Library · Topic

Mind & Performance

Mental resilience, focus, dopamine, and cognitive performance.

Video

Temperature as a Performance Tool: The Neuroscience of Cooling and Recovery

Overheating stops performance before your muscles do. Palmar cooling — applied deliberately to the face, palms, and soles — can double your training volume by managing the one variable that outranks everything else.

Andrew Huberman

Video

Cold Before or After: Timing the Plunge Around Your Training

Timing your cold plunge around training isn't a preference — it's a decision that shifts your hormonal response, power output, and recovery. Here's the protocol logic, and why n=1 is the only study that matters.

Cold Plunge Podcast

Video

The Morning Routine That Adds Years to Your Life

Five sequential practices — cold, light, protein, movement, electrolytes — that anchor circadian rhythm, quiet chronic inflammation, and protect the systems most likely to erode with age.

Doctor Alex

Video

Optimize & Control Your Brain Chemistry to Improve Health & Performance

Dopamine, epinephrine, serotonin, acetylcholine — four molecules govern every mental state you enter. Understanding their daily rhythm is the protocol.

Andrew Huberman

Video

Controlling Your Dopamine: The Science of Motivation, Focus & Satisfaction

Dopamine doesn't spike and vanish — it circulates as a baseline that every choice lifts or lowers. The science of sustained motivation is the science of protecting that floor.

Andrew Huberman

Paper

EXPERIMENTAL MODELS OF STRESS OPPORTUNITIES ADVANTAGES AND DISADVANTAGES

Paper

Beyond the cold baths contemporary applications of cold-water immersion

Paper

The increased analgesic efficacy of cold therapy after an unsuccessful

Paper

The Impact of Years of Schooling on Dementia: Panel Data Evidence from Europe

Paper

Cold Exposure Can Induce an Exaggerated Early-Morning Blood Pressure

Paper

White Adipose Tissue Browning in the R62 Mouse Model of Huntingtons

Paper

The Roles of Noradrenergic and Glucocorticoid Activation in the Development of Intrusive Memories