Application of driver training and safety research in split-second decision making under stress, for managing impulsivity and inattention with mental health and general populations

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Authors: Abraham-Gerard Meyer and Robert W. Lebovits
Page Range: 257-276
Published in: Brain, Body, Cognition, 9#2 (2019)
ISSN: 2643-5683

Table of Contents

ABSTRACT

Transferring living laboratory’s driving safety research into applications for the general population for all aspects of mental health through training to remove human resistance to change. We engage subjects through a caring path to success and mentoring constructive ways to think POSITIVELY, facilitating the choice to determine their individual journey to progress. By making daily, goal-directed mini-steps for six to eight weeks, they satis-factorily master the knowledge and behavioral skills needed for self-sustaining their new way of improved functioning.

Prior to any intervention in mental health application of the enabling research, we employ advanced online, automated screening to detect potential co-morbid conditions (ADHD, ODD, and CD, plus any of Procrastination’s seven factors) so as to customize for each subject a meta-cognitive po-sitive psychology protocol for Mind Focused Coaching and Therapy. We aim to diminish decision-making errors of impulsivity and inattention and to remediate Tunnel Vision Effect (TVE), a physiological dysfunctional response trigg-ering dire psychological and traumatic consequences associated with panic, obsession, anxiety, depression, and PTSD. We continuously reinforce the concept: “Think pos-itive and it will be positive.”

Keywords: impulsivity, inattention, tunnel vision effect, destination, attitude, focus, awareness, choice

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