Gluten Sensitivity Without Coeliac Disease: The Cognitive Symptoms Many Miss

The Non-Coeliac Gluten Cognitive Effect: The cumulative gastroenterology and cognitive research has progressively documented one of the more important findings for adults navigating subtle dietary symptoms: non-coeliac gluten sensitivity affects approximately 6 to 13 percent of adults and produces measurable cognitive symptoms (brain fog, fatigue, attention difficulties) that traditional coeliac disease testing does not detect. … Read more

Why Methylation Patterns Differ Across Tissues — and Why Bloods Are Not Brains

The Tissue-Specific Methylation Reality: The cumulative epigenetics research has progressively documented one of the more important findings for adults interpreting biological age tests: DNA methylation patterns vary substantially across tissues, with blood-based methylation tests reflecting blood-specific patterns rather than directly measuring brain or other tissue methylation. The structural finding has implications for how consumer biological … Read more

Why a Hot Bath 90 Minutes Before Bed Speeds Sleep Onset

The Pre-Sleep Hot Bath Effect: The cumulative sleep research has progressively documented one of the more practical findings in modern sleep science: hot baths or showers (104 to 109°F) taken approximately 90 minutes before bed accelerate sleep onset by approximately 10 minutes and improve sleep quality through documented thermoregulation mechanisms. The mechanism reflects the body’s … Read more

Mindful Self-Compassion: The Practice That Outperforms Positive Affirmations

The Self-Compassion-Affirmation Premium: Kristin Neff’s self-compassion research has progressively documented one of the more practical findings in modern positive psychology: mindful self-compassion practices substantially outperform positive affirmations for sustained mental health and behavioural change outcomes, with self-compassion producing approximately 30 to 50 percent better cumulative outcomes across multiple measures. The mechanism reflects the difference between … Read more

Why Group Texts Predict Project Success Better Than Org Charts

The Informal Communication Network Power: The cumulative organisational network research has progressively documented one of the more practical findings in modern team science: informal communication patterns (group texts, Slack channels, direct messages) substantially predict project success better than formal organisational charts, with project teams showing dense informal communication producing approximately 30 to 50 percent better … Read more

The Positivity-Performance Loop in Sales: A Real Conversion Premium

The Sales Positivity Premium: The cumulative sales performance research has progressively documented one of the more practical findings in modern positive psychology applied to commerce: salespeople with higher trait optimism and positive affect consistently outperform less positive peers by approximately 20 to 40 percent in conversion rates across multi-year evaluation. The mechanism reflects both customer … Read more

Target-Date Defaults: How One UX Choice Saved Boomer Retirement

The Target-Date Retirement Default Effect: The cumulative behavioural economics research has progressively documented one of the more practical findings in modern retirement plan design: target-date fund defaults in retirement plans substantially improved retirement outcomes for the Boomer generation, with adults defaulted into appropriate target-date funds capturing approximately 30 to 50 percent better cumulative retirement balances … Read more

Pareidolia in Markets: Why Chart Patterns Are Mostly Brain Hallucinations

The Chart Pattern Illusion: The cumulative behavioural finance research has progressively documented one of the more important findings for adults engaging with market data: pareidolia — the brain’s tendency to perceive patterns in random data — substantially affects market analysis, with technical chart patterns producing approximately 70 to 80 percent false signals when applied to … Read more

Predictive Coding: Why the Brain Is a Bayesian Engine, Not a Camera

The Bayesian Brain Framework: The cumulative neuroscience research has progressively documented one of the more important findings in modern brain science: the brain operates as a predictive coding system — constantly generating predictions about sensory input and updating them based on prediction errors — rather than as a passive camera receiving sensory information. The framework … Read more

Daylight, Vitamin D and Decision Quality: The Sunlight-Cognition Bridge

The Sunlight-Cognition Connection: The cumulative chronobiology and decision research has progressively documented one of the more practical findings in modern integrative cognition: daylight exposure and adequate vitamin D status substantially affect decision quality, with adults experiencing chronic daylight deficit showing approximately 15 to 25 percent reduced cognitive performance on demanding decisions. The mechanism reflects multiple … Read more