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Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) is among the most commonly diagnosed neurodevelopmental conditions, affecting approximately 5โ7% of children and 2โ5% of adults worldwide. Yet it remains widely misunderstood โ particularly in relation to intelligence.
Two myths persist in popular culture: first, that ADHD means low intelligence; second, that ADHD is actually a superpower associated with exceptional creativity or genius. The truth, as with most complex phenomena, is more nuanced than either extreme.
ADHD is a neurodevelopmental disorder characterised by persistent patterns of inattention, hyperactivity, and/or impulsivity that impair functioning across multiple contexts. It is associated with differences in the development and function of the prefrontal cortex โ particularly circuits involved in executive function, working memory, inhibitory control, and emotional regulation.
ADHD is not a deficiency of attention in general. People with ADHD can sustain extraordinary focus ("hyperfocus") on activities that are intrinsically engaging or novel. The deficit is in the ability to direct and sustain attention voluntarily โ particularly on tasks that are routine, boring, or lack immediate reward.
Statistically, individuals with ADHD score approximately 5โ9 points lower on standardised IQ tests on average compared to non-ADHD peers. However, this is a group average, and the distribution is enormous. Many highly intelligent people have ADHD, and many ADHD individuals score in the superior or very superior ranges.
The lower average IQ in ADHD groups likely reflects several factors:
Crucially, these are performance effects, not necessarily capacity effects. The underlying cognitive potential may be higher than IQ tests measure in ADHD individuals.
ADHD is more common in gifted populations than chance would predict โ a phenomenon called "twice exceptional" or 2e. High-IQ individuals with ADHD often go undiagnosed for years because their intelligence compensates for ADHD deficits. They can pass through school achieving reasonable results while expending enormous effort โ or achieving far below their potential.
The "compensation hypothesis" suggests that high general intelligence can partially mask ADHD symptoms, making diagnosis harder but not eliminating the underlying neural differences or the exhaustion of constant compensatory effort.
Rather than uniformly lower intelligence, ADHD produces a distinctive cognitive profile:
Stimulant medications (methylphenidate, amphetamine salts) improve working memory, processing speed, and sustained attention in ADHD โ and these improvements are reflected in cognitive test performance. However, stimulants do not produce IQ gains beyond typical ranges; they restore functioning toward potential rather than exceeding it. Non-medication interventions (CBT, executive function coaching, environmental accommodations) also improve real-world functional outcomes significantly.
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