3. Neurological Foundation
The Monotropic Expansion model describes a structurally distinct form of cognition—one that organizes attention through internally anchored salience and expands outward through deliberate contextual layering. While the model is cognitive in framing, its plausibility is strengthened by growing neuroscientific evidence that supports its core mechanisms. This section connects the model to known patterns in neurological development, attentional processing, and functional connectivity, offering a biological foundation that enhances both its coherence and its potential for empirical validation.
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