Mapping Curiosity Across Disciplines

Mapping Curiosity Across Disciplines


People like neat career narratives because they compress uncertainty.

Former neuroscientist. Storyteller. Marketer. Cybersecurity explorer.

All of those labels are true, but none of them are the whole shape of the work. What actually links them is a particular kind of curiosity: the urge to understand how perception is formed, how systems constrain behavior, and how meaning changes when it moves between contexts.

In a lab, that meant studying cognition and signal.

In brand and narrative work, it means asking how people remember, trust, and interpret.

In security, it means examining where systems break, what assumptions they make about human behavior, and how fragile those assumptions often are.

These fields look far apart if you sort them by industry. They look much closer if you sort them by questions.

What is someone actually seeing? What are they inferring? What has been hidden by complexity, jargon, or default settings? What fails first when pressure shows up?

Those are the questions I keep following. This site exists so I can track them in public, across domains, without forcing each idea into the wrong box just to make the categories feel tidy.