Publication Date

2019

Document Type

Article

Organizational Units

Sturm College of Law

Keywords

Intelligence, Cognitive capacity, General intelligence, Emotional intelligence, Social competency, Mental strength, Brain literacy, Stress, Cognition, Well-being, Stress, Performance, Mental Health, and Neuro-intelligence

Abstract

This article proposes that law students, legal educators, and lawyers will benefit from developing their neuro-intelligence, as well as their understanding of the impact of emotion and stress on performance, and the how building mental strength can empower their professional and personal lives. With greater neuro-intelligence, individuals can improve well-being and performance, and organizations can leverage healthy human beings to enhance capacity and innovation.

Publication Statement

Copyright held by the author. User is responsible for all copyright compliance. This article was originally published as Debra S. Austin, Windmills of Your Mind: Understanding the Neurobiology of Emotion, 54 Wake Forest L. Rev. 931 (2019).

Rights Holder

Austin, Debra, Wake Forest Law Review

File Format

application/pdf

Language

English (end)

Extent

42 pgs

File Size

456 KB

Publication Title

Wake Forest Law Review

Volume

54

Issue

4

First Page

931

Last Page

972



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