Proceedings of the International scientific and practical conference ―Science, Technology and Culture: From Tradition to Digital Future‖ (December 8-10, 2025) / Publisher website: www.naukainfo.com. – Vienna, Austria, 2025. – 183 p.

153 human is born with this capacity, most function in fragmented, reactive modes. When coherence arises, the person becomes capable of shaping both inner and outer experience. 3.2. The Integrated State The integrated state includes:  regulated bodily sensations,  recognized and stable emotional tone,  focused and non-fragmented attention,  the experience of being both agent and observer. This creates a semi-permeable boundary between inner and outer processes, enhancing perception and interaction. 3.2.a. The Baseline State as a Neuropsychological Structure In addition to the moment-to-moment configuration described in the integrated state, human experience is shaped by another, deeper layer: the baseline state. Whereas momentary states arise as immediate responses to internal or external stimuli, the baseline state constitutes a stable neuropsychological configuration that persists across contexts and time. From the perspective of contemporary cognitive neuroscience, the baseline state can be understood as a multi-layered matrix integrating: - autonomic tone that reflects ongoing physiological regulation (Porges, 2011 [7]); - affective baseline — a person’s characteristic emotional set-point (Barrett, 2017 [8]); - somatic markers emerging from accumulated experience (Damasio, 1999 [6]); - patterns of neural integration that stabilize attention, perception, and behavioural response (Siegel, 2012 [9]). The baseline state functions as an internal regulator that shapes perception, readiness for action, and behavioural tendencies. It is not merely an emotional or cognitive construct — it is an embodied, system-level organization that influences how a person interprets events and enters interaction. Baseline State as a Mechanism of Transmission

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