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Articles and Report of the work
Articles on current trends in crowd behavior and dynamics. Seeing things differently.


Crowd Psychology – Market Behavior Temporal Dynamics, Cognitive Divergences, and Psychic Homogeneity
This document analyzes market behavior through collective psychology, highlighting how emotional cycles, cognitive biases, and crowd dynamics shape price movements. It presents time as a key psychological vector influencing activation, reaction, and memory in market participants.


The Three States of Consciousness: A Continuum from Bias-Driven Survival to Unlimited Perception
This text explores the mastery of cognitive biases to transcend an existence in survival mode toward a fluid, creative, and conscious life, integrating neuroscience, psychology, and philosophy (chapters 10-13).It analyzes extreme phenomena where biases become pathological, the mechanical construction of reality by the mind, the perception of time, and access to deep consciousness beyond physical filters.The chapters on happiness and freedom redefine them as an inner quest ins


From Childhood to Individual Wisdom
The journey of life evolves from innocent childhood joys and simple discoveries, through adolescent awareness of inequalities and adult pursuits of material accumulation, to reflective maturity where inner harmony and simple pleasures prevail over possessions. This individual path intertwine with collective dynamics, where psychological attachments and conformity drive crowd behavior, leading to cycles of emotional contagion, divergences, and the need for mental refuges amid


The Conjuncture of Wealth and Poverty
The distribution of wealth reveals an extreme concentration among the richest 1%, who control supply through institutional, innovative, and natural monopolies, while the poor embody demand, driven by needs and wants, perpetuating inequality through biases such as loss aversion. This dynamic creates a vicious cycle where the short-term impulsiveness of the poor fuels the long-term analytical dominance of the rich, even though crowd-generated SMEs produce 60-70% of global jobs
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