Great work but you guys are making CMA into rocket science!
More like neuroscience, to be accurate. There's no implication that anyone needs a post-graduate-level academic education in order to be an effective practitioner of martial arts. I've simply applied the knowledge I gained in that field to a study of how that learning takes place. If someone else were a trained psychologist as well as a martial artist, it might not be particularly surprising for them to explore the topic of combat psychology. I've just done the same with neurophysiology. The improvements in modern sport performance as a result of sport science/exercise physiology in the last 20-25 years have produced results considered unachievable just a few years prior. They have also informed the modern practice of coaching and training sport performance to such a degree as to completely revolutionize it in some cases.
Likewise, the information obtained and insights gained from the work I've done in this area for the last 20+ years have allowed me to develop similar improvements to the training of combat skills. As a result, I can now routinely expect results for my purposes which dramatically surpass those of more common and/or traditional training approaches. These improvements would not be possible without the curiosity to explore the process in the first place.