The Cognitive Performer – Détails, épisodes et analyse
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The Cognitive Performer
Marco Rigazio
Fréquence : 1 épisode/29j. Total Éps: 13

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The Science of Performance Anxiety
Épisode 2
mercredi 14 mai 2025 • Durée 25:07
In this episode of The Cognitive Performer, I dive into the fascinating neuroscience behind performance anxiety and discuss how it specifically affects voice actors. Learn why your body responds the way it does during high-pressure situations, how anxiety impacts your vocal performance, and why trying harder often makes things worse.
I explore the surprising "paradox of choking" and understand the critical difference between helpful performance arousal and debilitating anxiety. You'll discover evidence-based techniques to regulate your nervous system, including specific breathing patterns, cognitive reframing strategies, and a complete pre-recording routine you can implement immediately.
Based on cutting-edge research from performance psychology and neuroscience, this episode provides practical tools to transform anxiety from your enemy into your ally. Whether you're dealing with audition nerves, session jitters, or that critical inner voice that sometimes shows up in the booth, you'll learn how to perform at your best, even under pressure.
Below are the links to research materials mentioned in this episode.
- Developmental phases in self-regulation: Shifting from process goals to outcome goals
- How breath-control can change your life: A systematic review on psycho-physiological correlates of slow breathing
- Coping with anxiety in sport
- Rethinking stress: The role of mindsets in determining the stress response
- Music performance anxiety and occupational stress amongst opera chorus artists and their relationship with state and trait anxiety and perfectionism
- Choking vs. clutch performance: A study of sport performance under pressure
- Ironic processes of mental control
- Mind over matter: Reappraising arousal improves cardiovascular and cognitive responses to stress.
- The putt and the pendulum: Ironic effects of the mental control of action
Copyright 2026 Marco Rigazio
Neuroplasticity for Voice Actors
Épisode 1
jeudi 24 avril 2025 • Durée 19:14
In this debut episode of The Cognitive Performer, we dive into the fascinating world of neuroplasticity and how voice actors can leverage this brain science to enhance their performances. Discover how your brain physically changes with each practice session and learn science-backed techniques to optimize your vocal training for faster skill development.
Some reference links from the show:
- Brain Structures Differ between Musicians and Non-Musicians - PMC
- Dr. Michael Merzenich's Official Website
Copyright 2026 Marco Rigazio
Navigating Imposter Syndrome: Evidence-Based Strategies for Voice Actors
Épisode 3
lundi 9 juin 2025 • Durée 19:38
Imposter syndrome, a pervasive psychological phenomenon, is the focal point of our discourse today. We delve into the intricate interplay between the mind and body as we explore this condition that afflicts many, particularly within creative professions. By elucidating the underlying neuroscience, we aim to demystify the experiences associated with imposter syndrome, ultimately equipping our listeners with empirically supported strategies to manage its effects. Throughout this episode, we will examine how these feelings manifest, their neurological triggers, and the correlation with maladaptive perfectionism. As we navigate through this complex landscape, we shall also highlight effective interventions derived from contemporary research, thereby fostering a deeper understanding of this common yet often misunderstood experience.
- Siddiqui, K., et al. (2024). Educational interventions for imposter phenomenon: a scoping review.
- Ogunyemi, D., et al. (2022). Improving wellness: defeating impostor syndrome in medical education using an interactive reflective workshop.
- Feehan, K., et al. (2025). Mindfulness predicts impostorism in trainee psychologists in professional programs.
- Pákozdy, C., et al. (2024). The imposter phenomenon and its relationship with self-efficacy, perfectionism and happiness in university students.
- Bagheri Sheykhangafshe, F., et al. (2024). The efficacy of cognitive behavioral therapy on mental health, self-esteem and emotion regulation of medical students with imposter syndrome.
- Hutchins, H. M., & Flores, J. (2021). Don't believe everything you think: applying a cognitive processing therapy intervention to disrupting imposter phenomenon.
- Para, E., et al. (2024). Interventions addressing the impostor phenomenon: a scoping review.
- Chrousos, G. P., Mentis, A. A., & Dardiotis, E. (2020). Focusing on the neuro-psycho-biological and evolutionary underpinnings of the imposter syndrome
- Bravata, D. M., et al. (2020). Prevalence, predictors, and treatment of impostor syndrome: a systematic review.
Copyright 2026 Marco Rigazio
Exploring the Intricacies of Cognitive Processing: Your Questions Answered
Épisode 4
mardi 8 juillet 2025 • Durée 23:00
In this special Q&A episode, Marco answers fascinating questions from fellow voice actors about the brain and performance. Discover why people think so differently (it's actual brain wiring, not just personality), what dreams really do for your brain, and the surprising science behind "manifestation." Plus: where creativity actually comes from, what happens in your brain during those amazing "aha moments," and why exercise might be the single best thing you can do for brain health.
Topics covered: Analytical vs. holistic thinking • Dream science • Positive/negative thinking patterns • Brain aging and adaptation • The neuroscience of creativity • "Eureka moment" brain chemistry • Exercise effects on the brain
Questions from: Norm Izard (vocalnorm.com) • Monique Mosher • Erin Cox
Have a question about the brain and performance? Send a voice recording to marco@thecognitiveperformer.com
The Cognitive Performer explores the fascinating intersection of neuroscience and human performance.
- Physical Activity Lowers Brain Disease Risk - Neuroscience News
- Exercise Increases Brain Size - Neuroscience News
- Exercise-Related Physical Activity Relates to Brain Volumes in 10,125 Individuals
- Differences in psychologists’ cognitive traits are associated with scientific divides | Nature Human Behaviour
- Frontiers | Analytic and Holistic Thinkers: Differences in the Dynamics of Heart Rate Complexity When Solving a Cognitive Task in Field-Dependent and Field-Independent Conditions
- The 'middle-aging' brain
- Frontiers | Horizons in Human Aging Neuroscience: From Normal Neural Aging to Mental (Fr)Agility
- Brain-wide cell-type-specific transcriptomic signatures of healthy aging in mice
- Repetitive negative thinking is associated with amyloid, tau, and cognitive decline
- Dreaming conundrum
- Memory updating in dreams
- Unlocking Dreams and Dreamless Sleep: Machine Learning Classification With Optimal EEG Channels
Copyright 2026 Marco Rigazio
Nutrition and gut health effects on the brain
Épisode 8
samedi 1 novembre 2025 • Durée 24:54
Your gut is talking — and your brain is listening. Discover how diet, microbiota, and even fasting reshape your brain chemistry, mood, and cognition in this deep dive into the gut-brain connection.
Your gut is talking to your brain — and your brain is listening. In this episode of The Cognitive Performer, we explore the gut-brain axis — the communication highway connecting your digestive system and your mind. Discover how trillions of microorganisms influence your mood, focus, memory, and long-term brain health. We’ll look at how diet shapes your microbiome, why certain bacteria can act like microscopic pharmacists, and what dietary patterns best protect cognitive function. From the serotonin-shaping power of Roseburia intestinalis to the fasting-linked boost in microglial cleanup, this episode unpacks the real neuroscience behind “gut feelings.”
Key Takeaways- Roughly 90 % of the vagus-nerve signals run from gut → brain, not the other way around.
- The gut microbiome produces neurotransmitters such as serotonin, dopamine, and GABA that directly influence mood and cognition.
- Stress diverts tryptophan from serotonin production toward inflammation — but beneficial bacteria can reverse that shift.
- Mediterranean, DASH, and MIND diets consistently support brain health by nourishing diverse gut bacteria.
- Alternate-day fasting reshapes gut microbes and improves microglial function, translating into measurable cognitive gains.
- Building cognitive reserve through learning, social connection, movement, and sleep can cut dementia risk nearly in half.
Links and Resources
- Qu S et al. (2024). Gut microbiota modulates neurotransmitter and gut-brain signaling. Microbiological Research, 287.
- Zhou M. F. et al. (2023). Microbiome and the kynurenine metabolic pathway in depression. Microbiome, 11.
- Gong Y et al. (2025). Healthy dietary patterns and cognitive performance. J. Prev. Alzheimer’s Dis., 12.
- Mela V et al. (2025). Microbiota fasting-related changes ameliorate cognitive decline in obesity. Gut.
- Ward N A et al. (2023). PROMED-EX Randomised Controlled Trial. BMJ Open, 13.
- Bekdash R A (2024). Epigenetics, Nutrition, and the Brain. Int. J. Mol. Sci., 25.
- Margolis K G et al. (2021). Microbiota-gut-brain axis modulation of enteric and central nervous system function. Gastroenterology, 160.
- Cryan J F et al. (2021). Diet, microbiota, and host behavior — narrative review. Adv. Nutrition.
Connect and Subscribe
For more neuroscience-backed insights on performance, mindset, and mental health, subscribe to The Cognitive Performer Newsletter at thecognitiveperformer.com.
Fear Extinction: How to Rewire Your Brain for Resilience
Épisode 7
mercredi 1 octobre 2025 • Durée 18:18
Think you're stuck with an anxious, stressed brain? Think again. In this episode of The Cognitive Performer, Marco explores the neuroscience of fear extinction - your brain's natural ability to unlearn stress responses and build resilience instead. Discover why stress literally rewires your neural circuits, how fear conditioning keeps you stuck in anxiety loops, and the specific, science-backed techniques you can use to intentionally reshape your brain's stress response.
What You'll Learn:
- The difference between classical and operant conditioning (and why fear responses use the classical type)
- How chronic stress flattens your cortisol rhythm and damages neural connections
- Why your amygdala hijacks your prefrontal cortex during stress responses
- The three-step process of fear extinction and how it creates competing memories
- Why cyclic sighing outperforms mindfulness and box breathing for nervous system regulation
- How sleep actively rewires your brain through synaptic homeostasis
- Practical tools for building antifragility - getting stronger from stress instead of just surviving it
Key Topics:
Fear extinction, neuroplasticity, stress response, amygdala function, prefrontal cortex, cortisol regulation, classical conditioning, synaptic depression, parasympathetic activation, brain network connectivity, cognitive flexibility, antifragility
Practical Techniques Covered:
- 90-second cyclic sighing protocol for nervous system reset
- Mindfulness practices that break rumination loops
- Movement strategies for neuroplasticity and BDNF production
- Sleep optimization for emotional memory processing
- Building safe exposure routines for stress triggers
Perfect for: Voice actors, performers, creatives, anyone dealing with performance anxiety, stress management, or wanting to understand how to work with their brain instead of against it.
Research-Backed: All techniques discussed are supported by recent neuroscience studies from 2021-2025, with specific focus on fear extinction mechanisms, large-scale brain network changes, and evidence-based interventions for stress resilience.
Episode Length: 20 minutes
Connect: Have questions about brain rewiring or topics for future episodes? Email marco@thecognitiveperformer.com
#NeurosciencePodcast #FearExtinction #StressManagement #Neuroplasticity #PerformanceAnxiety #BrainScience #VoiceActing #MentalPerformance #ResilienceTraining #CognitiveBehavioral
Fear Extinction
- Bergstrom, H. C., & Maren, S. (2024). Pharmacological stimulation of infralimbic cortex after fear conditioning facilitates subsequent fear extinction. Neuropsychopharmacology.
- Author(s). (2021). Rat models for low and high adaptive response to exercise differ for stress-related memory and anxiety. Physiological Reports.
Skill Learning & Mental Rehearsal
- Demaison, C., et al. (2022). Mental practice modulates functional connectivity between the cerebellum and the primary motor cortex. iScience.
- Xie, K., et al. (2022). Motor learning selectively strengthens cortical and striatal synapses of motor engram neurons. Nature Neuroscience.
Mindfulness
- Brechmann, A., et al. (2022). Mindfulness meditation increases default mode, salience, and central executive network connectivity. Scientific Reports.
- Rogerson, A., et al. (2023). Mindfulness training changes brain dynamics during depressive rumination: A randomized controlled trial. Biological Psychiatry.
- Sousa, R., et al. (2024). Neurobiological changes induced by mindfulness and meditation: A systematic review. Brain Sciences.
Exercise & Stress
- Roth, M. M., et al. (2022). Learning and control in motor cortex across cell types and scales. Nature.
- Li, K., et al. (2021). Stress undermines reward-guided cognitive performance through synaptic depression in the lateral habenula. Neuron.
Sleep & Trauma
- Gvozdanovic, G. A., et al. (2023). Neural correlates of sleep-induced benefits on traumatic memory processing. Human Brain Mapping.
- van der Heijden, K. B., et al. (2022). Sleep spindle dynamics suggest over-consolidation in post-traumatic stress disorder. Sleep.
- Cairney, S. A., et al. (2024). Targeted memory reactivation to augment treatment in post-traumatic stress disorder. Current Biology.
- Schäfer, S. K., et al. (2023). The potential beneficial effect of sleep deprivation following traumatic events to preventing PTSD: Review of current insight regarding sleep, memory, and trauma resonating with ancient rituals. Neuropsychopharmacology Reports.
Copyright 2026 Marco Rigazio
Dopamine: The Misunderstood Molecule
Épisode 6
lundi 1 septembre 2025 • Durée 14:19
We’ve all heard it: dopamine is the “pleasure molecule.” Catchy, sure. But wrong. In this episode of The Cognitive Performer, Marco Rigazio unpacks the myths around dopamine and explores its real role in the brain. Far from being just about “feeling good,” dopamine is a regulator—shaping focus, working memory, and even intelligence. Along the way, you’ll discover what happens when dopamine falls out of balance (ADHD, addiction, burnout, anhedonia) and why motivation isn’t just about willpower, but about your brain’s state of readiness.
Copyright 2026 Marco Rigazio
- Molecular Imaging of Central Dopamine in Obesity: A Qualitative Review across Substrates and Radiotracers - PMC
- Age-dependent effects of protein restriction on dopamine release - PMC
- The Potential Role of Dopamine Pathways in the Pathophysiology of Depression: Current Advances and Future Aspects - PubMed
- The tonic/phasic model of dopamine system regulation: its relevance for understanding how stimulant abuse can alter basal ganglia function - PubMed
- The tonic/phasic model of dopamine system regulation and its implications for understanding alcohol and psychostimulant craving - PubMed
- Dopamine D2/D3 receptor availability and working memory in stimulant use disorder
- Neurobiology of Schizophrenia: A Comprehensive Review - PMC
- White-Matter Integrity and Working Memory: Links to Aging and Dopamine-Related Genes - PMC
- A multi-faceted role of dual-state dopamine signaling in working memory, attentional control, and intelligence - PMC
- Dopamine-related polymorphisms and Affective Working Memory in aging - PubMed
- Effects of Caffeine Consumption on Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) Treatment: A Systematic Review of Animal Studies - PMC
- Adult Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder: a Narrative Review of Biological Mechanisms, Treatments, and Outcomes - PubMed
- Effects of physical exercise on children with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder - PMC
- The Cognitive-Enhancing Outcomes of Caffeine and L-theanine: A Systematic Review - PMC
- The Effects of Drugs used for the Treatment of Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) on Pregnancy Outcome and Breast-feeding: A Critical Review - PMC
- Dezocine modulates the reinstatement of conditioned place preference in morphine-dependent rats via the dopamine reward circuitry - PMC
- From Reward to Anhedonia-Dopamine Function in the Global Mental Health Context - PMC
- Reward, motivation and brain imaging in human healthy participants – A narrative review - PMC
- Dopamine synthesis and transport: current and novel therapeutics for Parkinsonisms
- Role of Microbiota-Gut-Brain Axis in Regulating Dopaminergic Signaling
The Hidden Cost of Creative Decision Fatigue
Épisode 5
mardi 5 août 2025 • Durée 11:02
Ever record take after take and still feel unsure which one was right?
It might not be a creative block. It could be decision fatigue.
In this episode of The Cognitive Performer, we break down what really happens when your brain gets overloaded — and how it quietly shapes the choices you make during creative work.
You’ll learn:
- How small, invisible decisions stack up during a session
- What fatigue does to your planning, flexibility, and creative flow
- Why defaulting to “what usually works” isn’t always a good thing
- How to spot the signs of mental drain before it tanks your performance
- Simple science-backed ways to protect your energy and output
Subscribe to the newsletter for bonus content, behind-the-scenes extras, and a free glossary of neuroscience terms:
👉https://thecognitiveperformer.com
Got a question you’d like answered on the show?
Send it my way: marco@thecognitiveperformer.com
Thanks for listening — and don’t miss next month’s episode on dopamine: the buzzword, the brain chemical, and the reality behind the hype.
The Comfort of the Known - Why We Stay Stuck
Épisode 9
lundi 1 décembre 2025 • Durée 16:50
Why do we stay in patterns that hurt us? Why do we return to familiar anger, destructive relationships, or self-defeating habits even when we logically know better? In this episode, we explore the neuroscience of why the brain mistakes familiarity for safety - and what it takes to actually change.
In This Episode:
- Why "knowing better" doesn't equal "doing better"
- The two minds competing inside your brain (and which one usually wins)
- How your hippocampus keeps you stuck in the familiar
- The aversion amplifier: why change feels dangerous even when it's good
- Five science-backed conditions for creating lasting change
SOURCES REFERENCED:
Brain Systems & Memory:
- Dual hippocampal memory systems (associative vs. predictive coding) - optogenetic study in rats demonstrating separate memory pathways for familiarity and navigation
Default Mode Network:
- DMN activation patterns in depression and rumination - increased self-referential processing maintains negative narratives
Aversion & Threat Processing:
- Interpeduncular nucleus (IPN) circuit amplifies aversive experiences - isolated brainstem pathway that intensifies discomfort without triggering general anxiety
Cognitive Flexibility:
- Brain signal variability correlates with cognitive flexibility - higher variability in inferior frontal junction predicts better task-switching ability
Model Arbitration:
- Amygdala's role in arbitrating between habit-based and goal-directed learning systems
Quote:
- Scott Galloway: "It's very difficult to read the label from inside the bottle"
The Verification Tax & Attention Hijacking
Épisode 13
mercredi 1 avril 2026 • Durée 14:27
Your brain evolved to trust what it sees. For millions of years, that worked. Now? Deepfakes, synthetic media, AI-generated everything. That instinct gets you fooled.
This is Episode 3 of our AI and the Brain series. Today we're covering two forces acting on your brain that most people don't even realize are happening.
In this episode:
- The Verification Tax: the mental exhaustion of constantly trying to figure out what's real
- Why your brain shuts down under cognitive overload instead of working harder
- Delta wave activity in heavy digital users - your brain showing sleep patterns while you're awake
- Why misinformation wins when you're already exhausted
- Attention Hijacking: how social media algorithms manipulate your dopamine system like a slot machine
- Brainwave changes that persist 15+ minutes after you close the app
- Zombie scrolling, doomscrolling, and vicarious traumatization
- The difference between tool AI (you're driving) and algorithmic AI (you're the passenger)
- Psychological inoculation: building immunity to manipulation techniques
- Practical boundaries for protecting your cognitive resources
Core message: Tool AI puts you in the driver's seat. Algorithmic AI puts you in the passenger seat - and the driver doesn't care where you want to go.
Referenced episodes: Episode 1 (AI Isn't Coming For Anything), Episode 2 (Cognitive Offloading)
Research Referenced in This Episode:
- The "Brain Rot" Phenomenon: Yousef and colleagues (2025) dive into the concept of "brain rot" in the digital era, exploring what infinite scrolling and low-quality content do to the cognitive health of Gen Z and Gen Alpha. Published in Brain Sciences.
- Social Media's Modern Day High: A 2025 study by Satani et al. tracking real-time brainwave changes—like dopamine spikes, attention hijacking, and cognitive fatigue—while users scroll through social media feeds. Published in Cureus.
- Teen Addiction & Social Media Algorithms: De et al. (2025) explored the neurophysiological impacts and ethical concerns of AI-driven social media algorithms that are designed to maximize screen time for teenagers. Published in Cureus.
- Multitasking and Cognitive Load: Boere et al. (2024) used mobile brain-scanning (fNIRS) to measure exactly what happens to the prefrontal cortex when our brains are forced to handle complex multitasking and cognitive overload. Published in Neuroimage: Reports.
- Screen Time & Teen Depression: A massive dose-response meta-analysis by Liu et al. (2022) that quantifies how every extra hour spent on social media increases the risk of depression in adolescents. Published in the International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health.
- Passive Scrolling and Depression: Wang et al. (2025) researched how passive social media consumption links to "fear of missing out" (FOMO), vicarious traumatization, and depression during public health crises. Published in Frontiers in Psychology.
- Why Misinformation Persists: Zhou & Shen (2024) explain the cognitive fallacies and motivational biases that make fake news and misinformation so hard to debunk, as well as the cognitive cost of skepticism. Published in Frontiers in Psychology.
- Decision Neuroscience & Attention: A 2023 editorial by Chew and colleagues breaking down the brain mechanics behind goal-directed (top-down) versus stimulus-driven (bottom-up) attention. Published in Frontiers in Neuroscience.
- Cognitive Fatigue and Performance: Stafylidis and team (2025) looked into how heavy mental exhaustion and cognitive fatigue mess with vigilance, reaction times, and physical performance. Published in Sports.
- Crisis & Pandemic Fatigue Online: White et al. (2024) break down how internet users express digital fatigue, information avoidance, and feeling overwhelmed by constant emergencies on social media platforms. Published in BMC Public Health.









