Rewards
5 articles on this topic
How Your Brain Responds to Rewards and Punishment
Your brain doesn't treat rewards and punishments as equals. This asymmetry explains why many common motivational tactics fundamentally fail, often leading to anxiety instead of action.
Why Some People Enjoy Solving Problems
It's not just the solution; it's the neurochemical dance of discovery. Our brains are hardwired to crave the struggle, turning cognitive challenges into powerful, almost addictive, reward loops.
How Your Brain Responds to Rewards
Dopamine isn't pleasure, it's prediction. Your brain craves the chase, not just the catch, constantly recalibrating its future desires.
Managing Employee Benefits Costs
Cutting benefits costs often backfires, costing businesses far more in turnover and lost productivity. Strategic investment, not just cuts, truly slashes long-term expenses and builds a stronger workforce.
Designing Equitable Reward Systems
Conventional rewards perpetuate hidden biases. True equity demands reimagining value beyond the visible, ensuring every contribution counts, not just the loudest.