Trust, Language & the Limits of AI Persuasion.
The full keynote address that anchors the Progress feature — the science of why most AI-mediated persuasion fails, and the architecture of what replaces it.
A curated library of where Elizabeth's thinking has been published, recorded, and taught — across Forbes, the Volume PR Field Notes, the Affective Intelligence Substack, LinkedIn, the keynote stage, and the university lecture hall.
A short reel from recent keynote engagements — the moment of arrival, the turn of the room, the audience leaning forward. The clearest two-minute proof of what booking Elizabeth feels like.
Watch the Reel on YouTubeSelected feature articles, interviews, and bylined work — including the most-cited pieces of the last twelve months and the three anchor essays from the Affective Intelligence Substack.
Recordings of recent keynote engagements — the full talks, not the highlight reels.
The full keynote address that anchors the Progress feature — the science of why most AI-mediated persuasion fails, and the architecture of what replaces it.
A full-length keynote on AI in communication, business leadership, and the new operating model required for the Intelligence Era.
A peer-association keynote at the Southern Public Relations Federation — Affective Intelligence delivered to the senior PR practitioners shaping the field across the South.
Podcast appearances and long-form conversations on AI, communication, public relations, and the science underneath all of it.
A conversation on what changes — and what doesn't — when AI systems become the primary mediators of public belief about every organization, leader, and idea.
Elizabeth is a guest lecturer at universities across the country, teaching communication students the latest behavioral science and the ethics of the field they are entering. This is part of a broader role she has come to occupy: helping universities update their communication curricula for an era when affective neuroscience, AI mediation, and signal architecture have become as foundational to the discipline as media relations and message strategy once were.
Below are example lectures from one of those universities — Pepperdine — recorded in classroom settings. The audio is grainy. The thinking is not. She is the only practitioner currently mapping this intersection and is open to additional university teaching engagements.
Inquire About a University EngagementAn introductory lecture for communication students on the integrated sciences underneath the discipline — affective neuroscience, embodied cognition, and the foundations of Affective Intelligence.
A second lecture taking students into the ethical implications of communication as biological intervention — and the obligations that follow for the next generation entering the field.
A third lecture on what communication education will need to become — and is already becoming, in the universities updating their programs for the Intelligence Era.
Four places to follow Elizabeth's writing in real time. Each runs at a different cadence and depth.