Litcius/Paper detail

*Co-Occurrence and Causality Among ADHD, Dyslexia, and Dyscalculia

Elsje van Bergen, Eveline L. de Zeeuw, Sara A. Hart, Dorret I. Boomsma, Eco J. C. de Geus, Kees‐Jan Kan

2025Psychological Science12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

ADHD, dyslexia, and dyscalculia often co-occur, and the underlying continuous traits are correlated (ADHD symptoms, reading, spelling, and math skills). This may be explained by trait-to-trait causal effects, shared genetic and environmental factors, or both. We studied a sample of ≤ 19,125 twin children and 2,150 siblings from the Netherlands Twin Register, assessed at ages 7 and 10. Children with a condition, compared to those without that condition, were 2.1 to 3.1 times more likely to have a second condition. Still, most children (77.3%) with ADHD, dyslexia, or dyscalculia had just one condition. Cross-lagged modeling suggested that reading causally influences spelling (β = 0.44). For all other trait combinations, cross-lagged modeling suggested that the trait correlations are attributable to genetic influences common to all traits, rather than causal influences. Thus, ADHD, dyslexia, and dyscalculia seem to co-occur because of correlated genetic risks, rather than causality.

Topics & Concepts

DyslexiaPsychologyDyscalculiaTraitSpellingDevelopmental psychologyTwin studyCausality (physics)Reading (process)Attention deficit hyperactivity disorderBiological theories of dyslexiaCognitive psychologyHeritabilityClinical psychologyDevelopmental dyslexiaGeneticsLinguisticsProgramming languagePhilosophyBiologyPhysicsComputer scienceQuantum mechanicsAttention Deficit Hyperactivity DisorderReading and Literacy DevelopmentCognitive Abilities and Testing