Are you stressed out with your emotions running high? Understand how your ADHD brain regulates your emotions, and learn ...
While neuroscience researchers have long suspected that ADHD symptoms result from atypical interactions between the frontal cortex and these deep information-processing brain structures ...
Maturation of the brain, as reflected in the age at which a cortex area attains peak thickness, in ADHD (above) and normal development (below). Lighter areas are thinner, darker areas thicker.
An analysis of data from the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development Study (ABCD) study found that emotion dysregulation mediates the association between a smaller ...
Previous research has shown that when healthy people who have not been diagnosed with ADHD engage in aerobic exercise, the excitability of the cortex, the 'higher thinking' layer of the brain ...
Neurotypical people have a Pre-frontal Cortex. ADHD-ers have a Pre-Frontal Vortex. Here's Professor Penny, PhDADhD, Master of the Neurodiverse, to explain why we do a million things at once ...
Interestingly, these same subregions appear to be involved in ADHD symptomatology. In addition, disruptions in the connectivity between the frontal cortex and the amygdala may contribute to the ...