The Dual Influence of Travel on Subjective Time Perception and Physiological Longevity

Author: Khirstyn-Lien Date: December 2025 Neuroscience and Psychology Abstract: Travel introduces novel sensory, cognitive, and environmental inputs that reshape both the subjective experience of time and several physiological pathways linked to health and longevity. This entry explores neuroscientific mechanisms underlying time dilation during travel, alongside epidemiological findings indicating that regular vacations may contribute to longer … More The Dual Influence of Travel on Subjective Time Perception and Physiological Longevity

Bilateral Stimulation and Regulation of the Central Nervous System: A Neurophysiological Parallel to Psychotherapy Induced Calming Mechanisms

Author: Khirstyn-Lien Neuroscience and Psychotherapy Date: October 2025 Abstract Bilateral stimulation (BLS) is a therapeutic technique that involves rhythmic, alternating sensory input that are typically visual, auditory, or tactile, across both hemispheres of the brain. Originally popularized through Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR) therapy, BLS has since been studied as a mechanism that induces … More Bilateral Stimulation and Regulation of the Central Nervous System: A Neurophysiological Parallel to Psychotherapy Induced Calming Mechanisms

Chronic Stress Induced Remodeling of the Prefrontal Cortex and Its Impact on Decision Making

Author: Khirstyn-Lien Neuroscience and Cognitive Science Date: August 2025 Abstract Chronic stress induces profound structural, functional, and molecular alterations in the prefrontal cortex (PFC), a brain region essential for executive control, working memory, and goal directed decision making. Prolonged exposure to stress hormones and neuromodulators disrupts dendritic architecture, reduces synaptic connectivity, and alters neurotransmission, shifting … More Chronic Stress Induced Remodeling of the Prefrontal Cortex and Its Impact on Decision Making

Distortion of Reality and Its Neurocognitive Consequences: The Correlation Between Lying And Dementia

Author: Khirstyn-Lien Neuroscience and Cognitive Science Date: July 2025 AbstractIn the following perspective based review, I explore the hypothesis that individuals who frequently lie or habitually alter their perception of reality may be at increased risk of developing dementia. Drawing upon existing neuroscientific literature on executive function, memory distortion, and prefrontal cortex integrity, I propose … More Distortion of Reality and Its Neurocognitive Consequences: The Correlation Between Lying And Dementia

The Default Mode Network (DMN) and Spontaneous Cognition: A Neurobiological Basis for Insight During Mundane Tasks

Author: Khirstyn-Lien Neuroscience and Cognitive Science Date: June 2025 Abstract The Default Mode Network (DMN) is a prominent resting state network involved in introspective functions such as autobiographical memory, self referential processing, and future simulation. Although initially characterized as task negative, emerging evidence reveals the DMN’s essential role in creative cognition, particularly during durations of … More The Default Mode Network (DMN) and Spontaneous Cognition: A Neurobiological Basis for Insight During Mundane Tasks