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Optimising Human Performance

Optimising Human Performance

By: OpHP Ltd
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About this listen

Optimising Human Performance is the podcast for people who can’t afford to fail. If you work in the military, defence and security, emergency services, first response, elite sport, or any other high‑pressure environment, this show gives you practical, evidence‑based tools to perform at your best when it matters most.

Hosted by Dr Martin I. Jones and Jonpaul Nevin, the podcast brings together world‑leading experts, cutting‑edge science, and hard‑won field experience.

  • Martin is a sport psychologist with over 20 years of research and applied experience. He holds advanced degrees from Loughborough University and the University of Oxford, has authored more than 50 peer‑reviewed publications, and previously served as Principal Advisor for Human Performance and Human Augmentation at the UK’s Defence Science and Technology Laboratory (Dstl). He has also represented the UK on NATO’s Human Factors and Medicine panel.
  • Jonpaul is a former British Army soldier with 15 years of service in the Royal Engineers and the Royal Army Physical Training Corps and is an associate professor at Buckinghamshire New University.

Together, Martin and Jonpaul explore how to optimise physical, psychological, and cognitive performance in contexts where the stakes are high, the margins are thin, and the cost of failure can be severe.

In each episode, you’ll hear from guests such as leading scientists, military and emergency services professionals, elite coaches, clinicians, and operators who have performed in extremis. Conversations blend rigorous research with real‑world application, making complex science accessible and directly applicable.

Topics include:

  • Sleep, circadian rhythms, and fatigue management for shift workers and night operations
  • Mental toughness, resilience, and emotional control under pressure
  • Decision‑making in high‑stress, uncertain, and time‑critical situations
  • Recovery from brain injury, trauma, and long‑term exposure to stress
  • Training, preparation, and debriefing practices used by elite military units and sports teams
  • Sustaining performance and wellbeing across long careers in high‑risk, high‑responsibility roles

Across the series, you’ll learn:

  • How to design sleep and recovery routines that work in the real world
  • How to recognise and manage the cognitive and emotional effects of stress, fear, and fatigue
  • How to build habits and systems that protect performance
  • How to translate laboratory findings and academic research into simple, repeatable practices you can use on duty, on operations, or in competition
  • How to communicate, lead, and support others when they are operating at – or beyond – their limits

The focus is always on what you can actually do: checklists, frameworks, mental models, and small, practical changes that make a meaningful difference in demanding environments. Episodes are designed so that you can take at least one actionable idea back to your unit, team, watch, squad, clinic, or organisation.

Whether you are a commander, paramedic, firefighter, police officer, intelligence analyst, surgeon, coach, or performance specialist, Optimising Human Performance will help you:

  • Understand the science behind human performance in high‑stakes situations
  • Apply that science to your own context
  • Improve your ability to think clearly, act decisively, and recover effectively

If your work involves protecting others, making critical decisions, or operating when the pressure is on, this podcast is for you.

Subscribe to Optimising Human Performance to hear from the people who study, train, and live high performance in the most challenging conditions, and to learn how you can do the same.


Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

OpHP Ltd
Exercise & Fitness Fitness, Diet & Nutrition Hygiene & Healthy Living Personal Development Personal Success Psychology Psychology & Mental Health
Episodes
  • Perspective, Pressure, and Performing Through Adversity with Dr Andrew Wood
    Mar 18 2026

    What if the biggest obstacle to performing under pressure isn't the situation itself, but the way we think about it? In this episode, Martin talks to fellow psychologist and world-leading expert on pressure and adversity, Dr. Andrew Wood, about the strategies and philosophies that can help you take control of the irrational beliefs that often hold us back.


    We discuss rational emotive behaviour therapy (REBT) and how irrational core beliefs fuel pressure, anxiety, and maladaptive behaviour. Andrew explains REBT’s focus on flexible, rational beliefs, distinguishing helpful vs unhelpful responses rather than positive vs negative thinking, and introduces concepts like awfulizing & low frustration tolerance. He describes tools such as the “badness scale,” 10-10-10 perspective taking, humour, and testing beliefs through controlled exposure to feared situations. Andrew also discusses leadership climates that normalise all-or-nothing thinking, and shares his own long COVID experience, bedbound for a year, identity loss, and using rationality, values and symptom-tracking to cope, ending with reflections on reconciling fear of death to reduce everyday fears.


    Guest, Cast & Crew

    Dr. Andrew Wood is a Performance Psychologist, keynote speaker, and published researcher specialising in rational thinking under pressure. Drawing on over a decade working with elite athletes, emergency services, corporate leaders, and his own lived experience navigating life-changing disability, Andrew's work sits at the intersection of science, story, and practicality. He doesn't just teach people how to think more clearly and perform at their best when faced with setbacks, he's also had to do it himself, when it mattered the most.


    Hosted by Martin Jones https://www.ophp.co.uk

    Produced & edited by Bess Manley


    Resources

    • https://www.linkedin.com/in/drandrewwood/?originalSubdomain=uk
    • drandrewgwood@gmail.com


    Thanks for tuning in. If you found this podcast valuable, please take a moment to rate, share & review. If you have feedback, guest suggestions or topics that you'd love us to cover, then do email us at info@ophp.co.uk or connect with us on LinkedIn.


    Chapters

    02:20 REBT Explained

    05:09 Irrational Beliefs In Action

    05:53 Awfulizing

    07:44 Badness Scale Perspective

    11:14 When Identity Collapses

    14:39 Culture And Leadership Climate

    18:06 Resilience Myths And Language

    22:00 Building Robustness And Tolerance

    25:48 Reframing Pain And Discomfort

    27:33 Bedbound After COVID

    28:09 Finding Your Why

    29:06 Meaning Without Extremes

    31:07 Testing Beliefs Safely

    34:26 Tools Without The App

    36:49 Imagery And Perspective

    38:37 Reframing Setbacks

    41:24 No One Is Perfectly Rational

    43:39 Long COVID Lived Experience

    47:16 Acceptance And New Normal

    49:45 Keynote Plans And Contact

    50:44 Making Peace With Death

    51:50 Final Wrap Up

    Thanks for listening to Optimising Human Performance.

    This podcast is for people who can’t afford to fail. Each episode gives you practical, evidence‑based tools you can apply in the real world.

    For more about the podcast, speaking, coaching, and mentoring, visit:

    www.ophp.co.uk

    Connect with us:

    LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/ophp/

    Instagram: @ophumanperformance

    If you found this episode useful, please share it with one colleague, subscribe, and leave a review – it helps us reach more people who operate in high‑stakes environments.





    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    52 mins
  • Embracing the Unknown with Solo Ocean Rower with Annasley Park
    Mar 4 2026
    Former GB cyclist-turned-adventurer and solo ocean rower Annasley Park has built her life on the value of fortitude. In this episode of the Optimising Human Performance Podcast, she shares her journey, including her experiences with injury and burnout. She introduces the ‘fortitude mindset’, built on feral intelligence, visualisation, and emotion, and shares practical routines that anchored her through fear, fatigue and uncertainty.Guest, Cast & CrewAnnasley Parks speaks from lived experience about leadership under pressure, performing in uncertainty, managing fear, and sustaining high performance without burnout.At just twenty-nine years of age, she is the ninth solo, unsupported and independent woman in history to row three thousand miles across the Atlantic Ocean. A former professional cyclist, white-water raft instructor, Alpine chalet manager and superyacht deckhand. Annasley has spent over a decade working in demanding and unpredictable environments where resilience, adaptability, decision-making under pressure and self-leadership were essential skills.Growing up on the military estates of Herefordshire, Annasley found her freedom in the mountains through sports, ultimately building a professional cycling career with the Great Britain Cycling Team, competing on the road and track, and signing for a UCI World Tour-level road team. However, injuries cut this chapter short, teaching her early lessons in rebuilding and resilience when identity and purpose is lost.She went on to explore unconventional career paths that took her from source to sea. From Alpine chalet management to white-water rafting on the American rivers, and four years serving as a deckhand on superyachts, travelling all over the world with high-profile clients. Annasley gained unique insights into navigating diverse environments and thriving outside the conventional structures.Despite her physical, mental and emotional fortitude, Annasley experienced severe burnout in 2023. That period led her to question what truly sustains people when pressure rises, plans fail, fear sets in, and motivation runs out. Her Ocean Survivoar Challenge became the ultimate test of all the knowledge, skills, resources and networks she had developed. In less than a year, she brought the project to the starting line, assembling a world-class team of experts in ocean rowing, communications, medical and equipment support, and more, ensuring the expedition's success.Her Atlantic row was more than a test of endurance. It was a journey into the critical 20% zone. An unpredictable space she calls the messy middle, a threshold of transition where you are no longer who you once were, but not yet who you are becoming. This is a space where human capacity outlasts the plan. The lessons she learned in that zone form the foundation of The Fortitude System, built on the disciplines of solitude, magnitude and attitude of any given challenge or faced adversity, helping audiences convert chaos into clarity, overwhelm into sustainable performance and fear into action.Hosted by Martin Jones & Jonpaul Nevin https://www.ophp.co.uk Produced & edited by Bess ManleyResourceshttps://annasleypark.com/https://www.instagram.com/annasleypark/ Thanks for tuning in. If you found this podcast valuable, please take a moment to rate, share & review. If you have feedback, guest suggestions or topics that you'd love us to cover, then do email us at info@ophp.co.uk or connect with us on LinkedIn. Chapters01:23 Podcast Setup and Welcome02:26 From Running to GB Cycling04:06 Inside British Cycling Culture08:03 Injuries Identity and Retirement09:48 Where the Drive Comes From10:49 Post Cycling Adventures and Burnout18:25 Ocean Rowing Begins 21:17 Chaos at Sea22:22 Fortitude Mindset Tools24:46 Lows and Liminal Space27:06 Scraping Barnacles 29:17 Bird Companion and Team30:39 Flow State Ocean Signs33:04 Purpose and Charity Mission35:25 Advice for Young People39:24 Enjoy the Middle Space40:49 Where to Follow Next41:27 Final Podcast WrapThanks for listening to Optimising Human Performance.This podcast is for people who can’t afford to fail. Each episode gives you practical, evidence‑based tools you can apply in the real world.For more about the podcast, speaking, coaching, and mentoring, visit:www.ophp.co.ukConnect with us:LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/ophp/Instagram: @ophumanperformanceIf you found this episode useful, please share it with one colleague, subscribe, and leave a review – it helps us reach more people who operate in high‑stakes environments. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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    42 mins
  • The Future of Female Soldiers: Training, Nutrition, and Menstrual Health in Military Optimisation
    Feb 18 2026
    In this episode, Dr Julie Greeves, principal physiologist for the British Army and expert in applied human physiology, shares groundbreaking research on female soldier health, injury prevention, and performance optimisation. Dr. Greeves unpacks the Women in Ground Close Combat research program, and explains what it tells us about physical performance, load carriage and reproductive health. Listeners from defence, sports, or health sciences will benefit from these insights, which can help tailor training and policies for women in demanding environments. We discuss the implementation of physical employment standards, the importance of nutrition, menstrual health and sleep for female soldiers, and the steps required to help women thrive in strenuous roles within the military.Key Takeaways:Development and implementation of gender-specific physical employment standards and their impact on female recruitment.Physiological differences between men and women: skeletal structure, muscle mass, cardiovascular capacity, and susceptibility to injury.Injury risk factors: higher stress fractures and bone injuries in women, especially during initial training phases.Benefits of female physiology: metabolic advantages, increased fat oxidation during prolonged submaximal exercise, and potential to reduce injury risk with appropriate systems.The myth of training around the menstrual cycle and its practical, science-backed inaccuracy.Hormonal fluctuations, menstrual health, contraceptive use, and their impacts on performance and injury risk.The importance of micronutrients like iron and calcium for women in military settings.The role of sleep, stress, and the gut-brain axis in psychological health and performance, with sex differences in cortisol responses.Practical advice for individuals preparing for arduous training: targeted load carriage, resistance, nutrition, and tracking menstrual health.Guest:Julie is the Head of Army Health and Performance Research in the British Army. After obtaining her doctorate in female physiology, Julie has spent over 25 years pioneering original research on musculoskeletal health and human performance in the military. Julie's research has widely informed Army and Defence policies, and she was decorated with an OBE in 2017 for her scientific contribution to the opening of Ground Close Combat roles to women. Julie holds honorary Chair appointments at the School of Medicine UEA and UCL and has published over 140 original papers in peer-reviewed journals.Hosted by Martin Jones & Jonpaul Nevin https://www.ophp.co.uk Produced & edited by Bess ManleyResources:https://www.linkedin.com/in/julie-greeves-obe-facsm-60170a52/?originalSubdomain=ukhttps://scholar.google.com/citations?user=RgILbTUAAAAJ&hl=en Arduous Training Guide for Women – coming soon!Chapters:00:13 Julie's Career Journey and Current Role02:06 Women in Ground Close Combat Research Program04:39 Implementing Research Findings in the Army08:41 Physical Differences and Injury Risks for Women12:02 Benefits of Female Physiology in the Military16:17 Training and the Menstrual Cycle22:58 Analysing Data on Muscle Performance and Bone Health23:12 Informed Decisions on Contraceptives and Training23:57 Tactical Decisions Around Menstrual Cycle24:17 Understanding RED-S in Military Context25:13 Energy Deficiency and Logistical Challenges26:52 Impact of Sleep on Reproductive Health29:16 Psychological Health and Stress Responses33:14 Nutritional Needs and Training Recommendations36:09 Empowering Women Through Menstrual Health Tracking38:33 Future Research and Implementation42:46 Final Thoughts and Closing RemarksWomen can absolutely thrive in demanding military and sporting environments if they get the right training, nutrition, sleep, and monitor their menstrual health. The tools and policies to support you are on the horizon. Thanks for listening!Thanks for listening to Optimising Human Performance.This podcast is for people who can’t afford to fail. Each episode gives you practical, evidence‑based tools you can apply in the real world.For more about the podcast, speaking, coaching, and mentoring, visit:www.ophp.co.ukConnect with us:LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/ophp/Instagram: @ophumanperformanceIf you found this episode useful, please share it with one colleague, subscribe, and leave a review – it helps us reach more people who operate in high‑stakes environments. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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    45 mins
All stars
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Really good podcast. Excellent guests and a broad range of topics. Definitely worth a listen if you want to improve yourself.

The quality of problem solving

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Fantastic array of guests from across the realm of HPO and a well put together podcast.

Excellent guests and content.

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