Here's a short video on a neuromarketing study we did at Flying Horse Communication that shows what makes ski advertising work. First study of its kind. Enjoy! https://t.co/VGn8teI5M1 #neuromarketing#marketing#ski#Skiresorts
Neuroscience keeps discovering a strange paradox:
The brain has no master controller…
…but decisions still emerge as if the system is guided by one.
Multi-area recordings show:
recurrent loops,
cross-region attractors,
population-level competitions,
phase-locked oscillations,
and distributed dynamics that settle into a single outcome.
This is not a computational hierarchy.
It’s a geometric phenomenon.
When the local dynamics across regions align into a shared resonance geometry, a global decision appears, not because of a “central executive,”
but because the field structure itself becomes coherent.
The same geometry that produces the 0.6 curvature law in moiré physics and cortical phase-lock
reappears here as the decision-making scaffold.
Cortex doesn’t compute the decision.
Cortex settles into the geometry of the decision.
This is the missing link between:
multi-area population dynamics
distributed cortical fields
phase-locking
the 0.6 curvature signature
and global decision states
The geometry is the executive.
@MillerLabMIT@PessoaBrain@donalddhoffman@KordingLab@EricTopol@StanDehaene@StuartHameroff
Stress can scramble the brain so badly it changes your memories. It can selectively delete or add a past that did not exist.
New research shows what I have observed in so many unfortunate folks it is one of the 1000s of reasons I am building YOUR AI.
https://t.co/hFJazLSAXw
Here's a question for you: how can you tell which movie trailer will best engage an audience? Here's how you figure it out. Check out this case study that Flying Horse did on Spider-Man No Way Home https://t.co/g6AK2YOWHU #neuromarketing,#marketing,#trailers,#coolstuff
Positive thoughts + Intentions - Worry = manifestation
Manifesting is easy if you don’t let worry and doubt put the breaks on your future awesome!
Don’t worry, bout a thing, cos every little thing is gonna be alright
Research shows that ~90 min is the longest period we can expect to maintain intense focus and effort toward learning. Shorter bouts are fine but after ~90 min, take a break. Space intense learning bouts ~2-3 (or more) hours apart.
Ok, here's something simple from the world of neuromarketing and common sense: when it comes to communication, simplicity is your friend, complexity is your enemy. Want to know why from a neuroscience perspective? #marketing#neuromarketing#communication#PR#social