- Web Desk
- 27 Minutes ago
ADHD: Bad for us, but survival tactic for our ancestors?
WEB DESK: ADHD is commonly called a disorder, but new science suggests it may have helped our ancestors find food and survive.
Hyperactivity, impulsivity and a skittish attention span — the symptoms of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) tend to be seen as a weakness or mental health condition that needs to be treated.
But ADHD also has advantages that have been scientifically investigated. People with ADHD are considered creative and dynamic, they are socially and emotionally competent and have high cognitive abilities.
And that’s not all. In a new study, researchers at the University of Pennsylvania attempted to trace the origins of ADHD. Co-author David Barack writes on X: “ADHD and ADHD-like cognitive traits such as distractibility or impulsivity are widespread and often viewed in a negative light. But if truly negative, then their persistence presents a puzzle.”
So is ADHD an important part of evolution? According to the new study, you could say so, yes. The research team says ADHD developed as an adaptive survival strategy for our ancestors. Their study was published in Proceedings of The Royal Society B (Biological Sciences).
Picking berries with ADHD
To get to the bottom of the matter, the researchers analyzed data from 457 adults, 206 of whom reported they had ADHD symptoms.
The test subjects were asked to collect as many berries as possible from virtual bushes in a video game, in a limited amount of time.
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They had to decide again and again: Do they continue collecting in the same spot where the berries are running low or do they change locations to explore a new bush? The latter cost valuable seconds.
Those with ADHD traits tended to switch more quickly and spend less time on a single bush, effectively collecting more berries than the group without ADHD symptoms. The latter, in turn, tended to spend much more time on one bush in the hope of optimizing the yield.
The researchers were surprised by this result. They assumed that the rapid change of shrubs would lead to a poorer yield. “But higher ADHD symptoms lead to a higher reward rate and better performance,” says study co-author, Barack.
ADHD as a survival strategy
This tactic has advantages: it prevents the exploitation of resources in a single location, while at the same time, new areas are scouted — a strategy that may have been vital for the survival of hunter-gatherers in the past.
Other studies support this evolutionary advantage thesis. They have shown that a nomadic lifestyle is associated with genetic mutations that play a role in ADHD.
All of this could possibly explain why ADHD is so prevalent today — the difference being now that traits that used to prove their worth in foraging are no longer quite as advantageous in contemporary society, at least where resources are plentiful.
Dopamine is broken down more quickly in people with ADHD than in people without it. The constant striving for this important neurotransmitter can lead people with ADHD to constantly switch back and forth between different tasks without really completing one.
However, the researchers emphasize the need for further investigations because, they say, the significance of their study is limited to the participants’ self-assessments of their ADHD.
In the next step, the researchers want to conduct with people who have been diagnosed as having ADHD, as opposed to self diagnosis. In addition, they will set real-life foraging tasks, which require more effort than any in an online game.