Biological Integration Across Molecular and Behavioural Systems: A Systems-Oriented Framework for Mechanistic Continuity
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Abstract
This framework document presents a systems-oriented synthesis of molecular mechanisms underlying behavior and cognition.
Contemporary biomedical research has generated substantial domain-specific knowledge across molecular biology, neuroscience, immunology, and translational medicine; however, conceptual fragmentation often limits cross-scale integration.
The present work articulates structural continuity across biological levels, linking genetic regulation, intracellular signalling networks, cellular integration, neural circuit organization, immune modulation, and behavioural outputs within a unified architecture.
The proposed Systems Integration Model describes interacting biological layers rather than hierarchical silos, emphasizing reciprocal feedback, network dynamics, and environmental modulation.
Within this structure, cognition and behaviour are conceptualized as emergent properties of coordinated molecular and cellular processes embedded in systemic regulation.
The Five-Pillar Architecture operationalizes this integrative perspective across thematic domains: molecular basis of behaviour, cell and molecular signalling, immunology and infection biology, integrative One Health systems biology, and translational molecular medicine.
Together, these pillars provide a structured foundation for interdisciplinary scholarly synthesis.
This document does not introduce novel empirical findings but consolidates established mechanistic principles into a coherent framework intended for researchers, clinicians, and educators seeking biologically grounded integration across disciplines.
By emphasizing mechanistic continuity across scales, the framework supports conceptual clarity, interdisciplinary dialogue, and translational relevance in contemporary biomedical science.
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References
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