Emotional Behavioural Awareness (EBA) is a behavioural and systems-awareness framework developed by the author that integrates emotional signalling, behavioural recognition and layered environmental analysis to support reflective insight, responsible action and governance accountability.
Emotional Behavioural Awareness (EBA) integrates attachment science, behavioural pattern recognition and systemic reflection to articulate how identity, behaviour and productivity develop within layered environments, and how behavioural awareness can support reconstruction from conditions of safety.
Within the Emotional Behavioural Awareness framework, the Fernan–Mead Layered Integration Model (FMLIM) describes the layered environmental context influencing behaviour, while the Acknowledge–Accept–Act (AAA) method provides the behavioural recognition and response sequence through which individuals may respond to those influences.
Acknowledge–Accept–Act (AAA) is a behavioural recognition and response method developed within the author's Emotional Behavioural Awareness (EBA) framework. The method provides a structured sequence through which individuals recognise behavioural patterns, contextualise their origins, and implement deliberate behavioural responses across personal, organisational and governance environments. Read More...
The Fernan–Mead Layered Integration Model (FMLIM) is a conceptual framework within the author's Emotional Behavioural Awareness (EBA) framework describing how behavioural patterns and identity responses emerge through interaction across layered environments. The model provides a structural lens for examining behavioural awareness and decision-making across individual, relational, organisational, cultural and governance contexts. Read More...
Advanced components of the framework examine the broader systemic and governance influences that shape behavioural environments.
These advanced frameworks extend the EBA architecture beyond individual behavioural recognition to include institutional, systemic and governance influences.
The Threat Exposure Principle (TEP) — describing behavioural and psychological responses to threat environments.
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Fernan–Mead Layer of Systemic Anxiety (FMLSAM) — examining systemic and institutional sources of layered anxiety and behavioural adaptation
Systems-mapping model that demonstrates how the Threat Exposure Principle (TEP) operates across multiple interacting institutional institutions to compound risk, vulnerability and anxiety over time.
Substantiated through applied systems mapping, including a formal diagram developed in 2014 and subsequent refinement through long-term institutional and policy analysis.
More coming soon