Reframing how we think about thinking
Cognitive Spectrum Theory™, developed by Gregor Jeffrey, is a foundational reframing of human cognition - not as a fixed trait or deficit-based categorization, but as a spectrum of distinct yet interacting cognitive patterns. Building on the applied research of Ned Herrmann, Dr. Geil Browning, and Dr. Wendell Williams, Cognitive Spectrum Theory (CST) offers a next-generation synthesis designed for the complexity of advanced relational dynamics.
CST identifies four primary cognitive domains: Analytical, Logistical, Conceptual, and Relational. These domains represent overlapping patterns of perception, reasoning, and response - revealing how we orient to information, solve problems, relate to others, and generate meaning. As a growing body of theory and practice, CST challenges the constraints of conventional models by offering a multidimensional view of mind for applications in leadership development, team performance, and advanced self-awareness.
INDIVIDUAL
ORGANIZATIONAL
PSYCHOLOGICAL
INDIVIDUAL
Cognitive Modes Assessment
Revealing how you naturally think, decide, and communicate
The Cognitive Modes Assessment™ is a 20-item self-assessment that maps an individual’s cognitive orientation across four domains: Analytical, Logistical, Conceptual, and Relational. The Cognitive Modes Assessment (CMA) offers a nuanced understanding of how individuals prefer to process information, evaluate ideas, and engage with complexity. Rather than categorizing personality, it reveals underlying patterns of thought that shape communication, collaboration, and problem-solving. The CMA is designed to support both individual insight and organizational alignment, enabling users to recognize diverse cognitive approaches and foster environments where differing ways of thinking are understood, valued, and effectively integrated.
ORGANIZATIONAL
Cognitive Sequence Method
Translating internal cognition into external coherence
Originally developed in 2015 by Gregor Jeffrey, the Cognitive Sequence Method™ is a communication framework that structures information according to how audiences cognitively receive and process meaning. By aligning the structure of a message with underlying cognitive patterns, the Cognitive Sequence Method (CSM) enhances comprehension, engagement, and persuasive impact. Applicable to both speaking and writing, it supports presenters, leaders, and professionals in delivering ideas with greater precision and resonance. CSM is adaptable across contexts - from presentations to written correspondence, including a specialized prompt for AI. It offers a disciplined yet flexible structure for translating complex thought into influential communication.
ORGANIZATIONAL
Cognitive Dyadic Mapping
Relational performance through cognitive awareness
Cognitive Dyadic Mapping™ is a method for illuminating the cognitive dynamics between two individuals by identifying how each perceives, processes, and organizes information. Cognitive Dyadic Mapping (CDM) analyzes divergent and convergent thinking styles across Analytical, Logistical, Conceptual, and Relational domains. It reveals where cognitive friction, complementarity, or misalignment may arise - whether in professional, collaborative, or personal contexts. By translating cognitive differences into structured insight, CDM supports deeper mutual understanding, more adaptive communication, and the co-creation of psychological safety.
ORGANIZATIONAL
Cognitive Decision Integrity
Structuring decisions through cognitive thresholds
Cognitive Decision Integrity™ is an advanced corporate governance system designed to strengthen the quality and resilience of organizational choices by introducing the critical dimension of cognitive threshold validation. While most decision processes rely on consensus, hierarchy, or informal judgment to determine readiness, Cognitive Decision Integrity (CDI) reveals how decision failures emerge predictably when one or more cognitive domains remain under-represented. CDI acts as a structured layer within executive governance and strategic execution, providing leaders and teams with a disciplined mechanism to overcome bias, reduce predictable failure patterns, and embed cognitive balance directly into operational decision-making.
PSYCHOLOGICAL
Cognitive Spectrum Reframing
Relational performance through cognitive awareness
Cognitive Spectrum Reframing™ is a therapeutic framework designed to enhance and deepen the effectiveness of Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) by introducing the critical dimension of cognitive mode mapping. While CBT focuses on identifying and restructuring distorted thoughts, Cognitive Spectrum Reframing (CSR) reveals how these distortions are not random but emerge predictably from an individual's dominant cognitive mode - Analytical, Logistical, Conceptual, or Relational. CSR acts as an optional cognitive precision layer within the CBT model, providing therapists, coaches, and facilitators with a nuanced toolset to diagnose distortion patterns at their cognitive source.
PSYCHOLOGICAL
Cognitive High Spectrum Model
Reframing neurodivergence through cognitive architecture
The Cognitive High Spectrum Model™ is a conceptual framework that reframes commonly diagnosed neurodevelopmental conditions through the lens of cognitive architecture. The model proposes that patterns associated with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) and Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) often emerge from statistically predictable concentrations of specific cognitive modes rather than from inherent deficits. When these highly concentrated modes interact with environments designed for more evenly distributed cognitive processing, the resulting friction is frequently interpreted or pathologized as disorder.