Framework Overview

An accessible summary of the framework’s four pillars, designed for researchers and practitioners seeking concrete, scalable practices at the intersection of climate and neurology.

A detailed, photographic-realism image of four sleek, semi-transparent cubes arranged in a precise square on a reflective white surface, each cube etched with a minimalist icon representing a pillar of an early warning framework: a waveform for monitoring, a network node for data integration, a shield for risk mitigation, and a radar symbol for forecasting. Inside each cube, fine glowing lines form subtle neural-network patterns. Cool, diffused overhead lighting casts crisp but gentle reflections, emphasizing edges and textures. The background is a soft, gradient light gray fading to white, keeping the scene uncluttered. Captured from a slightly elevated angle with sharp focus throughout, the mood is structured, systematic, and professional, echoing an organized four-pillar scientific framework.
A high-resolution, photographic-realism visualization of a translucent human brain made of fine glass-like material, suspended above a subtly textured globe of Earth. Thin, luminous lines connect specific cortical regions to highlighted climate hotspots on the planet’s surface, shown as softly glowing zones of heat. The background is a clean, deep blue gradient suggesting the atmosphere and data space. Soft, diffused studio lighting creates precise reflections on the glass brain and gentle highlights on ocean surfaces, with minimal shadows. Shot at eye level with a centered, balanced composition and shallow depth of field to keep focus on the brain–Earth relationship. The mood is professional, analytical, and forward-looking, ideal as a universal hero image for a climate–neurology research site.

Climate–Neurology Framework

This poster introduces a structured approach to integrating neurological health within climate early warning systems, highlighting novelty, scope, and methodological rigor.

Four Pillar Model

The model aligns environmental surveillance with neurological risk indicators, ensuring timely alerts, reproducible methods, and cross-disciplinary collaboration to protect vulnerable populations.

A close-up, photographic-realism image of a clear glass vial filled halfway with shimmering, color-shifting liquid resting on a brushed metal lab bench. Reflected in the curved glass surface are two crisp overlays: a faint climate heat map and a delicate outline of a brain, both subtly projected on the vial as if mirrored data. Behind it, a softly blurred background shows out-of-focus lab instruments and a digital tablet displaying small, colorful charts. Cool, directional side lighting creates sharp highlights along the glass edges and gentle shadows on the metal surface, conveying precision. Composed at eye level with a shallow depth of field, the mood is meticulous, experimental, and clinically professional, ideal for illustrating biomarker research within a climate–neurology framework.

Notes & Updates