Alli Webb personality life celebrities community experts Alli Webb

SUCCESS® to Host Women’s Leadership Conference and Empower Visionaries of Tomorrow

Reading now: 465
success.com

SUCCESS® magazine will inspire and celebrate impactful women across industries at the March 12-13, 2024. During this two-day event, SUCCESS will bolster and foster community for self-identified women to share insights and rewrite the narrative for the next generation of women’s leadership.

Registration is open to the public.Designed around the concept of i-LEAD (inspire, learn, engage, adapt, drive), the summit will help attendees unlock a life where they can achieve success in all areas of life—health and well-being, wealth, relationships, business, mindset, and fulfillment.

The summit is focused on two pillars: to empower visionaries of tomorrow and to celebrate the visionaries of today.During the virtual summit, SUCCESS® will connect aspiring leaders with some of the most influential female power icons in the world including Jasmine Star, Alli Webb, Lauryn Bosstick, Lori Harder, and Rachel Rodgers.

Read more on success.com
The website mental.guide is an aggregator of articles from open sources. The source is indicated at the beginning and at the end of the announcement. You can send a complaint on the article if you find it unreliable.

Related articles

additudemag.com
94%
463
Atypical Brain Connectivity Linked to ADHD: NIH Study
March 27, 2024ADHD symptoms in children are associated with unusual interactions between the frontal cortex and deep centers of the brain where information is processed, according to a recent report in the American Journal of Psychiatry.1 These findings may help inform additional research into the ADHD brain that leads to more effective treatments and interventions.A research team from the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) and National Human Genome Research found children with ADHD demonstrated heightened connectivity between brain structures involved in learning, movement, and reward, and frontal areas of the brain that regulate emotion, attention, and behavior.“The present findings suggest that these brain alterations are specifically associated with ADHD and are not indicative of general features of childhood psychopathology or influenced by comorbid symptoms,” the study’s authors wrote.Researchers have long suspected that ADHD symptoms result from atypical interactions between the frontal cortex and these deep information-processing brain structures. However, the study’s authors noted that prior studies testing this model returned mixed results, possibly due to the small size of the studies they suggested.The present study examined more than 10,000 functional brain images of 1,696 youth with ADHD and 6,737 without ADHD aged 6 to 18.
DMCA