Research Library
A curated library designed for school leaders and corporate decision-makers. Each entry includes what it means in practice, what to measure, and how to report outcomes responsibly — without medical claims.
How to use this library
We keep the signal high: clear takeaways, conservative messaging, and a measurement-first mindset.
Schools: attention stamina, on-task behavior, learning endurance. Corporates: deep-work time, error reduction, decision clarity.
Use a simple baseline → training → progress snapshot loop. Focus on observable performance indicators and repeatable routines.
We position programs as evidence-informed skill training and performance routines — not medical diagnosis or treatment.
Library entries
Filter by audience and evidence level. Each item is written in plain English with implementation notes for institutions.
Attention training and classroom outcomes
Schools want improvements that are visible in daily learning: stronger on-task time, smoother transitions, and better learning stamina.
- Teacher-rated attention stamina
- On-task time (simple observation rubric)
- Task completion rate
- Self-regulation routine use
Use conservative claims: position as skill-building and performance routines, not diagnosis or treatment. Add your pilot outcomes as they mature.
Executive function skills, productivity, and error reduction
In corporate environments, small improvements in cognitive control can reduce rework, increase decision clarity, and expand deep-work capacity.
- Deep-work minutes per day (self-report + manager rating)
- Error/rework rate
- Meeting-to-output ratio
- Cognitive fatigue check-in
Position as performance training and cognitive habits. Avoid medical language; report outcomes in operational terms.
EEG biofeedback / neurofeedback: evidence overview
Stakeholders often ask what is established, what is debated, and what outcomes are reasonable to expect in real-world settings.
- Session adherence
- Self-regulation routines
- Sleep quality check-in (optional)
- Focus stamina rating
Keep messaging balanced and transparent: results vary by population and protocol. Prioritize responsible claims and measurable reporting.
Skill transfer: practice to real-world performance
The real value is transfer: skills practiced in sessions must show up in classrooms, meetings, and daily routines.
- Transfer checklist (weekly)
- Teacher/manager observation rubric
- Goal attainment scaling
Anchor reporting around transfer metrics and observable performance, not only session metrics.
Neuro-gaming and engagement: motivation as a training lever
BCI Games can improve adherence by making practice enjoyable while reinforcing attention and calm-state routines.
- Session engagement score
- Consistency (attendance)
- Time-on-task
- Goal completion streaks
Treat as an engagement-enhancer and pilot module. Keep claims conservative until local outcomes are established.
Cognitive load: designing learning and work for focus
Even strong training underperforms when daily tasks overload attention. Better task design reduces errors and improves endurance.
- Task completion time
- Error/rework rate
- Perceived difficulty rating
- Break adherence
Use simple focus-friendly design rules: reduce context switching, clarify steps, and plan recovery breaks. Report outcomes at workflow level.
Sleep, attention, and executive function
Sleep quality strongly influences attention and learning readiness. Performance training lands better when routines are stable.
- Sleep duration (self-report)
- Sleep quality check-in
- Morning focus rating
- Afternoon fatigue rating
Keep this non-clinical: routine coaching and hygiene. Provide referrals when red flags appear.
Attention practice and stress regulation routines
Structured attention practice can support calm-state routines and improve consistency under pressure.
- Stress check-in (1–5)
- Breathing routine adherence
- Return-to-task time
- Self-regulation confidence
Frame as attention practice and recovery routines. Avoid therapy positioning.
Physical activity and cognition: energy, focus, and learning
Movement is a practical lever for attention and learning readiness, especially for students and high-pressure roles.
- Daily movement minutes
- Post-activity focus rating
- On-task time
- Meeting energy rating
Offer simple routines (micro-walks, stretch breaks) tied to measurable performance indicators.
Habit formation: making focus routines stick
The difference between a nice experience and real impact is adherence. Habits turn training into durable change.
- Routine streaks
- Drop-off points
- Weekly adherence %
- Goal attainment scaling
Design for low friction: clear cues, tiny starts, and immediate feedback. Keep reporting simple and consistent.
Biofeedback-informed stress recovery routines (HRV-style)
Teams often need recovery training as much as focus training. Recovery routines improve consistency and protect performance sustainability.
- Recovery routine adherence
- Perceived stress rating
- Workday energy rating
- High-level absence trend (optional)
Frame as resilience routines and performance hygiene. Avoid medical claims and keep language operational.
Want this as a downloadable research pack?
We can convert this library into a formal PDF pack with citations, case studies, and pilot outcomes — ready for school boards and HR procurement.
Request the institution-ready pack with your preferred citations, case studies, and partner logos — formatted for decision makers.
