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A Copernican Approach to Brain Advancement

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A Copernican Approach to Brain Advancement: The Paradigm of ... frontiersin.org Frontiers in Human Neuroscience Apr 25, 2019 10 facts
claimThe authors of 'A Copernican Approach to Brain Advancement' posit that Post-Traumatic Stress (PTS) is more endemic to modern life than traditional homeostatic thinking, as established by Hans Selye (1956), suggests.
perspectiveDefining 'normal' biology in an absolute sense, including for the state of the brain, is considered problematic by the authors of 'A Copernican Approach to Brain Advancement'.
perspectiveThe author of 'A Copernican Approach to Brain Advancement' asserts that Charles Darwin's writings represent the second decisive science-based humbling for the human species by placing humans in a lineage with other primates.
perspectiveThe author of 'A Copernican Approach to Brain Advancement' questions the limits of free will in producing top-down effects that recover healthier neural processes and their physical correlations.
perspectiveThe author of 'A Copernican Approach to Brain Advancement' asserts that evolutionary thinking has encouraged a cosmological context for the human imagination.
perspectiveThe authors of 'A Copernican Approach to Brain Advancement' argue that homeostatic modeling and intervention are associated with limitations that can lead to dysfunctional 'disease creep' and the medicalization of everyday life.
imageFigure 5 in the article 'A Copernican Approach to Brain Advancement' maps studies along axes of variable attention to complexities in the natural environment and top-down neural regulation, identifying a nascent category of research that explicitly attends to complexities in both.
accountThe author of 'A Copernican Approach to Brain Advancement' observed an individual in her mid-50s with dementia residing in an assisted living facility 15 years after serving as a responder to the 2001 terror attacks in New York City.
claimThe current assumptions and data available for evidence-based modeling of stress prevention and elimination are considered unacceptably fragile or absent, according to the authors of the article 'A Copernican Approach to Brain Advancement'.
perspectiveThe authors of 'A Copernican Approach to Brain Advancement' argue that architects and planners should pay increasing attention to allostatic health in the design and construction of hospitals, urban planning, educational structures, commercial and civic facilities, public housing, and correctional institutions.