Life Enhancing Information Processing Blog

May I Have Your Attention, Please!
In this installment #2 of The Science of Connection in a Disconnected World, I’ll be exploring the central role that attention plays in the Biopsychosocial-AIP Model of EMDR. We will focus on the theory I introduced in my 2012 paper that states that adaptive information processing is the apex of the attachment system. The best model for psychotherapy is the securely attached child and caregiver. After a decade of being inspired by the application of these ideas, I proposed in 2022 that trauma is best defined as an absence of attentional agency. I believe we innately fear not being attended to and that much of the work of psychotherapy can be organized best by taking this into account. We will look into why attention may be the most important resource involved in human information processing and why being able to process information of all sorts is a life or death matter.

Moth to the Flame
In this first installment of the “Science of Connection in a Disconnected World”, we will explore how the brain, self, and interpersonal relationships form an umwelt. An umwelt is the world of any organism as it is experienced by it. The inspiration for this piece comes from the non-fiction science writing of Ed Jong. You can read more about umwelten in his book “An Immense World”. We are all having an experience of the world that is unique to our individual set of senses that inform our behavior. Just as a spider uses its web to sense and feel the world around it, we use our web of social relationships. We don’t need to buy any special gear or achieve any great feat to connect with each other. Like the spider, we have the innate capacity to create a web of connection that will bring us what we need to thrive.

The Science of Connection in a Disconnected World
This blog series is dedicated to exploring the relationship between our biopsychosocial health and the information processing resources we are endowed with. This time around, I will give examples how sensing, feeling, and moving is at the core of what we share with all life forms. I will also highlight how attention in all it’s varieties, is a central resource that any psychotherapist and client will want to appreciate. I’ll use examples from many areas of science and now and again specifically feature applications of the LEIP perspective and BPS-AIP to my practice of Eye Movement Desensitization Reprocessing (EMDR) therapy.