11 Behaviors That Seem Rude But Are Actually Signs Of Neurodivergence, According To Research

There are many behviors our society typically considers to be rude, but for people whose brains are wired somewhat differently, these same actions may simply be what comes naturally. Traditionally, societal standards have been established by neurotypical people — meaning people whose brains “function in a similar way to most of their peers.” And what their standards fail to acknowledge is that there are many behaviors that may seem rude but are actually signs of neurodivergence.

We now know that somewhere between 15-20% of the world’s population is neurodivergent, with conditions such as dyslexia, dyspraxia, ADHD, autism, dyscalculia, and Tourette’s syndrome. For these individuals, some commonly disliked ways of being or speaking are far more comfortable than those society would consider more appropriate.

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Dyscalculia vs maths anxiety: supporting students with barriers to learning mathematics 

Dyscalculia is about how your brain is wired to process and understand numbers. Maths anxiety is about the feeling or reaction you have when encountering maths. It is an emotional response that can block the demonstration of knowledge you have previously learnt. With maths anxiety being an emotional response, it means mathematical performance varies dramatically depending on stress levels. Individuals may solve problems easily when in casual conversation, but freeze when it’s called a test or when they feel they are being watched.  

For people with dyscalculia, the struggles are consistent across situations and environments, and will often be apparent in number-related activities that aren’t typically thought of as maths – telling the time, remembering PIN numbers or estimating reasonable prices. 

Maths anxiety can develop at any point in an individual’s life, often relating to experiences such as a harsh teacher, public failure, timed test or comparison to peers. Dyscalculia presents from early childhood, though it is often underdiagnosed, particularly as it usually co-occurs with other learning differences or needs like ADHD, dyslexia, developmental language disorder or developmental coordination disorder. 

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Math Anxiety is REAL – and it can hold students back by up to half a school year

Even students who seem confident in math can struggle when anxiety creeps in. It’s not just nerves. Anxiety literally steals working memory, leaving less brainpower for solving problems. Suddenly, concepts that were easy at home become impossible under pressure. This can make even familiar concepts harder to recall under pressure.

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Stanford Medicine Study Reveals How Math Learning Disabilities Impact Brain Problem-Solving

A groundbreaking study conducted by researchers at Stanford Medicine offers new insight into the neural mechanisms underlying math learning disabilities in children, revealing that children with such impairments process math tasks differently at the brain level, despite achieving comparable accuracy on simple numerical comparisons. This discovery advances our understanding of the cognitive and neural intricacies that contribute to math struggles, underscoring the importance of targeting not just numerical skills but also cognitive control and error-monitoring processes in interventions.

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