The Institute's research program advances a unified, biologically grounded model of human behavior — integrating affective neuroscience, embodied cognition, psychoneuroimmunology, communication science, and systems biology into a coherent operational framework.
The Institute's research program is organized into eight distinct but interconnected areas of inquiry — each producing publications, working papers, and applied frameworks in coordination with the Engagement Science Lab and academic partners.
The unified model of how biology, environment, relational history, and signal load combine to produce human behavior. Foundational to all other research — replacing the rational-actor and corrective-bias frameworks with an integrated ecological model.
A formal organizational structure for the field's hundreds of named "biases" — recovered as conditioned instincts on calibrated spectra rather than cognitive errors. Designed for academic citation and applied use across regulation, AI ethics, and leadership development.
The science establishing that communication signals measurably alter cortisol, cytokines, immune function, and social trust — and the operational implications for product design, AI mediation, regulation, and the ethics of influence at scale.
The applied ethics framework distinguishing influence that expands the audience's capacity to reason, trust, and choose from influence that compresses that capacity. The Institute's central operational ethics contribution.
How AI systems are reshaping the affective signal architecture between institutions and the publics they serve — and the structured response institutions can deploy. Includes the AI Blind Spot framework and applied diagnostics.
The affective dynamics of institutional trust — how legitimacy is built, eroded, and rebuilt through communication architecture across government, healthcare, science, media, and corporate institutions.
The structural transformation of public relations — from publicity (PR 1.0) and platform reputation (PR 2.0) to AI-mediated trust architecture (PR 3.0). Field-defining analysis with operational implications across communication, marketing, and institutional strategy.
The taxonomy of influence — from coercive and sub-coercive communication (which compress capacity through pressure and engineered cognitive load) to allyship communication and civil influence (which proceed with consent and respect for the receiver's autonomy).
The Institute's most consequential intellectual contribution. Developed across more than two decades of integrated research, formally publishing through 2026.
Just as chemistry's periodic table organized the elements into a predictive structure, the Periodic Table of Behavioral Affect organizes the field's hundreds of named "biases" into a coherent system of conditioned instincts on calibrated spectra. Loss aversion is not error; it is an adaptive instinct conditioned to a particular position on a survival spectrum. Confirmation bias is not failure; it is an instinct calibrated to a specific need for coherence under signal load. Each item names a real adaptation — calibrated by environment.
The Periodic Table makes the bias canon predictive and operational for the first time. It supports applied use across leadership development, regulatory analysis, AI ethics, product design, and communication strategy — and provides the structural foundation for academic citation and field-wide adoption. The formal publication is in preparation for 2026 release through the Institute's research program.
The Institute's research is not the work of any single discipline. It integrates findings from twelve adjacent fields whose convergent trajectory now permits a unified model — and whose institutional separation has, until now, prevented one.
Foundational publications are in active distribution; formal academic publications and the Institute's white paper program are advancing through 2026.
The Institute's foundational analysis of the structural transformation reshaping public relations — naming the shift from publicity (PR 1.0) and platform reputation (PR 2.0) to AI-mediated trust architecture (PR 3.0). Establishes signal architecture, the AI Blind Spot framework, and the new operating model for the profession.
Read the Series · SubstackThe Institute's reclassification of the cognitive bias canon — establishing biases as adaptive instincts on calibrated spectra rather than cognitive defects, with operational implications across leadership, regulation, and AI ethics.
Read the EssayFeatured industry analysis on the affective limits of automated influence — and the institutional response now forming across communication, marketing, and AI governance teams.
Read on ProgressThe formal publication of the Periodic Table — the Institute's most consequential intellectual contribution. Designed for academic citation and applied use. Publication in preparation through 2026 with academic partners.
The Institute's applied ethics white paper — the operational framework for distinguishing legitimate persuasion from exploitative manipulation, usable by product, marketing, regulatory, and AI governance teams.
The Institute's ongoing public-facing research publication. Where new analysis, frameworks, and applied research findings are published — the home of the field as it is being built.
SubscribeThe Institute welcomes structured conversations about joint research, citation, co-publication, fellowship participation, and the formal advisory and review networks now being established.