Children with ADHD who also experience severe emotional outbursts show distinct differences in brain structure and connectivity, according to a new study published in Psychological Medicine. Attention ...
New research shows autism and ADHD may share brain and gene patterns, changing how we understand both conditions.
Scientists are uncovering a surprising connection between autism and ADHD that goes deeper than labels. Instead of diagnoses, it’s the severity of autism-like traits that seems to shape how the brain ...
Researchers identified three distinct ADHD brain biotypes, each with different neurological wiring, strengths, and risks.
What if we could directly ask the brain about ADHD? A recent study used innovative techniques to do just that.
MRI shows different progressive grey matter volume changes in two ADHD subtypes across symptom severity. Specifically, ADHD subtype 1 exhibits increased GMV, while ADHD subtype 2 shows decreased GMV.
But anyone who works with children with ADHD-or raises one-knows that symptoms can look very different from one child to another. A new brain imaging study now provides scientific evidence for this ...
To learn more about our editorial approach, explore The Direct Message methodology. For decades, ADHD research has been haunted by a strange contradiction. Brain imaging studies kept producing ...
Despite decades of research, there is no definitive biological marker for ADHD, no blood test, consistent gene variant, nor a ...
People often question why so many people are being diagnosed with ADHD these days. There are a few reasons. Firstly, there is much more awareness of ADHD nowadays.