"Evolutionary Advantage: How ADHD May Have Helped Ancient Foragers"

A study from the University of Pennsylvania suggests that ADHD may have evolved over 12,000 years ago as an advantage for foragers, allowing those with the disorder to quickly move to new areas when food sources became scarce. Researchers found that individuals with ADHD were more likely to cut their losses and move on to another foraging patch quicker than non-ADHD participants. This behavior may have provided a survival advantage for ancient hunter-gatherers. While the root cause of ADHD remains unknown, the disorder tends to be passed down genetically, and the study's findings shed light on how behaviors associated with ADHD may have been adaptive in past environments.
- ADHD may have evolved as an advantage for foragers Daily Mail
- ADHD-like traits could offer humans an advantage in foraging, study suggests The Washington Post
- ADHD may have been an evolutionary advantage, research suggests The Guardian
- ADHD may have evolved to help foragers know when to cut their losses New Scientist
- ADHD linked to evolutionary success in ancient humans New Atlas
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