Neural Recovery
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- $9.99
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- $9.99
Publisher Description
Neural Recovery: How Brain Retraining Changes Mental Health and Human Behavior is a narrative-driven, interdisciplinary exploration of how human emotional suffering emerges, stabilizes, and can gradually reorganize through experience-dependent change in the nervous system.
The work integrates contemporary models from neuroscience, psychology, and cognitive science, including neuroplasticity, predictive processing, attachment theory, emotional regulation, and memory reconsolidation, to present mental health not as a fixed diagnostic state, but as a dynamic pattern of learned neural adaptation.
Through a structured narrative following the psychological evolution of an individual moving through chronic anxiety, trauma-related responses, emotional dysregulation, and relational insecurity, the book illustrates how survival-based neural strategies, such as hypervigilance, avoidance, dissociation, and control, develop in response to overwhelming or inconsistent environments. These strategies are framed not as dysfunctions, but as adaptive responses that become maladaptive when environmental conditions change.
A central thesis of the work is that the brain operates as a predictive system, continuously generating models of expected experience. Psychological distress arises when these predictive models remain overgeneralized or outdated, leading to persistent threat perception in contexts that are no longer dangerous. Healing, therefore, is conceptualized as a process of prediction updating through repeated, emotionally meaningful, and relationally safe experiences.
Rather than emphasizing symptom suppression, the work highlights mechanisms of change including prediction error, co-regulation, emotional tolerance, and behavioral repetition. It argues that recovery is not a single event, but a gradual reorganization of neural pathways that alters perception, emotional response, and identity formation over time.