
Inattentive ADD is most often processing related.
 - Processing skills can be strengthened with exercise.
 - Self paced software to improve ADD symptoms.
Attention Deficit FAQ
Facts and Fiction About Attention Difficulties
ADD is a common concept in our culture, but what do we really know about it?
Attention Deficit Disorder, ADD, is characterized by a prolonged history of inattention, impulsiveness, poor concentration, and variable amounts of hyperactivity, all normal human characteristics. All of us at times are forgetful and inattentive, become nervous and fidgety, and are somewhat impulsive. ADD is not the presence of these behaviors, but the degree to which they manifest. People with ADD have an overabundance of these characteristics.
In the U.S., over 3 million youths have been diagnosed with ADD. Recent research shows that boys and girls with ADD may be equal in numbers.
Often, symptoms of attention or learning deficits are misunderstood for laziness, lack of motivation, or limited intelligence. Memorization is excessively difficult for ADD students. Many feel inadequate or dumb, avoid homework, need several reminders to get started, and lose motivation through frustration—but they are neither dumb nor lazy. They most likely lack specific cognitive strengths and strategies that make learning easier. The Center for Disease Control reports that about half of all ADD students have learning disabilities.
Attention Deficit Disorder symptoms
A learning disability can be due to a range of processing weaknesses. For example, an auditory processing disorder is characterized by difficulty interpreting and making sense of language -- analyzing sounds, recalling verbal information -- a weak working memory, and organizing thoughts for expression. Imagine sitting through a lecture that is sometimes in your native language and sometimes in ancient Phoenician!
How well and how long could you sustain attention? Auditory processing weaknesses, like other specific learning disabilities, often accompany or are misconstrued as attentional weaknesses. Stressful situations, allergies, asthma, diabetes, hearing or vision problems, iron deficiencies, lead intoxication, medication side effects, or thyroid problems can produce symptoms that mimic ADD; however -- based on the neurological evidence -- bad parenting, laziness, poor motivation, or low intelligence are never a cause.
The Science Behind Stimulants
Stimulants were found to have calming effects on disruptive behavior as early as 1937, leading to the widespread use of medications like Ritalin® to treat hyperactivity. Not until the 1980’s advent of brain scan technology was the paradox of using stimulants to slow down constantly moving children explained. Neuropsychologists identified weaker activity levels in the frontal lobes resulting in poor self-regulation, planning, and ability to attend to tasks. Stimulant medications strengthen this area by releasing dopamine, a natural stimulant and neurotransmitter normally abundant in the brain’s prefrontal area. An under-active cortex may be less able to use these chemical messengers or have fewer dopamine neurons that connect the lower brain to the prefrontal cortex. Constant motion and risk taking may be an attempt to energize the brain.
Relief without a Cure
In those with ADD, the frontal cortex (surface) of the brain has more difficulty using glucose (blood sugar) and less blood flow than in people without ADD (Hallowell and Ratey, 1994). The frontal cortex inhibits impulses, initiates behavior, and controls working memory. When under active, the ability to screen out irrelevant stimuli is reduced and the individual pays attention to everything. This results in poor regulation of the motivation system and makes staying on task difficult without immediate rewards. Video games provide rapid, constant feedback and stimulation and tend to be very engaging for people with ADD. In the case of routine schoolwork, lack of sufficient stimulation results in little sustained effort and inconsistent academic performance. Students may make mistakes on simple problems but put greater effort into stimulating tasks. Boredom is often mistaken for poor sustained attention when the task is no longer unique.
Approximately 5-15% of the population has ADD and 30% of parents of ADD children have the disorder. Parenting or life situation problems may make attention and learning deficits worse but do not cause the disorder.
Cumulative Consequences
Attention deficits have serious consequences: failure, dropout, depression, conduct disorders, unsuccessful relationships, workplace underachievement, and substance abuse. Elementary children can’t consistently follow directions: “Stay in your seat, raise your hand, follow directions, and do the work I give you for the time I consider appropriate.”
The situation worsens for older students with ADD. Independence, self-direction, and large-scale, long-term projects are common. Frequent class changes bring new environments with different visual and auditory stimuli and teachers with contrasting rules and varying personalities. Combine these factors with normal developmental changes and the mix is especially problematic.
ADD program choices are multiple and varied, in duration, approach and effectiveness. Gemm Learning uses Fast ForWord for selective attention issues, most often related to an underlying cognitive difficulty.
ADD Treatment Protocols
ADD or Not?
ADD mimics or is frequently combined with other conditions. Low self-esteem and depression often accompany ADD due to a sense of chronic failure and underachievement. In ADD, an under-energized right cortex may protect against depression, but combined with weakness in the left cortex, it results in moodiness and irritability. (Depression Beyond Serotonin, H. Marano, 1999). The right side of the brain manages cause and effect relationships, spatial perception, and decision making. An under active right hemisphere may cause trouble seeing the whole picture, poor spelling, getting lost, losing things, and difficulty adapting to unexpected situations.
One of the most challenging diagnoses in this area is differentiating between ADD and a reading difficulty.
Reading and ADD
“Alternative” Medicine: Another Approach
Based on neuroscientific research, attention is a cognitive skill set that can be improved and developed. Why do schools treat ADD with accommodations like removing distractions, reducing workload, or isolating students into quiet areas? This may allow better performance temporarily but does nothing to develop the cognitive skill of attention long-term. That would be like treating poor vision by having someone read to you instead of getting glasses, contacts, or having surgery. Your future would be ill served.
How do You Develop Attention?
Neuroscience shows that by targeting and stimulating the under active region of the brain responsible for the characteristics of inattention (the prefrontal cortex), attention can be strengthened.
Therefore, the correct approach is the opposite of the usual accommodations used.
Besides, it’s not that the person is not paying attention: they pay attention to every environmental stimulus. Attention develops when a person performs a task requiring attention while exposed to structured distracting stimuli. This designed intensity and distraction is at the core of cognitive skills training aimed at improving attention.
Unlike biofeedback or neurofeedback that simply identifies under active brainwaves, cognitive training is a brain program that alters brain structure to strengthen cognitive function. It is active rather than passive, just like diet and exercise improve health and conditioning. Those with ADD deserve the opportunity to overcome distractions and limitations this disorder presents. Appropriate training, not accommodation, presents that opportunity. Gemm does this using Fast ForWord software.




