelastic, reactive), energy-level manifolds, adiabatic vs nonadiabatic regimes, vibrational/rotational/electronic states, strong-field vs weak-field limits.
Natural SciencesChemistryOrganic ChemistryStructural & Mechanistic Organic ChemistryReaction types (substitution, elimination, addition, rearrangement), reactive intermediates (carbocation, carbanion, radical, carbene, nitrene), stereochemical families (syn/anti, E/Z, R/S).
Natural SciencesChemistryOrganic ChemistryStereochemistry & Conformational AnalysisStereoisomer classes (R/S, E/Z, meso), conformational classes (gauche, anti, synclinal, antiperiplanar), cyclic conformations, atropisomers, configurationally stable vs. labile stereocenters.
Natural SciencesChemistryOrganic ChemistrySynthetic Organic ChemistryReaction classes (addition, substitution, elimination, rearrangement, redox), synthetic strategies (linear, convergent, divergent), protecting-group families, catalytic reaction classes.
Natural SciencesChemistryOrganic ChemistryPhysical Organic ChemistryMechanistic classes (SN1/SN2/E1/E2, addition, pericyclic), substituent-effect categories (σ, σ*, σ_R, σ_I), kinetic regimes, catalysis types (general/ specific acid/base, nucleophilic).
Natural SciencesChemistryOrganic ChemistryOrganometallic Organic ChemistryLigand classes (L/X/Z-type), reaction types (oxidative addition, reduction, insertion), catalyst families (palladium, nickel, rhodium, iridium), mechanistic classes (inner-/outer-sphere, radical, ionic).
Natural SciencesChemistryOrganic ChemistryPolymer Chemistry (Carbon-based)Polymerization types (radical, anionic, cationic, coordination, condensation), polymer architectures (linear, branched, crosslinked, dendritic, block/graft), microstructure classes, tacticity classes.
Natural SciencesChemistryOrganic ChemistryBioorganic ChemistryReaction types (hydrolysis, oxidation, reduction, group transfer, elimination/addition), enzyme classes, cofactor families, biomimetic catalysts, supramolecular host–guest binding categories.
Natural SciencesChemistryOrganic ChemistryNatural Products ChemistryNatural product families (terpenes, alkaloids, polyketides, peptides, phenolics), pathway types (polyketide synthases, terpene synthases, NRPS/PKS hybrids), structural classes (macrocycles, steroids).
Natural SciencesChemistryOrganic ChemistryMedicinal ChemistryDose–response assays, enzyme inhibition assays, cell-based functional assays, metabolite profiling, in vitro ADMET tests, standardized plate workflows, buffer and pH control, replicate runs.
Natural SciencesChemistryInorganic ChemistryMain-Group ChemistryFamilies (alkali, alkaline earth, boron group, carbon group, pnictogens, chalcogens, halogens, noble gases), cluster types, hypervalent species, main-group radicals, ionic vs covalent vs multi-center species.
Natural SciencesChemistryInorganic ChemistryTransition-Metal ChemistryGeometries (octahedral, tetrahedral, square planar, trigonal bipyramidal), ligand types (L/X/Z), redox categories, high-spin vs low-spin complexes, catalytic mechanism families, cluster types.
Natural SciencesChemistryInorganic Chemistryf-Block ChemistryLanthanides vs actinides, oxidation-state families, coordination geometries, hard/soft ligand interactions, magnetic categories (paramagnetic, single-molecule magnets), cluster types.
Natural SciencesChemistryInorganic ChemistryCoordination ChemistryGeometries (octahedral, square planar, tetrahedral, trigonal bipyramidal), ligand types (L/X/Z), chelates vs monodentates, macrocycles, supramolecular assemblies, Werner-type vs modern coordination complexes.
Natural SciencesChemistryInorganic ChemistrySolid-State ChemistryCrystal systems, Bravais lattices, structure types (rocksalt, perovskite, spinel, fluorite), phases (α/β/γ polymorphs), conduction types (ionic/electronic), defect types, amorphous vs crystalline categories.
Natural SciencesChemistryAnalytical ChemistryQualitative AnalysisFunctional-group classes, inorganic ion groups (Group I–VI classical system), spectral-classification groups, MS fragmentation families, matrix types, interference classes, confirmatory-test hierarchies.
Natural SciencesChemistryAnalytical ChemistryQuantitative AnalysisCalibration strategies (external, internal, standard addition), quantitative technique families (titrimetric, gravimetric, spectroscopic, chromatographic, electrochemical), error types (systematic/random).
Natural SciencesChemistryAnalytical ChemistrySeparation ScienceChromatographic modes (normal-phase, reverse-phase, ion-exchange, size-exclusion, affinity), electrophoresis types (capillary, gel, micellar), extraction classes (liquid–liquid, solid-phase), membrane separations (ultra/micro/nanofiltration), distillation classes (simple, fractional, azeotropic).
Natural SciencesChemistryAnalytical ChemistryInstrumental AnalysisSpectroscopic methods, chromatographic methods, mass spectrometric methods, electroanalytical methods, thermal analysis, atomic spectrometry, hyphenated techniques, detector classes (optical, electrochemical, MS, thermal).
Natural SciencesChemistryBiochemistryStructural BiochemistryProtein fold families, domain architectures, RNA/DNA secondary-structure classes, symmetry classes in complexes, intrinsically disordered proteins (IDPs), structured vs unstructured regions.
Natural SciencesChemistryBiochemistryEnzymologyMechanistic enzyme classes (acid–base, metal-ion, covalent, general catalysis), EC classifications (1–6), inhibition classes (competitive/noncompetitive/uncompetitive/mixed), regulatory enzyme types (allosteric, covalent-modification, feedback-controlled).
Natural SciencesChemistryBiochemistryMetabolism & BioenergeticsCatabolic vs anabolic pathways, central carbon pathways, electron-carrier families, phosphoryl-group transfer categories, linear vs cyclic pathways, aerobic vs anaerobic energy systems.
Natural SciencesChemistryBiochemistryMolecular Biology & Gene ExpressionGene classes (housekeeping, inducible, repressible), regulatory RNA types (miRNA, lncRNA, siRNA), promoter types, enhancer classes, chromatin states, transcription-factor families, operon structures, RNA polymerase systems (I/II/III).
Natural SciencesChemistryBiochemistryCellular BiochemistryOrganelle types, trafficking pathways, cytoskeletal systems (actin, microtubules, IFs), membrane-transport categories (channels, carriers, pumps), degradation systems (proteasome, autophagy), metabolic zones, redox systems.
Natural SciencesChemistryBiochemistryMembrane BiochemistryMembrane-protein classes (channels, pumps, receptors), lipid types (phospholipids, sphingolipids, sterols), membrane domains (rafts, caveolae), trafficking routes, transport mechanisms (passive, active, facilitated), curvature-generating proteins.
Natural SciencesChemistryBiochemistryProtein ChemistryProtein structural classes (all-α, all-β, α/β, α+β), domain families, fold types, oligomeric states, PTM classes, enzyme classes (chemical reactivity), IDPs vs structured proteins, aggregation-prone vs stable proteins.
Natural SciencesChemistryBiochemistryBiochemical GeneticsMutation classes (missense, nonsense, frameshift, splice-site), inheritance classes (autosomal, X-linked, mitochondrial), biochemical disorder classes (enzyme deficiencies, transport defects, receptor mutations), genotype–effect categories (null, hypomorphic, hypermorphic, neomorphic).
Natural SciencesEarth & Space SciencesGeologyMineralogy & CrystallographyMineral groups (silicates, oxides, sulfides, carbonates), crystal systems (cubic, tetragonal, orthorhombic, hexagonal, trigonal, monoclinic, triclinic), space groups, defect classes, polymorphic series, exsolution textures.
Natural SciencesEarth & Space SciencesGeologyPetrologyIgneous rock classes (felsic/intermediate/mafic/ultramafic), metamorphic facies (greenschist/amphibolite/granulite/blueschist/eclogite), sedimentary rock types, magmatic series (tholeiitic/calc-alkaline), P–T path types.
Natural SciencesEarth & Space SciencesGeologyStructural Geology & TectonicsFault types (normal, reverse, thrust, strike-slip), fold types (anticline, syncline, monocline), deformation styles (brittle, ductile, brittle-ductile), plate margins (divergent, convergent, transform), shear-zone types, fabric types (S-foliation, C-shear bands, L-lineations).
Natural SciencesEarth & Space SciencesGeologySedimentology & StratigraphyDepositional environments (fluvial, deltaic, marine, aeolian, glacial); bedform types (ripples, dunes, antidunes); facies associations; stratigraphic units (formations, members); sequence types (transgressive/regressive); lithofacies classes.
Natural SciencesEarth & Space SciencesGeologyGeomorphologyLandform types (fluvial, coastal, aeolian, glacial, periglacial, karst, hillslope), drainage patterns, channel planforms (meandering, braided, straight, anabranching), slope processes, climate-controlled geomorphic domains, geomorphic transport laws.
Natural SciencesEarth & Space SciencesGeologyGeophysicsSeismic wave types (P, S, surface), crustal vs mantle structures, magnetic anomalies (induced/remanent), EM regimes (resistive/conductive), gravity anomalies (positive/negative), rheological regimes (elastic, viscous, viscoelastic, plastic).
Natural SciencesEarth & Space SciencesGeologyGeochemistryAqueous geochemical facies, redox environments, isotope systems (radiogenic/stable), weathering regimes (congruent/incongruent), hydrothermal systems, igneous trace-element groups (LILE, HFSE, REE), fluid types (meteoric, magmatic, metamorphic).
Natural SciencesEarth & Space SciencesGeologyPaleontologyFossil types (body/trace/chemical), taxonomic hierarchies, taphonomic grades, depositional environments, morphotypes, functional groups, biostratigraphic zones, evolutionary modes (gradualism, punctuated).
Natural SciencesEarth & Space SciencesGeologyHydrogeologyFlow regimes (confined, unconfined, perched), transport regimes (advection-dominated, dispersion-dominated), aquifer types (porous, fractured, karst), recharge mechanisms (diffuse/focused), contamination types (LNAPLs, DNAPLs, dissolved plumes).
Natural SciencesEarth & Space SciencesGeologyEconomic & Applied GeologyOre deposit classes (porphyry, VMS, SEDEX, epithermal, IOCG, skarn, orogenic gold), petroleum system categories (conventional/unconventional), reservoir types (clastic, carbonate, fractured), mineralization styles (vein, disseminated, stratiform), alteration types (propylitic, phyllic, potassic, argillic).
Natural SciencesEarth & Space SciencesMeteorologyDynamic MeteorologyTaxonomies of atmospheric flows: balanced vs. unbalanced flow, baroclinic vs. barotropic systems, geostrophic vs. ageostrophic motion, wave types (gravity waves, Rossby waves, Kelvin waves), and cyclone categories.
Natural SciencesEarth & Space SciencesMeteorologyThermodynamic MeteorologyStability regimes (stable, neutral, unstable), cloud categories (cumulus, stratiform, mixed-phase), convective modes (shallow, deep, organized), and thermodynamic profiles (inverted V, moist-stable, conditionally unstable).
Natural SciencesEarth & Space SciencesMeteorologyCloud Physics & MicrophysicsClassifies hydrometeors (cloud droplets, ice crystals, graupel, hail, snow aggregates), ice habits (plates, columns, dendrites), aerosol types, microphysical regimes (warm, cold, mixed-phase), and parameterization schemes (bulk, bin, spectral).
Natural SciencesEarth & Space SciencesMeteorologySynoptic & Mesoscale MeteorologyClassifies systems into synoptic cyclones, anticyclones, occluded systems, warm/occluded/cold fronts, mesoscale convective complexes (MCCs), squall lines, supercells, mesoscale convective vortices (MCVs), sea-breeze fronts, and terrain-induced circulations.
Natural SciencesEarth & Space SciencesMeteorologyAtmospheric Physics & ChemistryGas-phase chemistry families (NOx, HOx, ROx, VOCs), aerosol modes (nucleation, Aitken, accumulation, coarse), chemical lifetimes (short-lived vs. long-lived), radiative regimes (shortwave, longwave), and chemical transport regimes.
Natural SciencesEarth & Space SciencesMeteorologyClimatology & Climate DynamicsClimate regimes (glacial/interglacial, monsoon systems), oscillations (ENSO, PDO, AMO, NAO), forcing types (anthropogenic vs natural), feedbacks (positive/negative), and response timescales (fast/slow components).
Natural SciencesEarth & Space SciencesOceanographyPhysical OceanographyCirculation regimes, wave types, instability types, mesoscale/submesoscale eddies, boundary layers, climate modes (ENSO, NAO).
Natural SciencesEarth & Space SciencesOceanographyChemical OceanographyMajor-ion systems, nutrient systems (N, P, Si), trace-metal families, redox species, dissolved vs particulate pools, labile vs refractory DOM, hydrothermal vs riverine vs atmospheric sources, conservative vs reactive tracers.
Natural SciencesEarth & Space SciencesOceanographyBiological OceanographyNet tows, bottle sampling, filtration, fixation, staining, microscopy counts, flow-cytometry runs, incubation assays (¹⁴C, ⁵⁵Fe, O₂), nutrient uptake incubations, sediment-trap retrieval, satellite product QC, CTD profiling with bio-optical sensors.
Natural SciencesEarth & Space SciencesOceanographyGeological OceanographySediment types (terrigenous, biogenic, hydrogenous, volcanogenic), depositional environments (shelf, slope, abyss), tectonic settings (MOR, trench, hotspot), sedimentary structures (graded bedding, laminations), microfossil groups (forams, coccoliths, diatoms).
Natural SciencesBiologyMolecular BiologyNucleic Acid BiologyTaxonomies including DNA vs RNA types, coding vs noncoding regions, repair pathway categories (BER, NER, MMR), replication origin classes, RNA structure classes, modification types (methylation, acetylation, oxidation), and chromatin states.
Natural SciencesBiologyMolecular BiologyGene Regulation & EpigeneticsTaxonomies of activating vs repressing marks, classes of regulatory elements, TF families, types of regulatory RNAs, chromatin-state models, topologically associating domains (TADs), and genome-wide regulatory categories.
Natural SciencesBiologyMolecular BiologyProtein BiologyStructural classes (α-helix, β-sheet, mixed), functional protein families (enzymes, receptors, motors), fold families, domain architectures, PTM categories, complex types, and interaction-network classifications.
Natural SciencesBiologyMolecular BiologyMolecular Complexes & Information FlowComplex types (enzymatic machines, structural assemblies, signaling hubs), interaction categories (transient vs stable, high vs low affinity), structural states (active, inactive, intermediate), and information-flow motifs (feedforward, feedback, integration nodes).
Natural SciencesBiologyMolecular BiologyMolecular Methods & TechnologiesCategories such as sequencing methods (short-read, long-read), imaging modalities (fluorescence, confocal, super-resolution), analytical platforms (MS, NMR), amplification systems (PCR, isothermal), and microfluidic device types.
Natural SciencesBiologyCell BiologyCell Structure & OrganellesOrganelle categories (biosynthetic, degradative, energy-producing, regulatory); filament systems (actin, microtubules, intermediate filaments); trafficking routes (anterograde, retrograde); coat complexes (COPI, COPII, clathrin).
Natural SciencesBiologyCell BiologyCellular Dynamics & TraffickingTrafficking types (secretory, endocytic, recycling, retrograde, degradative), vesicle coats (clathrin, COPI, COPII), motor families (kinesin, dynein, myosin), transport regimes (directed, diffusive, confined), and membrane remodeling states.
Natural SciencesBiologyCell BiologyCell Signaling & CommunicationSignaling modes (autocrine, paracrine, endocrine, juxtacrine), receptor classes (GPCRs, RTKs, nuclear receptors), pathway families (MAPK, PI3K, NF-κB, JAK/STAT), messenger types (ions, lipids, nucleotides), and kinetic motifs (switches, oscillators, bistable systems).
Natural SciencesBiologyCell BiologyCell Cycle, Fate & DeathCell-cycle categories (G1, S, G2, M); death modalities (apoptosis, necroptosis, autophagic cell death); fate states (stem, progenitor, differentiated, senescent); checkpoint types (G1/S, intra-S, G2/M, spindle); lineage-decision structures (binary switches, graded responses, stochastic biases).
Natural SciencesBiologyCell BiologyCell Interactions & MicroenvironmentInteraction types (adhesive, mechanical, chemical), junction classes (tight, adherens, gap), ECM types (basement membrane, interstitial matrix), migration modes (mesenchymal, amoeboid, collective), microenvironment types (niche, fibrotic, inflammatory, tumor).
Natural SciencesBiologyCell BiologyCell Morphology & MotilityMotility modes (mesenchymal, amoeboid, collective, bleb-driven), protrusion types (lamellipodia, filopodia, blebs), adhesion classes (nascent, focal, fibrillar), polarity regimes (front–rear, rotational, multi-axial), cytoskeletal systems (actin, microtubules, intermediate filaments).
Natural SciencesBiologyGenetics & EvolutionClassical & Transmission GeneticsTrait types (autosomal, sex-linked, mitochondrial), dominance types (complete, incomplete, codominant), cross types (monohybrid, dihybrid), linkage classes (linked, unlinked), inheritance modes (Mendelian vs non-Mendelian).
Natural SciencesBiologyGenetics & EvolutionPopulation GeneticsForces (mutation, drift, selection, migration, nonrandom mating); population types (panmictic, structured, subdivided); selection modes (directional, stabilizing, disruptive, balancing); mating systems (random, assortative, disassortative, inbreeding).
Natural SciencesBiologyGenetics & EvolutionQuantitative GeneticsVariance components (VA, VD, VI, VE), trait types (continuous, threshold), selection regimes (directional, stabilizing, disruptive), genetic architectures (polygenic, oligogenic), covariance structures (genetic vs environmental; multivariate G-matrices).
Natural SciencesBiologyGenetics & EvolutionGenomic Evolution & Comparative GenomicsMutation classes (point, indel, SV), homology categories (ortholog, paralog, xenolog), rearrangement types (inversion, translocation, fusion, fission), evolutionary models (neutral, nearly neutral, adaptive), genomic feature types (coding, regulatory, repetitive).
Natural SciencesBiologyGenetics & EvolutionPhylogenetics & SystematicsTree types (gene, species), clade types (mono-, para-, polyphyletic), character types (molecular, morphological, behavioral), taxonomic ranks, species-delimitation categories, inference frameworks (parsimony, likelihood, Bayesian).
Natural SciencesBiologyGenetics & EvolutionMacroevolution & Speciation TheorySpeciation modes (allopatric, sympatric, parapatric, peripatric), isolation mechanisms (prezygotic, postzygotic), macroevolutionary models (gradualism, punctuated equilibrium, adaptive radiation), clade types (crown vs stem), diversification regimes (constant-rate vs variable-rate).
Natural SciencesBiologyPhysiologyCellular & Tissue PhysiologyCategories such as epithelial vs connective vs muscle vs nervous tissue, passive vs active transport, mechanical vs biochemical signaling, ion-channel types, and cytoskeletal filament systems.
Natural SciencesBiologyPhysiologyNeurophysiologyNeuron types (excitatory vs inhibitory), synapse types (chemical vs electrical), network architectures (feedforward, recurrent), firing classes (regular-spiking, bursting, fast-spiking), and neurotransmitter systems.
Natural SciencesBiologyPhysiologyEndocrine & Regulatory PhysiologyHormone categories (peptide, steroid, amine), secretion modes (endocrine/paracrine/autocrine), receptor classes (GPCR, nuclear receptor, RTK), feedback types, and regulatory-axis structures.
Natural SciencesBiologyPhysiologyCardiovascular & Respiratory PhysiologyBlood vessels (arteries/arterioles/capillaries/veins), respiratory zones (conducting vs respiratory), flow regimes, autonomic inputs (sympathetic/parasympathetic), and control modes (neural/endocrine/local).
Natural SciencesBiologyPhysiologyMetabolic & Energetic PhysiologyPathway categories (aerobic/anaerobic), substrate classes (CHO/fat/protein), metabolic states (rest, fasted, fed, exercise), tissue specializations (oxidative vs glycolytic), and thermogenic types.
Natural SciencesBiologyPhysiologyRenal, Fluid & Homeostatic PhysiologyNephron segments, transport processes (active/passive), fluid compartments, electrolyte categories, acid–base disorders (metabolic/respiratory acidosis/alkalosis), and hormonal regulatory types (RAAS/ADH/ANP).
Natural SciencesBiologyDevelopmental BiologyCell Fate & Lineage SpecificationFate states (pluripotent, multipotent, progenitor, terminal), division types (symmetric vs asymmetric), specification modes (autonomous, conditional), regulatory-factor types (master regulators, modulators), lineage-tree architectures (binary, multi-branch, stochastic).
Natural SciencesBiologyDevelopmental BiologyPattern Formation & Embryonic AxesGradient types (long-range, short-range, opposing), axis types (AP, DV, LR), patterning strategies (threshold-based, reaction–diffusion, relay mechanisms), segmentation modes (clock-and-wavefront vs non-clock systems), symmetry-breaking types (intrinsic, extrinsic).
Natural SciencesBiologyDevelopmental BiologyMorphogenesis & Tissue-Level MechanicsMechanical regimes (elastic, viscous, viscoelastic); deformation modes (folding, bending, elongation, spreading); force-generation mechanisms (contractile, protrusive, pressure-driven); tissue types (epithelial, mesenchymal); morphogenetic modules (junctional remodeling, intercalation, constriction).
Natural SciencesBiologyDevelopmental BiologyOrganogenesis & Multi-Tissue AssemblyOrgan types (tubular, branched, layered), branching modes (bifurcation, tip-splitting, side-branching), lumen-formation modes (hollowing, cavitation), tissue roles (inductive, supportive, boundary-forming), interaction types (paracrine, mechanical, structural).
Natural SciencesBiologyDevelopmental BiologyGrowth, Timing, Regeneration & Life-Cycle TransitionsGrowth types (isometric, allometric), regeneration modes (epimorphic, compensatory, morphallactic), timing systems (circadian, developmental, hormonal), life-cycle transitions (larval, juvenile, adult, metamorphic, senescent), checkpoint types (size, nutritional, molecular).
Natural SciencesBiologyDevelopmental BiologyEvolutionary Development (Evo–Devo)Developmental-change types (heterochrony, heterotopy, heterometry, heterotypy), homology classes (serial, molecular, deep), developmental modules (segmental, appendage, organ-specific), evolutionary GRN alterations (gain, loss, rewiring).
Natural SciencesBiologyEcologyOrganismal EcologyCategories such as behavioral strategies (foraging, mating, territoriality), physiological adaptation types (thermal, hydric, metabolic), morphological functional groups, habitat types, and environmental stressor classes.
Natural SciencesBiologyEcologyPopulation EcologyPopulation types (closed/open, regulated/unregulated), life-history strategies (r-selected vs K-selected), survivorship types (I/II/III), metapopulation structures, and density-response categories.
Natural SciencesBiologyEcologyCommunity EcologyCategories of interactions (competition, predation, mutualism), community types (forest, grassland, reef), successional stages (early, mid, late), functional groups, guilds, and trophic compartments.
Natural SciencesBiologyEcologyEcosystem EcologyEcosystem types (forest, grassland, desert, aquatic), trophic structures (producer/consumer/decomposer), nutrient pools (organic/inorganic), flux types (input/output/internal), and biogeochemical cycle components.
Natural SciencesBiologyEcologyLandscape & Spatial EcologyPatch types (core, edge, stepping-stone), landscape configurations (aggregated, dispersed, linear), connectivity classes (low, moderate, high), dispersal modes, and spatial network structures (graphs, clusters, hubs).
Natural SciencesBiologyEcologyGlobal Ecology & Earth-System InteractionsClimate zones, global biomes, major biogeochemical cycles (C/N/P/H₂O), feedback types (positive/negative), Earth-system components (atmosphere, biosphere, hydrosphere, cryosphere, lithosphere), and large-scale disturbance classes.
Formal SciencesLogicProof TheoryProof CalculiHilbert calculi, natural deduction systems, sequent calculi (LK, LJ), analytic tableaux, structural-rule taxonomies (with/without contraction/weakening), classical vs. intuitionistic vs. modal proof calculi.
Formal SciencesLogicProof TheoryStructural Proof TheoryClassical vs. intuitionistic systems, structural vs. substructural logics, sequent calculi (LK, LJ), calculi with/without structural rules, analytic calculi, deep inference systems, display calculi.
Formal SciencesLogicProof TheoryProof Theory of Non-Classical LogicsModal (K, T, S4, S5), intuitionistic (LJ variants), linear/affine (LL, MILL), relevant logics (R, RW), paraconsistent calculi (LP, da Costa systems), paracomplete logics, many-valued logics, labeled vs. unlabeled systems, deep inference vs. sequent calculus.
Formal SciencesLogicProof TheoryOrdinal & Strength AnalysisPredicative vs. impredicative strength, arithmetic vs. set-theoretic ordinals, large ordinal frameworks, collapsible vs. non-collapsible ordinals, reflection-based classifications, hierarchies of inductive definitions, recursion-based classifications (slow/fast-growing).
Formal SciencesLogicProof TheoryProof ComplexityResolution family (tree-like, DAG-like, regular, ordered), Frege vs. Extended Frege, algebraic systems (PC, PC⁺, Nullstellensatz), geometric/semi-algebraic systems, depth-limited proof systems, bounded-space systems, p-simulation hierarchies, complexity-class-linked systems (NP, coNP, PSPACE).
Formal SciencesLogicProof TheoryAutomated & Interactive ReasoningAutomated vs. interactive reasoning, SAT vs. SMT solvers, first-order vs. higher-order provers, sequent-based vs. rewriting-based systems, kernel-based proof assistants, DPLL/CDCL solvers, Euler-style vs. tactic-style proofs, symbolic vs. model-based reasoning systems.
Formal SciencesLogicModel TheoryStructures, Languages & InterpretationsModel classes, theory classes (stable, unstable, simple, o-minimal), isomorphism classes, definable sets, saturation levels, algebraic vs. elementary closure.
Formal SciencesLogicModel TheorySatisfaction & Definability TheoryDefinability classes (quantifier-free, existential, first-order), type classes, ranks of formulas, definability hierarchies, theory classes (stable, simple, o-minimal), preservation categories.
Formal SciencesLogicModel TheoryQuantifier Theory & Model CompletenessQuantifier classes (∃, ∀, alternating), prenex classes, definability hierarchies, model-complete theories, theories with quantifier elimination, stable/simple/o-minimal theory classifications.
Formal SciencesLogicModel TheoryClassification TheoryStable vs. unstable, superstable vs. stable, ω-stable vs. superstable, simple vs. non-simple, NIP vs. IP, NSOP vs. SOP, o-minimal vs. unstable expansions.
Formal SciencesLogicModel TheoryTame / O-Minimal Model TheoryO-minimal vs. weakly o-minimal, polynomially bounded vs. non-polynomially bounded o-minimal structures, expansions of real closed fields, tame vs. wild definable behavior.
Formal SciencesLogicSet TheoryAxiomatic Foundations & Cumulative HierarchyFinite vs. transfinite stages; successor vs. limit ordinals; small vs. large cardinals (within ZFC constraints); definability classes; cumulative layers; hierarchies by rank.
Formal SciencesLogicSet TheoryConstructibility & Inner ModelsAdmissible vs. inadmissible ordinals, standard vs. nonstandard segments, small vs. large mice, iterable vs. non-iterable structures, core model vs. extender models, definability tiers.
Formal SciencesLogicSet TheoryLarge Cardinal TheoryInaccessible → Mahlo → weakly compact → indescribable → measurable → strong → superstrong → supercompact → extendible → huge → superhuge (and further beyond).
Formal SciencesLogicSet TheoryForcing & Independence TheoryTypes of forcing (ccc, proper, semi-proper, κ-closed, stationary-preserving, Suslin, random, Cohen, Sacks, Laver); forcing equivalence classes; independence classifications; Boolean algebra completions.
Formal SciencesLogicSet TheoryDescriptive Set TheoryBorel hierarchy, projective hierarchy, Wadge hierarchy, equivalence-relation complexity classes, definability classes (Σ/Π/Δ), determinacy-based classifications of definable sets.
Formal SciencesLogicComputability TheoryModels of Computation & Recursive Function TheoryMachine-based vs. function-based models; deterministic vs. nondeterministic models; uniform vs. non-uniform frameworks; primitive recursive vs. partial recursive functions; typed vs. untyped λ-calculus; oracle hierarchies; normal vs. applicative reduction strategies.
Formal SciencesLogicComputability TheoryRecursively Enumerable (r.e.) Sets & DegreesTuring degrees, m-degrees, tt-degrees, r.e. vs. non-r.e. degrees, low degrees (A′ = 0′), high degrees (A′ = 0″), minimal and minimal-pair degrees, promptly simple sets, creative and productive sets, density classifications of r.e. degrees.
Formal SciencesLogicComputability TheoryReducibility & Degrees of UnsolvabilityTuring degrees, many-one degrees, tt and wtt degrees; complete vs. incomplete degrees; low/high degrees; minimal degrees and minimal pairs; hyperimmune-free degrees; jump hierarchy levels (0, 0′, 0″, …).
Formal SciencesLogicComputability TheoryArithmetical & Analytical HierarchiesArithmetical classes (Σₙ⁰, Πₙ⁰, Δₙ⁰); analytical classes (Σₙ¹, Πₙ¹, Δₙ¹); complete problems at each level; relativized hierarchies Σₙ⁰(A); difference hierarchies; Borel/projective class alignments (in extended frameworks).
Formal SciencesMathematicsAlgebraGroup TheoryAbelian vs. non-Abelian; finite vs. infinite; cyclic, dihedral, symmetric, alternating; simple groups; solvable and nilpotent groups; Lie groups; free groups; direct and semidirect products; torsion vs. torsion-free groups.
Formal SciencesMathematicsAlgebraRing TheoryCommutative vs noncommutative; integral domains; fields; PIDs; UFDs; Noetherian and Artinian rings; polynomial rings; matrix rings; local rings; valuation rings; semiprime/semisimple rings; coordinate rings of varieties.
Formal SciencesMathematicsAlgebraField TheoryFactoring polynomials; computing minimal polynomials; building extension towers; computing splitting fields; calculating automorphism groups; evaluating norms and traces; computing valuations; performing completions; determining ramification.
Formal SciencesMathematicsAlgebraModule TheoryFree/projective/injective/flat modules; torsion vs. torsion-free modules; finitely generated vs. infinitely generated; Noetherian/Artinian modules; cyclic modules; semisimple modules; modules over PIDs; graded modules; simple modules.
Formal SciencesMathematicsAlgebraLinear AlgebraFinite vs infinite dimensional spaces; Euclidean vs general inner-product spaces; diagonalizable vs non-diagonalizable operators; symmetric/Hermitian vs general matrices; normal vs non-normal matrices; singular vs nonsingular operators; orthogonal/unitary transformations.
Formal SciencesMathematicsAlgebraRepresentation TheoryFinite vs infinite-dimensional representations; unitary vs non-unitary; reducible vs irreducible; semisimple vs non-semisimple; representations of finite groups, Lie groups, Lie algebras, associative algebras; highest-weight modules; projective representations; modular representations (positive characteristic).
Formal SciencesMathematicsAlgebraUniversal AlgebraVarieties (HSP classes); quasivarieties; congruence-distributive/permutable/modular varieties; types of algebras (groups, rings, lattices, Boolean algebras, semigroups, etc.); finitely generated vs infinitely generated algebras; locally finite vs non-locally finite varieties.
Formal SciencesMathematicsAlgebraAlgebraic CombinatoricsSymmetric-function bases; representation classes indexed by partitions; poset families (Boolean, Eulerian, graded, distributive); graph families with algebraic structure; Coxeter types (A, B, D, affine); matroids; Schubert/Stanley/cluster combinatorial objects.
Formal SciencesMathematicsMathematical AnalysisReal AnalysisContinuous vs discontinuous functions; differentiable vs nondifferentiable; Riemann-integrable vs Lebesgue-integrable; measurable vs nonmeasurable sets; bounded vs unbounded functions; absolutely continuous vs singular; functions of bounded variation; Lᵖ spaces; Cᵏ classes.
Formal SciencesMathematicsMathematical AnalysisComplex AnalysisEntire vs meromorphic functions; removable/pole/essential singularities; domains (simply connected, multiply connected); conformal equivalence classes; bounded analytic functions; Hardy spaces; Bergman spaces; normal families; holomorphic vs pluriholomorphic in several complex variables.
Formal SciencesMathematicsMathematical AnalysisFunctional AnalysisNormed vs Banach vs Hilbert spaces; reflexive vs non-reflexive spaces; separable vs non-separable; bounded vs unbounded operators; compact vs non-compact operators; self-adjoint/normal/unitary operators; spectral classes (point, continuous, residual); locally convex spaces; distribution spaces (Schwartz, tempered).
Formal SciencesMathematicsMathematical AnalysisHarmonic AnalysisFourier vs wavelet vs time–frequency methods; Lᵖ spaces; Hardy spaces Hᵖ; BMO; Sobolev spaces; Calderón–Zygmund operator classes; singular kernels; Littlewood–Paley operators; representations of Abelian vs non-Abelian groups; lacunary series classes; tempered distributions.
Formal SciencesMathematicsMathematical AnalysisDifferential Equations (ODE/PDE)Linear vs nonlinear; autonomous vs non-autonomous; first-order vs higher-order; ODE vs PDE vs systems; elliptic/parabolic/hyperbolic PDEs; steady-state vs time-dependent; local vs global solutions; classical vs weak/distributional; well-posed vs ill-posed; dissipative vs conservative systems.
Formal SciencesMathematicsGeometry & TopologyDifferential GeometryRiemannian vs. pseudo-Riemannian manifolds; flat, constant-curvature, and curved geometries; symplectic vs. non-symplectic manifolds; orientable vs. non-orientable; geodesically complete vs. incomplete.
Formal SciencesMathematicsGeometry & TopologyAlgebraic GeometryAffine vs. projective vs. proper varieties; smooth vs. singular varieties; irreducible vs. reducible; rational, unirational, and general type varieties; moduli classifications (curves, surfaces, bundles).
Formal SciencesMathematicsGeometry & TopologyMetric GeometryGeodesic vs. non-geodesic spaces; CAT(0)/CAT(k) spaces; Alexandrov spaces; hyperbolic spaces; ultrametric spaces; doubling spaces; coarse-geometric classes (e.g., quasi-isometry types).
Formal SciencesMathematicsGeometry & TopologyPoint-Set TopologyT0–T4 spaces, compact vs. non-compact, connected vs. disconnected, first/second-countable, separable, metrizable, locally compact, Lindelöf spaces.
Formal SciencesMathematicsGeometry & TopologyHomotopy TheorySimply connected vs. non-simply connected; n-connected spaces; CW-complex types; stable vs. unstable phenomena; classification via Postnikov invariants; classes of fibrations/cofibrations.
Formal SciencesMathematicsGeometry & TopologyKnot TheoryPrime vs. composite knots; alternating vs. non-alternating; fibered vs. non-fibered; torus, satellite, and hyperbolic knots; tame vs. wild knots; oriented vs. unoriented knots; amphichiral vs. chiral.
Formal SciencesMathematicsNumber TheoryElementary Number TheoryPrimes vs composites; residue classes mod n; multiplicative vs non-multiplicative functions; solvable vs unsolvable congruences; linear vs quadratic vs higher Diophantine forms; primitive roots vs nonexistence.
Formal SciencesMathematicsNumber TheoryAlgebraic Number TheoryRamified vs unramified primes; splitting types; Dedekind domains; global vs local fields; Galois vs non-Galois extensions; class-number types; unit-rank categories; tame vs wild ramification.
Formal SciencesMathematicsNumber TheoryAnalytic Number TheoryL-functions (Dirichlet, Hecke, automorphic); character classes; multiplicative vs additive functions; smooth vs oscillatory sums; main-term vs error-term dominated phenomena; zero-density classes.
Formal SciencesMathematicsNumber TheoryArithmetic GeometryGood vs bad reduction; additive/multiplicative reduction; rational vs integral points; curves by genus; varieties by dimension; abelian vs non-abelian Galois representations; torsion vs free components; local vs global obstructions.
Formal SciencesMathematicsNumber TheoryModular and Automorphic FormsHolomorphic vs. Maass forms; cusp vs. Eisenstein; newforms vs. oldforms; GL(1), GL(2), GL(n) automorphic forms; automorphic representations by weight/level; spherical vs. ramified local components.
Formal SciencesMathematicsNumber TheoryTranscendental Number TheoryTranscendental vs algebraic numbers; measures of transcendence; Baker-type vs Schneider–Lang types of theorems; linear vs nonlinear independence problems; exponential/logarithmic classes; special constants families (e.g., e, π, log α).
Social SciencesAnthropologyHuman Evolutionary AnthropologyHominin species groups; fossil morphotypes; stone-tool traditions (Oldowan, Acheulean, Mousterian); subsistence strategies (foraging, scavenging, mixed diets); primate social-system types; adaptation categories (locomotion, diet, thermoregulation); genetic haplogroups; limb-proportion clusters.
Social SciencesAnthropologyKinship, Descent & Domestic OrganizationUnilineal vs bilateral descent; patrilineal vs matrilineal vs ambilineal systems; residence types (patrilocal, matrilocal, avunculocal, neolocal); marriage systems (monogamy, polygyny, polyandry); household types (nuclear, joint, extended); inheritance modes (primogeniture, ultimogeniture, partible inheritance); kinship terminological systems (Eskimo, Hawaiian, Iroquois, Omaha, Crow, Sudanese).
Social SciencesAnthropologyRitual, Cultural Practice & Symbolic SystemsRitual types (healing, initiation, calendrical, funerary, crisis, political); symbolic forms (visual, auditory, olfactory, tactile, spatial); semiotic categories (iconic, indexical, symbolic); cosmological systems (animist, ancestor-based, theistic); structural analysis types (binary oppositions, triadic cycles, spatial mappings); performance styles (formal, improvised, ecstatic, processional).
Social SciencesAnthropologySubsistence Systems, Environment & Human AdaptationSubsistence modes (foraging, horticulture, pastoralism, agriculture, fishing); adaptive strategies (risk reduction, storage, intensification, mobility); ecological zones (coastal, savanna, forest, tundra); technological regimes (lithic, ceramic, metallurgical); mobility patterns (nomadic, semi-sedentary, sedentary).
Social SciencesAnthropologyMaterial Culture, Technology & Archaeological InterpretationLithic typologies; ceramic typologies; metallurgical categories; architectural feature types; production techniques; site-function categories; depositional context (primary, secondary, mixed); tool-function classes; stylistic variants; technological phases; degrees of standardization.
Social SciencesAnthropologyEthnographic Method & Comparative AnalysisEthnographic genres; coding schemes for behavior; cultural-domain taxonomies; cross-cultural trait lists (e.g., SCCS variables); narrative and discourse categories; social-role classifications; interaction types; variation models (intra-cultural, inter-cultural); typologies of ritual, economic, kinship, political practices used in comparative analysis.
Social SciencesEconomicsChoice (Microeconomic Foundations)Preferences: convex, homothetic, quasilinear, Cobb–Douglas, CES; Risk attitudes: risk-neutral, risk-averse, prudent; Discounting: exponential, hyperbolic; Choice environments: static, intertemporal, stochastic, informational; Agent types: consumer, worker, firm; Production technologies: linear, convex, Leontief.
Social SciencesEconomicsInteraction (Markets, Strategy & Mechanisms)Market types: competitive, monopoly, oligopoly, auctions, matching markets; Games: static, dynamic, Bayesian, repeated; Mechanisms: direct, indirect, sealed-bid, ascending, VCG, deferred acceptance; Contracts: complete, incomplete, linear, nonlinear; Information structures: complete, incomplete, asymmetric; Externality structures: positive/negative, local/global.
Social SciencesEconomicsAggregation & Dynamics (Macroeconomic Systems)Models: RBC, New Keynesian, HANK (heterogeneous-agent), OLG, endogenous growth, VAR/SVAR; Shocks: technology, preference, monetary, fiscal, financial, productivity, markup; Markets: goods, labor, credit, money; Equilibria: deterministic/stochastic steady states, saddle-path stable dynamics; Policies: rules-based, discretionary.
Social SciencesGeography (Human)Spatial Patterns & Spatial AnalysisSpatial forms (clustered, dispersed, random); region types (formal, functional, vernacular); flow networks (origin–destination, commuting, migration); land-use classes (residential, industrial, commercial, agricultural); spatial models (gravity, Huff, location-allocation, kernel density); diffusion typologies (contagious, hierarchical, network-based).
Social SciencesGeography (Human)Mobility, Flows & ConnectivityFlow types (commuting, migration, freight, digital); network types (hierarchical, decentralized, scale-free, small-world); mobility regimes (open, restricted, seasonal, forced); diffusion types (hierarchical, network, contagious); congestion states (free-flow, saturated, gridlocked).
Social SciencesGeography (Human)Human–Environment Interaction & Landscape ModificationLandscape types (agrarian, urban, industrial, frontier); modification strategies (irrigation, terracing, burning, drainage, reforestation, damming); hazard categories (flood, drought, wildfire, erosion); socioecological regime types (sustainable, transitional, collapsing); resource-use systems (extensive, intensive); feedback classes (positive, negative, cascading).
Social SciencesGeography (Human)Place, Territory & Spatial ExperiencePlace types (homeplace, sacred place, public realm, liminal space); territorial types (personal, communal, political, symbolic, contested); boundary types (material, symbolic, performative, administrative); experiential categories (safe/unsafe, familiar/unfamiliar, open/enclosed, visible/hidden); spatial narratives (origin stories, trauma landscapes, heritage sites); territorial strategies (marking, surveillance, regulation, negotiation).
Social SciencesLinguisticsPhonetics & PhonologySegment classes (vowels, consonants); feature categories (+voice, +nasal, etc.); syllable types (CV, CVC, etc.); tone inventories; stress systems; prosodic constituents (foot, phrase); rule types (assimilation, deletion, insertion).
Social SciencesLinguisticsMorphologyInflectional vs derivational processes; productive vs unproductive morphology; agglutinative vs fusional vs isolating vs polysynthetic types; morpheme classes (prefix, suffix, infix); paradigm structures (regular, irregular, suppletive).
Social SciencesLinguisticsSyntaxPhrase categories; movement types (A, A′, head movement); syntactic functions (subject, object, adjunct); dependency vs constituency systems; configurational vs nonconfigurational languages; head-initial vs head-final orders; strong vs weak features.
Social SciencesLinguisticsSemanticsPredicate types (stative, eventive); modality types (epistemic, deontic); quantifier classes (existential, universal, proportional); aspectual classes (achievement, accomplishment, state, activity); semantic relations (synonymy, antonymy, hyponymy).
Social SciencesLinguisticsPragmaticsScalar vs conventional implicatures; presupposition types; deixis classes; speech-act categories; discourse-relation types (cause, contrast, elaboration); politeness strategies; reference types (definite, indefinite, demonstrative).
Social SciencesPolitical SciencePolitical Institutions & Formal Political OrderRegimes: democratic, authoritarian, hybrid; Government forms: presidential, parliamentary, semi-presidential; Electoral systems: majoritarian, proportional, mixed; Party systems: two-party, multiparty, dominant-party; Courts: constitutional vs supreme vs administrative; Bureaucratic types: meritocratic vs patronage; Federal vs unitary vs confederal systems.
Social SciencesPolitical SciencePolitical Behavior, Mobilization & Collective ActionParticipation types: voting, protest, activism, digital mobilization; Identities: ethnic, partisan, ideological, religious; Mobilization forms: grassroots, organizational, elite-driven, digital networks; Collective-action models: threshold, coordination games, cascade models; Behavioral modes: expressive, instrumental, emotional, identity-driven.
Social SciencesPolitical ScienceGovernance, Policy Formation & State CapacityCapacity dimensions (coercive, administrative, fiscal, infrastructural); Governance types (Weberian, clientelist, neopatrimonial); Policy instruments (regulations, taxes, subsidies, mandates, public services); Implementation types (top-down, networked, decentralized); Bureaucratic structures (meritocratic, politicized, hybrid); Accountability regimes (horizontal, vertical, diagonal).
Social SciencesPolitical ScienceInternational Relations & Global OrderSystem types: unipolar, bipolar, multipolar; Conflict forms: interstate war, proxy war, limited conflict, hybrid war; Cooperation forms: alliances, treaties, IOs, regimes; Actor types: great powers, middle powers, small states, non-state actors; Mechanism classes: coercive, cooperative, economic, institutional, normative; Power types: hard, soft, sharp, institutional.
Social SciencesPsychologyCognitive Processes & Mental ArchitectureTypes of memory (episodic, semantic, procedural); attention systems (top-down vs. bottom-up); reasoning types (deductive, inductive, heuristic); representational formats (symbolic, distributed, hybrid); processing modes (automatic vs. controlled).
Social SciencesPsychologyLearning, Conditioning & Behavioral MechanismsClassical vs operant conditioning; positive vs negative reinforcement; fixed vs variable schedules; ratio vs interval schedules; primary vs secondary reinforcers; simple vs chained behaviors; high vs low extinction resistance.
Social SciencesPsychologyEmotion, Motivation & Affect RegulationBasic vs complex emotions; intrinsic vs extrinsic motivation; approach vs avoidance drives; automatic vs controlled regulation; adaptive vs maladaptive strategies; acute vs chronic affective states; high vs low arousal emotions.
Social SciencesPsychologyDevelopment, Individual Differences & PsychometricsTrait taxonomies (e.g., Big Five); ability classifications (fluid vs crystallized); developmental-stage models; measurement-model types (IRT, CFA, SEM); factor structures (first-order, higher-order, bifactor); growth-model classes (linear, nonlinear, latent-growth-curve).
Social SciencesSociologySocial Interaction MechanismsTypes of roles; categories of interaction rituals; classes of emotion displays; typologies of face-threats; compliance vs. resistance behaviors; cooperative vs. competitive interactions; high-context vs. low-context interaction styles.
Social SciencesSociologySocial Structure MechanismsClass schemas; caste categories; occupational strata; institutional types; formal vs informal structures; open vs closed mobility systems; high- vs low-boundary rigidity; centralized vs decentralized authority systems.
Social SciencesSociologySocial Network & Relational DynamicsCore–periphery structures; cohesive clusters; bridging vs bonding ties; directed vs undirected networks; multiplex vs single-layer networks; temporal vs static networks; sparse vs dense networks; assortative vs disassortative patterns.