Abstract
The Somato-Psychic Pathway (SPP) is proposed as a universal ontogenetic developmental trajectory through which somatic structural-functional integrity and autonomic regulation shape the emergence and stability of the mind under both physiological and pathological conditions. Integrating insights from developmental neuroscience, evolutionary biology, and clinical neurodevelopment, SPP conceptualizes mental functions as interpretive extensions of bodily and autonomic states rather than as their primary generators. The framework delineates a developmentally constrained directional sequence beginning with somatic organization, proceeding through proprioceptive and interoceptive accuracy, and culminating in autonomic regulation, emotional stability, and cognitive-social maturation. Disruption of this trajectory-most prominently through axial dysfunction, distorted joint-muscle-fascial proprioception, persistent low-grade nociceptive drive, or direct mechanical influences on peripheral autonomic structures-is proposed to lead to Somato-Psychic Autonomic Dysregulation (SPAD), a state characterized by chronically reduced autonomic flexibility and heightened threat responsivity. Prolonged operation of the pathway in this pathological mode gives rise to the clinical phenotype termed Somato-Psychic Syndrome (SPS). The SPP framework emerged from longitudinal clinical observation of disrupted and restituted developmental trajectories, providing a unique ontogenetic perspective on the directionality of neurodevelopmental regulation. By integrating the somatic, autonomic, emotional, and cognitive domains into a single regulatory continuum, SPP offers a biologically grounded model with implications for understanding childhood neurodevelopmental disorders and guiding future therapeutic strategies.