Reading Time: 4 minutes A helpful guide to rebuilding confidence by addressing retained primitive reflexes with simple exercises you can do at home.
Reading Time: 4 minutes A helpful guide to rebuilding confidence by addressing retained primitive reflexes with simple exercises you can do at home.
Reading Time: 4 minutes Learn how retained primitive reflexes disrupt sensory integration and how In the Cortex helps restore proper sensory processing.
Reading Time: 2 minutes How In the Cortex helps kids with sensory-seeking behavior through brain reorganization and reflex integration.
Reading Time: 5 minutes Infant reflexes, especially those that manifest between 0-5 months, are among the earliest indicators of a baby’s neurological development.
Reading Time: 4 minutes Sensory processing is a fundamental aspect of how we interact with the world around us.
Reading Time: 4 minutes It’s not a secret that we’re constantly surrounded by things that stimulate our senses—sounds, lights, textures, and more.
Reading Time: 4 minutes You may have heard about Sensory Processing Disorder (SPD) in children, but did you know it can also affect adults? People with SPD have a hard time dealing with sights, sounds, smells, and other sensory information. Understanding this condition and learning how to manage it is important for anyone who.
Reading Time: 3 minutes In the first few months of life, babies show many natural behaviors that help them grow and survive. One of the most important of these is the sucking reflex.
Reading Time: 2 minutes Disruptive Mood Dysregulation Disorder (DMDD) is more than just a “bad mood” or occasional temper tantrums.
Reading Time: 3 minutes If you’re a parent, you might not be familiar with terms like brain reorganization, but it plays a big part in your child’s growth and learning. As your child develops, their brain must reorganize to learn new skills, from physical coordination to thinking and focusing. One important piece of this puzzle is the way the brain handles primitive reflexes—automatic movements babies are born with. These reflexes, like the Parachute Reflex, help with survival and early learning, but they need to fade away or be “integrated” as your child grows.