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The Cognitive Performer

The Cognitive Performer

Written by: Marco Rigazio
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About this listen

The Cognitive Performer focuses on the mental aspects of performance and how it applies to professionals in various fields seeking a mental performance edge. I will explore how to build mental strength based on neuroscience. Highlighting how we can train our brains to overcome challenges, directly connecting the science with the art. Take this journey of exploration with me.Copyright 2026 Marco Rigazio Art Entertainment & Performing Arts Hygiene & Healthy Living Psychology Psychology & Mental Health Science Social Sciences
Episodes
  • Planning For Friction: How to Set Up Your Year When You Know It Won't Be Smooth
    Jan 1 2026

    You know your year won't be smooth. So why plan like it will be?

    In this episode, I break down my 2026 planning strategy - not rigid annual goals, but quarterly focus that adapts to reality. Drawing from competitive powerlifting training, I share why backward planning works, how to maintain agency when life gets chaotic, and why 90-day sprints beat 12-month marathons.

    What You'll Learn:

    1. Why structure creates agency (not rigidity) and the neuroscience of locus of control
    2. The powerlifting method: backward planning from specific outcomes
    3. Where to focus vs. where to allow variety - and why this matters for your brain
    4. Why quarterly reassessment beats rigid annual planning
    5. My Q1 2026 focus: Political voice acting and the strategy behind it
    6. How to choose YOUR Q1 focus (with examples)

    Free Download: Quarterly Focus Planner

    Research Cited: Amar, I.B., et al. (2023). The relationship between locus of control and pre-competitive anxiety. Frontiers in Psychology. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2023.1227571

    Episode Callbacks: Episodes 5 (Decision Fatigue), 6 (Dopamine), 7 (Rewiring for Resilience)

    Your Q1 Challenge: Before January 15, pick ONE concrete, measurable focus for your Q1. Work backward to weekly actions. Execute for 90 days. Reassess for Q2.

    Contact: marco@thecognitiveperformer.com

    Copyright 2026 Marco Rigazio

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    20 mins
  • The Comfort of the Known - Why We Stay Stuck
    Dec 1 2025

    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"

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    17 mins
  • Nutrition and gut health effects on the brain
    Nov 1 2025

    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
    1. Qu S et al. (2024). Gut microbiota modulates neurotransmitter and gut-brain signaling. Microbiological Research, 287.
    2. Zhou M. F. et al. (2023). Microbiome and the kynurenine metabolic pathway in depression. Microbiome, 11.
    3. Gong Y et al. (2025). Healthy dietary patterns and cognitive performance. J. Prev. Alzheimer’s Dis., 12.
    4. Mela V et al. (2025). Microbiota fasting-related changes ameliorate cognitive decline in obesity. Gut.
    5. Ward N A et al. (2023). PROMED-EX Randomised Controlled Trial. BMJ Open, 13.
    6. Bekdash R A (2024). Epigenetics, Nutrition, and the Brain. Int. J. Mol. Sci., 25.
    7. Margolis K G et al. (2021). Microbiota-gut-brain axis modulation of enteric and central nervous system function. Gastroenterology, 160.
    8. 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.

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    25 mins
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