Our research aims to bridge academic studies, lived experience, and emerging technology

AI-Powered Supports for Neurodivergent Minds

In 2024, ITI answered a call from the Ohio Department of Developmental Disabilities. They wanted technology using AI to help people with intellectual disabilities or other disabilities like autism, ADHD, cerebral palsy, and/or Down syndrome improve their health.

After polling over 100 autistic and ADHD community members about potential apps they would find useful, a majority indicated the need for decision-making support. As a result, we proposed to study how AI can support decision-making for neurodivergent adults.

the number of decisions an adult makes per hour

Source: Sahakian & Labuzetta, 2013

of US autism research funding goes toward adults

Most research funding goes toward genetics, “cure,” or children. Autistics hit an enormous support cliff when they turn 18.

Source: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services

Research touch points with autistic and/or ADHD adults for this study

Interviews, beta testing, surveys, and more

AI-powered decision-making app developed to support research

Neurodivergent minds don’t generalize info as automatically, leading to more decision paralysis and fatigue

There is growing evidence that Autistic brains struggle with using past information to make accurate predictions (Pellicano & Burr, 2012; Sinha et al., 2014; Wada et al., 2023). Adults make more than 33,000 decision a day. That’s more than 2,000 decisions an hour! (Sahakian & Labuzetta, 2013) When minor and major decisions all feel equally intense, the mental effort piles up and can be overwhelming.

Neurodivergent people want different things than their caregivers / parents

They want autonomy, and tools that support their autonomy and work with their brain. Families and caregivers were more focused on the external presentation of nervous system dysregulation, while Autistic / ADHD adults prioritized the internal stressors preceding and contributing to that dysregulation.

Autistic and ADHD adults found AI-powered decision support to be helpful

Responses from 44 beta users

found the app at least somewhat useful

said it helped them think about how actions affect wellness

thought the app’s suggestions were good

felt calm when using the app

The definition for “wellbeing” must include the capacity to carry out decisions

Traditional definitions of wellbeing haven’t worked for neurodivergent minds because they discount the fact that despite knowing what good decisions one should make, a lack of capacity (apraxia, fatigue) will lead to bad decisions being made despite having sufficient knowledge.

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