https://ls1tech.com/forums/generation-i ... atter.html
There is a lot of reading, but you can just read what user Sales@Tick posts. If anyone else says anything useful, he usually quotes them so you will see it anyways. There are some excellent graphs too that are from actual testing with transducers. I still have more to read myself, but a few pages in and I knew it was worth sharing.
In somewhat of a summary, it is better to think of the cam in terms of when valve events occur, ie exhaust valve opens, intake valve opens, exhaust valve closes, intake valve closes, and how the relationship between them and what is going on with cylinder pressures, intake runner pressures, and exhaust runner pressures allows you to tune the engine to be happy. The tuning of your cam is very much dependent on your intake and exhaust design which greatly influences what the pressures inside them are doing, and how waves in the runners have a frequency affected by intake and exhaust geometry.
Here is a great image from the LS1Tech thread of pressure data from a well tuned engine, ie a cam tuned for how well the exhaust and intake flows. Called out are TDC, BDC, EVO, IVO, EVC, IVC.

But basically at the start of the graph, due to good exhaust design for where the exhaust valve opens and having adequate flow/scavenging at this RPM, cylinder pressures are lower than intake runner pressure when the intake valve opens. When the exhaust valve first opens, there is a massive amount of pressure built, but as it moves through the primary and scavenging starts to take effect, this causes exhaust runner pressure to go negative which causes cylinder pressures to go negative as well. The intake valve opens and pressure in the runner is higher than in the cylinder which helps fill the cylinder and exhaust the last bit of exhaust that the piston cannot push out (~combustion chamber volume). Then as the piston passes TDC, intake air gains momentum on the down-stroke, and it can be seen that the cylinder continues to fill due to this momentum after bottom dead center, when the piston is on the way up. There is a sudden drop off during compression stroke and the intake valve is tuned to close shortly afterwards.
I thought this was really cool, there are graphs of engines outside their tuned area and how they behave, and people ask them what he would recommend for their own setups and he gives detailed answers based on valve events.