The Neuroscience of Leadership Decisions Under Pressure
What happens inside the brain when a high-stakes decision must be made under pressure — and how understanding that neuroscience changes the way you lead.
Early Signs of Cognitive Decline Most People Miss
Neurologists identify behavioral and cognitive shifts that precede formal diagnosis by a decade — and the interventions that can slow progression before symptoms become disabling.
When CBT Isn’t Enough: What the Research Now Shows
CBT remains the gold standard for several conditions — but research increasingly clarifies when and for whom it underperforms, and what evidence-based alternatives are filling the gaps.
The Gut-Brain Axis: What Your Diet Does to Your Memory
Emerging microbiome research connects dietary patterns to memory consolidation, mood regulation, and neuroinflammation through pathways that challenge the traditional brain-body separation and open new doors for clinical intervention.
How Chronic Stress Physically Reshapes the Brain
Sustained cortisol exposure over months alters hippocampal volume, amygdala reactivity, and prefrontal connectivity in ways that compound silently and reinforce the very conditions that created the stress.
Grief in the Age of Social Media: Why We Mourn Differently Now
Digital memorialization, algorithmic reminders, and the performance of grief online have fundamentally altered how people experience bereavement — creating new complications for clinicians and demanding fresh clinical frameworks.
The Hidden Cost of High-Functioning Anxiety
High-functioning anxiety is among the most systematically misidentified presentations in clinical practice — partly because sufferers often appear to be thriving, and partly because the presentation itself resists the standard anxiety narrative.
The Psychology of Longevity: Why Some People Age Better
The Blue Zone research and emerging longevity science reveal that psychological and social factors — not genetics — account for the majority of variance in how well people age. What the evidence shows about resilience, purpose, and time.
Psychoneuroimmunology: How Your Mind Shapes Your Immune System
Psychoneuroimmunology has moved from fringe hypothesis to mainstream science. What the evidence now shows about how psychological states — particularly chronic stress, depression, and social isolation — translate directly into immune function changes.
Financial Trauma: Why Your Money Wounds Run Deeper Than You Think
Financial trauma is a clinically meaningful phenomenon — not a metaphor. It alters decision-making, triggers threat responses, and transmits across generations in ways that standard financial literacy approaches cannot address.
