
Interactive research tours on adversarial performance, constraint saturation, and recovery mechanisms.
For performers who need the truth.
Ground Press publishes from within the adversarial condition—from the body under pressure, from the control loop at the moment of collapse or coherence. These interactive tours guide you through the Control Loop Framework, constraint saturation, and the mechanisms of recovery under maximum pressure. Choose your entry point based on your current understanding and role.
Foundational Tour
An interactive research tour examining how constraint saturation operates in competitive tennis. Covers the CLF mechanism, Study 002 evidence, recovery pathways, and implications for elite performance.
For: Everyone — Start here to understand the core concepts
Topics Covered
Advanced Deep Dive
A technical deep dive into how performers reorganize their reference signal architecture under maximum pressure. Covers Transfer Ignition, the Internalization Sequence, Ground Communion, and case studies from Study 002.
For: Coaches, traders, executives — Full CLF/PCT rigor with critical extensions
Topics Covered
Measurement and Expansion
Formalize margin as a measurable metric: the gap between capacity and constraints. Learn measurement frameworks, capacity and constraint dimensions, margin expansion pathways, and operational applications for coaches, traders, and executives.
For: Traders, executives, coaches — Operational frameworks for margin-based decision making
Topics Covered
Start with the Foundational Tour to understand constraint saturation. Progress through the Recovery Mechanism for technical depth. Then explore the Adversarial Margin for operational frameworks.
Competitive athletes, coaches, traders, executives, and anyone investigating how performance architecture reorganizes under maximum pressure.
The Control Loop Framework, constraint saturation mechanisms, recovery pathways, margin measurement, and operational frameworks for expanding margin across domains.
Ground Press — Research from within the adversarial condition