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Editorial standards

How every page gets made.

Four stages. Same standard for a game blurb and a deep-dive article.

1. Research

We start with peer-reviewed primary sources - Nature, Cell, Neuron, PNAS, JAMA Psychiatry - and authoritative secondary sources like NIH, NIMH, APA, and major university research centers. Pop-press articles are inspiration, never evidence.

2. Draft

Every page is written to a brief that names its claim, its evidence, and its limits. Numbers, mechanisms, and brain regions are double-checked against the cited source - not paraphrased from memory.

3. Review

Drafts go through a science-literate edit pass focused on three questions: Is the claim accurate? Is the framing strengths-based? Could a reader misuse this medically? We rewrite until all three pass.

4. Update

Neuroscience moves fast. We review evergreen pages at least once a year and immediately when a major finding meaningfully changes the picture.

Where we draw the line

We do not diagnose. We do not prescribe. We do not promise that any game, exercise, or article will treat a condition. When neuroscience research is preliminary or contested, we say so out loud rather than pick a side for clicks.

See also our Citation Policy and About Our Sources.