The New Executive Brain: Frontal Lobes in a Complex World
Goldberg's 2009 revision and extension of his 2001 landmark — the book that added neuroimaging evidence, the novelty-routinization gradient in its mature form, and direct engagement with the cognitive demands of the emerging digital environment.
The New Executive Brain updates Goldberg's 2001 framework with a decade of additional evidence and develops the novelty-routinization gradient into its fullest articulation. The book extends the clinical framework to the environmental conditions of twenty-first-century work, arguing that the same prefrontal systems that clinical neuropsychology studies are the systems that modern workplaces increasingly fail to support. The argument anticipates by fifteen years the concerns that the AI moment has made urgent: that executive function is not just a clinical concern but a civilizational one, and that the conditions required for its sustained operation are being systematically undermined by environments optimized for other values.
The New Executive Brain: Frontal Lobes in a Complex World
In The You On AI Field Guide
The book integrates functional neuroimaging evidence that was not available when the 2001 edition was written. Brain imaging studies of executive function during complex tasks — planning, decision-making, sustained attention — confirmed the framework's