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My BrainWise Coach

Podcast de My BrainWise Coach

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Tecnología y ciencia

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Welcome to My BrainWise Coach — a podcast exploring the intersection of neuroscience, behavioral science, and psychology to help you live and lead better lives. Hosted by Cole Bastian and Phil Dixon, each episode connects brain science to everyday life, leadership, and relationships. You’ll gain practical insights into emotional intelligence, habits, trust, change, growth, and many other topics — all grounded in research and real human experience. 🧠 Stay curious. Stay compassionate. Stay BrainWise.

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79 episodios

episode The Otrovert: A New Personality Type Beyond Introversion (S2E22) artwork

The Otrovert: A New Personality Type Beyond Introversion (S2E22)

You've been told you're either an introvert or an extrovert your whole life, and neither label has ever quite fit. There's a reason for that. Jung's original 1921 framework has been distorted by a century of pop psychology, and a new concept from psychiatrist Rami Kaminski may finally name the experience you've been living without language for. In this conversation, Phil and Cole trace the full hundred-year arc from Carl Jung to the neuroscience of 2025: * Why Jung's original introvert/extravert distinction is almost unrecognizable in today's usage * The Myers-Briggs problem: two million tests a year, and what the science actually says about its validity * Eysenck's cortical arousal theory and why introverts and extroverts seek the same destination by opposite routes * The dopamine vs acetylcholine reward systems that drive social behavior * Adam Grant's Wharton research on ambiverts and sales performance * Richard Robins on why "omnivert" probably isn't a real personality type * Rami Kaminski's The Gift of Not Belonging and the otrovert concept * The "Bluetooth phenomenon" and why some brains don't auto-pair with groups * Colin DeYoung on continuous personality dimensions vs categorical types * How the 5P model (pleasure, prediction, participation) maps the introvert, extrovert, and otrovert onto distinct neurochemistry If this episode helped you put language to something you've felt your whole life, leave a five-star rating and review wherever you listen, and follow @mybrainwisecoach across every platform. 00:00 Phil's Confession About Belonging 00:01 Introducing The Otrovert Concept 00:02 Tracing A Hundred-Year Arc 00:03 What Jung Actually Meant In 1921 00:05 The Myers-Briggs Validity Problem 00:06 The Big Five And Continuous Dimensions 00:07 Eysenck's Cortical Arousal Theory 00:09 Dopamine Versus Acetylcholine Reward Systems 00:11 Brain Imaging Of Introverts And Extroverts 00:13 The Ambivert Advantage In Sales 00:15 Omniverts And Why Skeptics Push Back 00:17 Rami Kaminski And The Otrovert 00:18 The Bluetooth Phenomenon Explained 00:20 Otroversion Is Not Pathology 00:23 Category Errors And The Big Five 00:25 The Recognition And Permission Functions 00:28 Mapping Onto Pleasure Prediction Participation 00:31 Why Coaching Interventions Must Differ 00:32 Close And Stay BrainWise

24 de may de 2026 - 34 min
episode The Hidden Senses: How Your Body Reads the World Beyond Sight (ND2E21) artwork

The Hidden Senses: How Your Body Reads the World Beyond Sight (ND2E21)

Last week the count stopped at 11. This week it goes further. Phil and Cole make the case that some of what you call intuition, attunement, or "a feel for the room" is closer to sensing than to thinking, and that you have been systematically underusing it. If you have ever driven home and not remembered the drive, this episode is about what you are missing and how to get it back. Topics, research, and frameworks covered in this episode: * Esther Perel's work on eroticism as aliveness and sensory engagement * The default mode network versus the salience and attentional networks * Why distracted experience arrives at "low resolution" and how to restore it * David Livermore's four-factor cultural intelligence (CQ) model * The psychometric research of Soon Ang and Linn Van Dyne * CQ as perception rather than knowledge, and the limits of classroom training * Bud Craig's research on the anterior insula and interoception * Rizzolatti's 1992 mirror neuron discovery, plus the Hickok and Kilner critiques of overclaiming * Emotional contagion, nervous system co-regulation, and why the self is the signal You have more sensing equipment than you were taught, and most of it is recoverable through attention alone. If this show helps you think differently about how your brain works, rate, review, and follow @mybrainwisecoach wherever you listen. 00:00 Beyond The Eleven Sensory Systems 00:02 Going Past The Standard Count 00:03 Reframing Eroticism As Aliveness 00:04 Esther Perel On Sensory Engagement 00:05 The Default Mode Network Explained 00:06 Training High-Resolution Sensory Attention 00:08 David Livermore's Cultural Intelligence Model 00:11 Cultural Attunement As Bodily Perception 00:12 Why Cultural Knowledge Alone Fails 00:14 Reading A Room As Perception 00:14 Mirror Neurons And Their Critics 00:16 Emotional Contagion And Nervous System Resonance 00:18 The Practical Field Guide Summary 00:20 Recovering Your Underused Senses 00:20 Animal Senses And Closing Thoughts

21 de may de 2026 - 21 min
episode The Hidden Senses Your Brain Uses to Make Every Decision (S2E21) artwork

The Hidden Senses Your Brain Uses to Make Every Decision (S2E21)

You were taught you have five senses. You don't. Neuroscience now recognizes at least twelve distinct sensory systems, and the ones Aristotle missed are the ones quietly running your emotional life, your decisions, and your sense of who you are. In this conversation, Phil Dixon and Cole Bastian take apart the five-sense model and rebuild it with what the research actually shows. You'll learn why "touch" isn't one sense, why your gut feelings are sensory data, and why interoception, the sense of your own internal state, is the foundation of emotional intelligence and good judgment. Covered in this episode: * The history of the five-sense model from Aristotle's De Anima to modern neuroscience * Charles Bell and Charles Sherrington on the discovery of proprioception * The vestibular system, thermoception, and nociception explained * Why interoception is the neurological foundation of emotion, drawing on Lisa Feldman Barrett's constructed emotion theory * Antonio Damasio's somatic marker hypothesis and what it means for decision-making * C tactile afferents, the receptors tuned specifically to caring touch * Wilder Penfield's cortical homunculus and what your brain's body map really looks like * Chronoception, magnetoreception, and the edges of human sensing * How interoceptive awareness connects to the Personal Threat Profile (PTP) * Practical ways to train interoception for better self-regulation and leadership Follow @mybrainwisecoach across all platforms and leave a five-star rating and review wherever you listen. It helps the BrainWise community grow. 00:00 The Sense You Were Never Taught 00:02 Aristotle and the Five-Sense Model 00:03 Charles Bell Discovers Proprioception 00:06 The Vestibular System and Balance 00:08 Thermoception and Temperature Sensing 00:09 Nociception Is Not Just Touch 00:11 Interoception and the Body's Internal State 00:13 Lisa Feldman Barrett on Constructed Emotion 00:14 Connecting Interoception to the PTP 00:15 Chronoception and the Sense of Time 00:17 Magnetoreception and Speculative Senses 00:18 Why Touch Is Not One Sense 00:19 C Tactile Afferents and Caring Touch 00:20 The Cortical Homunculus Body Map 00:22 Damasio's Somatic Marker Hypothesis 00:25 How to Train Interoceptive Awareness 00:26 Closing the BrainWise Field Guide

17 de may de 2026 - 28 min
episode The Slot Machine in Your Pocket: How Apps Hijack Your Brain (ND2E20) artwork

The Slot Machine in Your Pocket: How Apps Hijack Your Brain (ND2E20)

Every time you pull to refresh, swipe on a dating app, or scroll a feed that never ends, your brain is running the same circuit B.F. Skinner discovered in pigeons in the 1950s. The variable ratio reinforcement schedule is the most powerful behavioral conditioning mechanism psychology has ever identified, and it has been quietly engineered into the technology you carry in your pocket. In this conversation, you'll learn exactly how the mechanism works, why willpower is the wrong tool to fight it, and how the same neurological principle shows up in the people closest to you. Topics covered: * B.F. Skinner's schedules of reinforcement and the variable ratio discovery * Wolfram Schultz's dopamine research at Cambridge and why uncertain rewards trigger a larger response than certain ones * The neuroscience of the near miss in slot machine design * Aza Raskin on infinite scroll and the 200,000 hours of daily attention it costs * Former Facebook VP Chamath Palihapitiya's admission about dopamine-driven feedback loops * Why dating app swipe mechanics optimize for engagement, not connection * Teasing as the oldest variable ratio schedule, and the line between play and manipulation * The dopamine deficit state, prefrontal cortex bypass, and the case for pre-commitment over willpower * 2025 research on social media addiction patterns in Generation Z Rate and review the show with five stars wherever you listen, and follow @mybrainwisecoach on every platform for more. 00:00 The Pigeon and the Lever 00:01 Welcome to Neuroscience Digest 00:02 Skinner's Schedules of Reinforcement 00:03 The Dopamine Anticipation Circuit 00:05 Why Uncertainty Amplifies Wanting 00:06 Inside the Slot Machine 00:07 The Near Miss as Accelerant 00:08 Your Phone Is the Lever 00:09 Infinite Scroll and Pull to Refresh 00:10 The Swipe and Dating App Design 00:11 Teasing as Variable Ratio Schedule 00:12 Playful Teasing Versus Manipulation 00:14 When Resolution Never Comes 00:15 The Positive Side of Anticipation 00:16 The Dopamine Deficit Problem 00:17 The Prefrontal Cortex Bypass 00:18 Exploitation of the Vulnerable 00:19 Field Guide: Recognize the Mechanism 00:20 Field Guide: Pre-Commit, Don't Willpower 00:21 Field Guide: Audit Your Own Behavior 00:21 Skinner's Pigeons in Our Pockets 00:22 Close and Call to Action

14 de may de 2026 - 22 min
episode The Neuroscience of Music: Why Your Playlist Hurts Focus (S2E20) artwork

The Neuroscience of Music: Why Your Playlist Hurts Focus (S2E20)

That playlist you swear is helping you concentrate? Your prefrontal cortex may be quietly working overtime to ignore it. This episode unpacks what neuroscience actually says about music, focus, and emotional regulation, and gives you a practical framework for choosing what plays in your headphones. In this conversation, you will learn: * Daniel Levitin's research on how music engages the auditory cortex, cerebellum, motor cortex, limbic system, prefrontal cortex, and nucleus accumbens * Why dopamine, frisson, and the brain's prediction machine explain musical chills * The "reminiscence bump" and why music from ages 13 to 25 stays neurologically wired to identity and memory * How music shifts dopamine, serotonin, cortisol, oxytocin, and endogenous opioids, including the 60-beats-per-minute effect on the parasympathetic nervous system * Hans Eysenck's cortical arousal theory and the Yerkes-Dodson curve as it applies to introverts, extroverts, and background music * Why open plan offices wreck cognitive performance, and what intelligible speech does to attention * Will Henshall and Focus@Will on the 1-to-4 kHz voice frequency problem and why saxophone, cello, and lead guitar disrupt focus * Music-based interventions for surgical anxiety, Parkinson's gait, and Alzheimer's recognition, including the documentary Alive Inside * A four-part field guide for matching music to task, personality, and ultradian rhythm If this episode shifts how you work, follow @mybrainwisecoach and leave a five-star rating and review wherever you listen. It helps new BrainWise friends find the show. 00:00 The Confession That Started This 00:01 Why Music Reaches Everywhere in the Brain 00:04 Dopamine, Prediction, and Musical Chills 00:06 Why Teenage Music Never Lets Go 00:09 Music as Mood and Neurochemistry 00:11 Rhythm, Synchrony, and the Cerebellum 00:12 Introverts, Extroverts, and Cortical Arousal 00:14 Demanding Work Versus Repetitive Tasks 00:16 The Open Plan Office Problem 00:17 Focus@Will and the Voice Frequency Trap 00:21 Personality, Distractibility, and Playlist Choice 00:22 Music as Medicine: Surgery, Parkinson's, Alzheimer's 00:24 Why Music Survives Neurodegeneration 00:24 Your Practical Field Guide 00:27 The Ultradian Rhythm Principle 00:28 Why Music May Predate Language

10 de may de 2026 - 30 min
Muy buenos Podcasts , entretenido y con historias educativas y divertidas depende de lo que cada uno busque. Yo lo suelo usar en el trabajo ya que estoy muchas horas y necesito cancelar el ruido de al rededor , Auriculares y a disfrutar ..!!
Muy buenos Podcasts , entretenido y con historias educativas y divertidas depende de lo que cada uno busque. Yo lo suelo usar en el trabajo ya que estoy muchas horas y necesito cancelar el ruido de al rededor , Auriculares y a disfrutar ..!!
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