Famous model in psychology and helps us understand what motivates people.
A simple practice to accept the anxiety, anger or sadness and start embracing them.
A systematic approach to studying and comprehending reading material effectively.
Learning and understanding complex concepts by teaching them to someone else
Effective strategies for rapid learning.
Developed from human psychology, it help us understand how the conscious and unconscious mind interacts.
Encourage active engagement with the material and reinforces memory with review.
This AI prompt framework helps you receive higher-quality feedback, and it’s very simple and effective
Define context, role, instruction, subject, preset, and exceptions to get high-quality AI feedback.
Help you write better AI prompts.
A simple prompt that saves time and gets better result.
Move beyond information overload and make truly wise decisions.
It’s not the situation that causes your emotions — it’s how you think about it.
Help you stay focused, filter noise, and improve output, which is deeply aligned with your intent.
Helps you study and improve by giving you a clear way to plan your effort.
Understand how to study with purpose, without wasted effort.
Creates a closed loop that ensures learning outcomes align with business objectives
Developed from human psychology, it help us understand how the conscious and unconscious mind interacts.
No application mappings are available for this framework yet.
Freud's Iceberg Theory, developed by Sigmund Freud, uses the metaphor of an iceberg to explain the human mind. It divides the mind into conscious and unconscious parts, illustrating how much of our behavior is influenced by hidden, unseen factors. Freud compared the mind to an iceberg: only a small part (the conscious mind) is visible above the surface, while the much larger portion (the unconscious mind) lies beneath.
Freud's Iceberg Theory, developed by Sigmund Freud, uses the metaphor of an iceberg to explain the human mind.
It divides the mind into conscious and unconscious parts, illustrating how much of our behavior is influenced by hidden, unseen factors.
Freud compared the mind to an iceberg: only a small part (the conscious mind) is visible above the surface, while the much larger portion (the unconscious mind) lies beneath.
Freud's Iceberg Theory divides the mind into three levels: