The Field
Psychomedia
Psychomedia is the psychology of media, trauma, and control.
It studies how media, language, trauma, and symbolic systems shape perception, emotion, identity, and collective awareness — treating every medium as a psychological environment that trains the nervous system over time.
The core of the field
Four pieces that introduce Psychomedia, define it as a field, turn it into a method, and lay out its working framework.
Psychomedia: The Psychology of Media, Trauma, and Control
The foundational essay introducing the field and its central questions.
Read →The Field of Psychomedia
What Psychomedia studies, and why it stands as a distinct field.
Read →The Discipline of Psychomedia
How the field becomes a research method across neuroscience, language, and design.
Read →The Psychomedia Framework
The working model that structures how a medium is analyzed.
Read →The models inside the field
Working models and taxonomies Psychomedia uses to name patterns and explain mechanisms.
Linguigenetic Theory
How language can function as inherited psychological programming.
DNPDuality of Neural Programming
Competing motivational circuits — Love–Life and Sex–Death — and how they shape perception and behavior.
DADDenial Architecture Disorder
How denial hardens into a structured architecture inside a person or system.
EDDEnergetic Debt of Denial
The accumulating cost of sustained denial in a mind or culture.
DFEDenial Fracture Event
The moment a denial structure ruptures and its contents surface.
New in Psychomedia
Psychomedia is the central project of PolyglotMint — the publishing home of the field. New here? Begin with Psychomedia: The Psychology of Media, Trauma, and Control.