5. Neural and Computational Mechanisms: Sustained Firing, Salience Gating, and Short-Loop Reward
The shortened causal horizon hypothesis requires a mechanism explaining how delayed, abstract goals lose control over action while immediate stimuli gain control. The proposed mechanism has three interacting components. First, distal goals must be sustained across time by prefrontal and association-cortical activity. Second, irrelevant or lower-priority stimuli must be gated out so that the current task model remains protected. Third, action-selection and reward systems must decide whether to continue investing in a distal goal or switch toward a more immediate feedback loop. ADHD may involve altered coordination among all three processes: reduced persistence of distal goal representations, lower thresholds for salience-driven updating, and greater motivational control by immediate reinforcement.
This section develops the computational core of the theory. ADHD is not framed here as a global inability to attend, nor as a simple lack of motivation. It is framed as an altered temporal architecture of behavioral control. In this architecture, the future must be represented internally, while the present is supplied continuously by sensation, emotion, bodily state, social cues, and reward opportunities. Long-term planning requires the nervous system to protect internally maintained future representations from the constant pressure of immediate stimuli. ADHD may make that protection porous.
5.1 Sustained firing and the behavioral presence of absent goals
Long causal chains depend on the ability to represent something that is not currently present. A future grade, career goal, health outcome, publication, savings account, or social consequence cannot directly stimulate the senses. It must be maintained internally. This is one of the core functions of working memory and prefrontal control.
Persistent neural activity has long been treated as one of the major neural mechanisms supporting working memory. Reviews describe delay-period activity as a widely observed feature of working-memory tasks, while also emphasizing that such activity is distributed across brain systems rather than confined to one prefrontal storage site. In primate dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, neurons can show persistent firing during spatial working-memory delays, and work on NMDA receptor mechanisms indicates that recurrent excitation within prefrontal networks contributes to maintaining representations in the absence of sensory input.
For the present hypothesis, the crucial point is not that the prefrontal cortex stores all working-memory content. Rather, prefrontal and association networks help maintain the control state: the rule, goal, relevance frame, or future-oriented causal model that tells the organism what currently matters. In a long causal chain, the control state must survive without continuous environmental support. The individual must keep acting for the future even though the present supplies competing alternatives.
This leads to one of the central claims of the article:
Sustained prefrontal firing is the neural process by which absent future causes remain behaviorally present.
When sustained firing is strong, an absent goal can govern action across delay. When sustained firing is weak, unstable, or easily disrupted, the future loses behavioral force. The person may still understand the future consequence, but the future is not sufficiently active in the online control system to organize behavior.
This distinction is critical for ADHD. Many individuals with ADHD can explain why a long-term goal matters. They know that studying, saving, exercising, organizing, writing, or completing paperwork has value. The difficulty is that this knowledge does not remain active enough, long enough, or with enough motivational strength to dominate moment-to-moment action. In causal horizon terms, the distal goal is cognitively accessible but behaviorally fragile.
5.2 Catecholamines, stress, and the stability of prefrontal representations
Prefrontal networks are unusually sensitive to neurochemical state. Arnsten’s review of stress and prefrontal cortex emphasizes that PFC working-memory function depends on tuned persistent firing in recurrent networks, and that both insufficient and excessive dopamine or norepinephrine can impair PFC function. The same review argues that even mild uncontrollable stress can rapidly impair PFC function, reducing working-memory abilities while strengthening more primitive amygdala-linked emotional responses.
This matters for ADHD because ADHD treatments often target catecholamine systems. Stimulants and non-stimulants are commonly interpreted as improving ADHD symptoms by optimizing dopamine and norepinephrine signaling in circuits that support executive control. In the present framework, these treatments may help lengthen the causal horizon by stabilizing task-relevant representations. They make the distal goal more able to persist despite delay and distraction.
Stress pushes in the opposite direction. Under acute threat, it may be adaptive for the organism to stop relying on slow, internally sustained, prefrontal models and instead respond to immediate environmental cues. Arnsten’s stress model describes a switch from thoughtful PFC regulation toward amygdala-driven conditioned responses under stress. Reser’s chronic stress model makes a similar neuroecological argument: prolonged stress may reduce reliance on PFC and hippocampal systems while increasing reliance on amygdala and caudate systems, shifting cognition from explicit, top-down processing toward faster, implicit, bottom-up processing.
The ADHD hypothesis extends this logic developmentally. If stress can transiently destabilize prefrontal representations in ordinary cognition, then early stress may, in some genetically susceptible individuals, bias development toward a nervous system in which distal representations have a shorter representational half-life. This would not mean that the child is continuously in an acute stress state. It would mean that development has recalibrated the balance between prefrontal persistence and immediate updating.
5.3 State-spanning coactivity and long causal chains
A long causal chain is not represented in a single mental instant. It must span many successive states. Reser’s model of state-spanning coactivity proposes that sustained firing in association areas allows high-order representations to remain coactive across multiple perception-action cycles, enabling successive mental states to share overlapping content. The article introduces state-spanning coactivity as shared content between successive brain states and argues that incremental change in such coactivity allows continuity necessary for updating, modeling, and systemization.
This model provides a computational basis for the causal horizon. A distal goal controls behavior only if it remains partially coactive while perception, action, emotion, and thought continue to update. For example, writing a scientific article requires the thesis to persist while the writer chooses words, recalls literature, anticipates objections, responds to distractions, and revises sentences. The thesis does not need to occupy all of working memory, but it must remain active enough to shape what gets selected next.
ADHD may involve shortened or unstable causal state-spanning coactivity. The individual can activate the goal, but the goal does not remain coactive across enough successive states to govern a multi-step action sequence. The mental stream then becomes vulnerable to query drift. A new stimulus, thought, feeling, or reward cue enters working memory and begins to define the next state. The task goal has not been rejected; it has simply lost continuity.
This explains why ADHD often feels like a failure of intention. The intention is real when formed. The difficulty is that it does not remain sufficiently embedded in the next sequence of mental states. The current state no longer contains enough of the original goal to constrain the next update. The person is then pulled into a new action path, often by something more salient, more concrete, or more immediately rewarding.
5.4 Representational half-life and the need for external refresh
The concept of representational half-life captures how long a goal remains behaviorally potent after it is no longer externally supported. A goal with a long representational half-life can guide behavior through boredom, delay, and distraction. A goal with a short representational half-life decays quickly unless refreshed by external structure.
In ADHD, low-feedback distal goals may have short representational half-lives. This explains why external supports are often effective: written reminders, visible timers, checklists, body doubling, immediate rewards, deadlines, social accountability, and gamified feedback all refresh the task representation from outside. They compensate for weak internal persistence.
This also explains why ADHD performance can be highly context-dependent. A boring assignment requires internally sustained goal maintenance. A video game, emergency, competition, debate, or hands-on repair task supplies constant external refresh. Each action produces feedback. Each feedback event renews the task representation. Hyperfocus may occur when the environment performs the stabilizing function that the prefrontal control system otherwise has to perform internally.
Thus, hyperfocus is not an exception to ADHD. It is evidence that attention can be sustained when the causal chain is short, vivid, and continuously refreshed. The difficulty is not sustaining attention in all circumstances. The difficulty is sustaining attention when the task requires a distal, low-feedback, internally maintained control state.
5.5 Salience gating and signal detection
Sustaining a distal goal is only half the problem. The system must also prevent irrelevant or lower-priority stimuli from displacing the goal. This is the gating side of the causal horizon.
Reser’s earlier phenotypic-plasticity paper on schizophrenia develops an argument that sensory gating and habituation deficits can be interpreted through signal detection theory. In that framework, a lower threshold for environmental stimuli may reduce the probability of missing important signals, but it also increases false alarms, distractibility, and fragmentation. The present article does not equate ADHD with schizophrenia. Instead, it applies a milder version of the same logic: ADHD may involve lower-threshold salience updating, not psychotic sensory flooding.
A low salience gate means that more stimuli are treated as potentially relevant. These can include sounds, movements, bodily urges, emotional tones, social cues, reward cues, novel objects, worries, memories, and unrelated thoughts. In stable environments with clear task demands, this produces distractibility. In volatile environments where relevance is uncertain, it may reduce misses. The organism becomes harder to keep locked onto one abstract task, but easier to redirect toward a changing environment.
This is the second half of the central metaphor:
The world leaks in.
The future leaks out when distal goals decay. The world leaks in when proximal stimuli update working memory too easily. ADHD may involve both. The distal task representation is not strong enough to prevent intrusion, and the salience threshold is low enough that intrusion happens frequently.
This interpretation also helps explain the subjective experience of ADHD. Distraction does not always feel like random noise. It often feels like a series of compelling micro-relevances. The person notices something that seems important now: a sound, an object, a message, an idea, a memory, a bodily discomfort, an emotional cue. Each one has local salience. The problem is that local salience repeatedly defeats distal relevance.
5.6 Short-loop reward and action-feedback control
The third component is short-loop reward. ADHD is strongly associated with preference for immediate rewards over delayed rewards. A meta-analysis of monetary delay discounting found that individuals with ADHD discounted delayed rewards more steeply than controls, with a medium effect size across 21 independent investigations. Another meta-analysis comparing simple choice-delay and temporal-discounting paradigms found small-to-medium effects indicating that participants with ADHD more often chose smaller immediate rewards over larger delayed rewards.
The causal horizon model interprets this as more than impulsive choice. Delayed rewards are behaviorally difficult because they must be represented internally. They require a long action-outcome chain. Immediate rewards are easier because they are perceptually and emotionally available. They reinforce the current action without requiring extended causal persistence.
This helps refine the motivational theory of ADHD. ADHD is not best described as low motivation. Many individuals with ADHD show intense motivation under the right conditions. The issue is the structure of reinforcement. ADHD motivation is often strongest when reinforcement is immediate, frequent, concrete, causally transparent, emotionally meaningful, feedback-rich, novel, urgent, socially salient, or action-linked. Motivation is weakest when reinforcement is delayed, abstract, symbolic, low-feedback, institutionally mediated, or dependent on many intermediate steps.
In ecological terms, short-loop reward is not inherently maladaptive. In unstable environments, immediate feedback may be more reliable than delayed promises. If resources are uncertain, social conditions unstable, or threats frequent, it may be locally sensible to value what can be acted on now. The cost emerges when the environment demands investment in distant, symbolic outcomes.
5.7 Procrastination, hyperfocus, distractibility, and impulsivity
The three mechanisms just described can explain several major ADHD phenomena.
Procrastination occurs when a task remains embedded in a long causal chain until the deadline becomes close enough to collapse that chain. A distant deadline says: work now to avoid a future problem. An imminent deadline says: act now to avoid an immediate threat. The first requires internally sustained causal persistence. The second supplies urgency from the environment. The deadline becomes an artificial predator, converting distal causality into immediate causality.
Hyperfocus occurs when a task continuously refreshes the relevant representation. Games, emergencies, creative work, debate, coding, hands-on repair, athletic tasks, and emotionally meaningful projects can provide frequent feedback and strong salience. The ADHD brain does not need to sustain the entire chain internally because the environment keeps reactivating it.
Distractibility occurs when proximal affordances defeat distal goal representations. A sound, message, object, thought, or feeling enters working memory and becomes more behaviorally real than the original long-term task. The distraction wins because it is immediate, not because it is objectively more important.
Impulsivity occurs when action is selected before delayed consequences have been sustained long enough to inhibit the immediate response. The immediate affordance says “do it.” The distal model says “this will cause problems later.” If the distal model decays too quickly or is not strongly coactive, the immediate affordance wins.
Hyperactivity may reflect active sampling, arousal regulation, and the generation of feedback. Movement creates stimulation. It changes sensory input. It helps regulate state. It keeps the organism engaged with the environment. In a classroom, this is disruptive. In a volatile ecology, it may be useful.
Delay aversion reflects the affective side of shortened causal horizon. Waiting is difficult not only because reward is delayed, but because the action-outcome link becomes less vivid, less certain, and less reinforcing. The longer the chain, the more motivational force leaks out.
5.8 ADHD as altered updating rate
The shortened causal horizon can also be described in terms of updating rate. A stable long-term task requires slow, constrained updating. The current working-memory state must preserve enough of the prior state for the goal to remain dominant. A high-update mode replaces content more quickly. It is more responsive to new information, but less able to preserve long causal chains.
Reser’s state-spanning coactivity model argues that successive mental states overlap through sustained coactivity, and that the longer representations are sustained, the more successive states can share related content and support modeling, systemization, and thematic continuity. In ADHD, task-relevant overlap may be reduced during low-salience tasks. The mind updates too readily away from the distal goal.
This can be harmful in stable environments, where persistence matters. But it can be useful in volatile environments, where excessive stability produces perseveration. A high-update system may detect change quickly, leave depleted patches earlier, switch strategies faster, and avoid overcommitment to obsolete plans. The tradeoff is between persistence and responsiveness.
This gives ADHD a computational interpretation:
ADHD may involve a high-update, short-horizon control style in which working memory is more easily refreshed by immediate salience than stabilized by distal goals.
5.9 Integration: the collapse of long causal chains
The mechanisms described above converge on one central process: long causal chains lose effective control over action. Distal goals require sustained firing, state-spanning coactivity, salience gating, and reward systems willing to invest in delayed outcomes. If any of these processes weaken, the causal horizon shortens. If all shift together, the result resembles ADHD.
The future leaks out when prefrontal and associative representations decay too quickly. The world leaks in when salience gates admit too many immediate stimuli. Short-loop reward takes over when action-selection systems favor immediate feedback over distal outcome. The person is left with a mind that is highly responsive to the present but less governed by the absent future.
This is not simply a deficit. It is an information-processing tradeoff. A long causal horizon supports planning, restraint, symbolic achievement, institutional functioning, and delayed gratification. A short causal horizon supports rapid updating, movement, exploration, environmental sensitivity, opportunistic action, and short-loop learning. ADHD may involve a shift toward the latter. The cost is impairment in modern settings built around delayed reward and long institutional causal chains. The possible benefit is responsiveness in volatile, feedback-rich, or rapidly changing ecologies.
6. Evolutionary, Comparative, and Mismatch Evidence
The shortened causal horizon hypothesis is not proposed as a complete evolutionary explanation of ADHD. It is better understood as a neuroecological framework: ADHD-associated traits may reflect an altered balance between long-horizon, internally sustained control and short-horizon, environmentally refreshed control. The evolutionary question is whether this balance could have been useful under some ecological conditions, especially conditions involving volatility, resource patchiness, danger, social instability, or unreliable delayed rewards.
The answer is cautiously affirmative. Several lines of evidence suggest that ADHD-like traits can be beneficial in some environments, that stress can shift mammalian cognition toward short-horizon control, and that neural systems involved in memory, salience, action, and reward are shaped by ecological demands. But the evidence is not strong enough to conclude that ADHD as a whole is an adaptation. A more defensible claim is that ADHD may include traits produced by evolved, stress-sensitive reaction norms, some of which can become mismatched to modern institutional demands.
6.1 Prior evolutionary accounts of ADHD
Evolutionary accounts of ADHD have usually emphasized exploration, hunting, novelty seeking, risk taking, migration, or foraging. These theories are valuable because they treat ADHD traits as possible tradeoffs rather than only impairments. Distractibility may be reframed as broad environmental monitoring. Hyperactivity may be reframed as active sampling. Impulsivity may be reframed as rapid action under uncertainty. Delay aversion may be reframed as reduced investment in unreliable future outcomes.
The limitation is that many evolutionary accounts remain under-tested. A systematic review of natural-selection-based evolutionary accounts of ADHD found that few empirical studies directly tested such theories, and it concluded that these accounts remained largely hypothetical at the time of review. The authors also noted that the available studies often did not directly assess the core symptoms of ADHD.
The present hypothesis addresses this gap by proposing a specific mechanism. ADHD is not described as globally advantageous, nor as a simple hunter-gatherer remnant. Rather, it is framed as a shortened causal horizon produced by reduced persistence of distal goals, increased salience updating, and stronger control by immediate reinforcement. This mechanism can be tested in laboratory tasks, developmental studies, neuroimaging studies, and ecologically valid decision environments.
6.2 Foraging, patch leaving, and exploration
Foraging theory is especially relevant because it formalizes the tradeoff between exploiting a current resource and exploring for a better one. Many ADHD traits can be mapped onto this decision problem. Remaining with a depleted patch requires patience and continued exploitation. Leaving early requires exploration and sensitivity to declining reward rate. In a classroom, frequent switching looks like distractibility. In a patchy resource environment, it may be useful.
A 2024 online foraging study tested adults in a virtual berry-picking task. Participants with elevated ADHD self-report scores left resource patches sooner than others and achieved higher reward rates in the task. The authors interpreted the finding as evidence that ADHD attributes may confer foraging advantages in some environments, while emphasizing that the result does not prove ADHD is adaptive in general.
This finding fits the shortened causal horizon model. The ADHD-like participant may be less bound to the current patch, more sensitive to declining local returns, and more willing to update behavior when immediate feedback changes. In a stable task, this can look like excessive switching. In a depleting-patch task, it can improve performance.
However, this evidence must be used carefully. The study measured ADHD-like traits by self-report, not necessarily diagnosed ADHD. The task was artificial, not real-world foraging. It does not show that developmental stress produces ADHD, nor that all ADHD traits are adaptive. It supports a narrower claim: under some reward ecologies, especially those involving patch depletion and short-loop feedback, ADHD-like switching can be beneficial.
6.3 DRD4, nomadism, and gene-by-environment fit
The DRD4 literature offers another important example of environmental contingency. The 7-repeat allele of DRD4 has been discussed in relation to novelty seeking, migration, and ADHD-related traits, although the associations are complex and not deterministic. One study of Ariaal pastoralists in northern Kenya found that the DRD4 7R allele was associated with higher BMI among nomadic men but lower BMI among recently settled men. The same allele appeared beneficial in one ecological context and costly in another.
This finding is useful because it illustrates the kind of logic required for a serious adaptive account: the same biological tendency may have different consequences depending on the ecology. A trait linked to exploration, movement, or reward sensitivity may be useful when mobility and opportunity detection matter, but harmful when sedentary institutional demands dominate.
The causal horizon model generalizes this point. ADHD-like traits may not be adaptive or maladaptive in isolation. Their value depends on whether the environment rewards immediate updating, movement, exploration, and short-loop learning, or whether it punishes these in favor of stillness, delayed reward, and symbolic long-term compliance.
6.4 Stress-induced shifts from cognitive to habit learning
The strongest bridge between stress and ADHD is not evolutionary speculation. It is the empirical stress-learning literature. Stress can shift control away from hippocampus-dependent flexible cognition and toward striatum-dependent stimulus-response or habit learning. In a human neuroimaging study, acute stress increased stimulus-response learning, increased amygdala activity and amygdala-striatal connectivity, and the effect was mediated by mineralocorticoid receptor mechanisms.
A related study found that a mineralocorticoid receptor haplotype associated with enhanced receptor expression facilitated the stress-induced shift from hippocampal cognitive learning toward dorsal striatal habit learning. Under stress, carriers showed reduced hippocampal activity and increased caudate activation.
These findings are highly relevant. They show that stress can make ordinary human cognition more short-horizon, more stimulus-bound, and more reliant on immediate action-feedback systems. This resembles the direction proposed for ADHD: less dominance by flexible long-range modeling, more dominance by striatal and local reinforcement systems.
Reser’s chronic stress paper anticipated this neuroecological logic, arguing that stress can reduce reliance on prefrontal and hippocampal processing while increasing reliance on amygdala and caudate systems, thereby shifting cognition from explicit, controlled, top-down processing toward faster, implicit, bottom-up responding. The present ADHD hypothesis can be understood as a developmental extension of that state shift: early adversity may tune some individuals toward a trait-like version of stress-induced short-horizon processing.
6.5 Rodent models and developmental stress
Animal models provide another layer of plausibility. No animal model fully captures human ADHD, but several models reproduce components of the phenotype: hyperactivity, impulsive choice, reinforcement abnormalities, catecholamine differences, and response to stimulant medication.
The spontaneously hypertensive rat is one of the classic ADHD models and has been used because it exhibits ADHD-like features, including some forms of impulsivity and hyperactivity. Recent work continues to use SHR models to study attention, reward, and incentive-salience processes. Lphn3 knockout rats and SHR have also been compared in delay-discounting paradigms, showing how different genetic models can produce overlapping but not identical ADHD-like impulsive-choice profiles. Recent dopamine work comparing SHR and Lphn3 knockout rats found mesocorticolimbic dopamine differences in both models, but with regionally and mechanistically distinct profiles.
This heterogeneity is important. It supports the idea that ADHD is not one lesion or one pathway. It is a family of routes into a short-horizon phenotype. Some routes may be primarily genetic, some stress-linked, some reward-system based, some arousal based, and some shaped by gene-environment interaction.
Environmental enrichment provides the opposite side of the same argument. Enrichment improved cognitive deficits in SHR, a result the authors explicitly connected to gene-environment interaction in ADHD. This matters because a developmental-calibration model should predict environmental modulation. If adversity can bias development toward shorter horizons, then enrichment, predictability, stimulation, and structured feedback should sometimes push in the opposite direction or reduce impairment.
6.6 Neuroecology and hippocampal plasticity
Comparative neuroecology shows that memory systems are shaped by ecological demand. Food-storing birds provide a classic example. Studies of North American passerines found that food-storing families such as chickadees, nuthatches, and jays have larger hippocampal complexes than non-food-storing birds, consistent with the role of spatial memory in cache recovery. The authors interpreted this as convergent evolution shaped by natural selection for memory-dependent food caching.
Reviews of food-storing birds likewise describe enlarged hippocampal volume in scatter-hoarding species relative to non-hoarding or larder-hoarding species, and seasonal work shows that hippocampal size and neuronal recruitment can vary with food-storing activity and ecological context.
This evidence does not directly concern ADHD. Its value is conceptual. It demonstrates that neural systems involved in memory, space, and temporal context are not fixed capacities that simply increase or decrease in a vacuum. They can be shaped by niche demands. A brain that invests heavily in cache memory is adaptive in one ecology. A brain that invests less in long-range hippocampal context but more in rapid updating or action may be adaptive in another.
This supports the neuroecological premise of the ADHD hypothesis: neural differences should not automatically be interpreted as damage. Sometimes they reflect allocation. The question is not only “what is impaired?” but “what information-processing priority has changed, under what ecological conditions, and at what cost?”
6.7 Phenotypic plasticity, signal detection, and vigilance
Reser’s schizophrenia paper provides a broader framework for interpreting psychiatric traits through phenotypic plasticity. It argues that severe developmental adversity may program alternative phenotypes through stress-responsive mechanisms, producing costly but context-sensitive shifts in energy use, stress responsivity, vigilance, habituation, and behavioral inhibition.
The ADHD hypothesis uses a milder and more restricted version of that logic. ADHD is not equated with schizophrenia. Rather, both frameworks ask whether some traits labeled as deficits may be components of broader ecological tradeoffs. In schizophrenia, Reser emphasized habituation deficits and sensory gating through signal detection theory: a lower threshold for environmental stimuli may reduce misses, even though it increases false alarms and fragmentation.
For ADHD, the analogous claim is low-threshold salience updating. The child or adult with ADHD may be less able to ignore stimuli that are not relevant to the institutional task, but those stimuli may still be ecologically meaningful: movement, tone of voice, reward cues, novelty, social change, threat, opportunity, or internal association. The same gating style that harms classroom performance may improve monitoring in volatile environments.
This gives the theory a more general form:
ADHD may involve a low-gate, short-horizon mode of cognition.
Low gate means more stimuli are admitted as potentially relevant. Short horizon means delayed outcomes exert weaker control. Together, they produce a mind tuned toward immediate environmental and internal updating.
6.8 Modern mismatch: ecological causality versus institutional causality
The strongest evolutionary argument may not be that ADHD evolved as an advantage, but that modern institutions exaggerate its costs. ADHD may be mismatched to environments that demand long causal chains.
It is useful to distinguish ecological causality from institutional causality.
Ecological causality is immediate, concrete, embodied, and feedback-rich. A rustle in the grass, a change in someone’s tone, a tool’s resistance in the hand, an animal track, a depleting food patch, a nearby conflict, or a sudden opportunity all provide direct action-relevant information. The causal chain is short. Act now, receive feedback now, update now.
Institutional causality is delayed, abstract, symbolic, and socially mediated. Homework affects grades. Grades affect transcripts. Transcripts affect applications. Applications affect credentials. Credentials affect careers. Forms affect future access to benefits. Savings affect retirement decades later. These chains are real, but they are not perceptually present. They depend on trust in stable institutions and on sustained representation of distal outcomes.
ADHD may be especially costly in institutional environments because those environments require the individual to ignore immediate ecological causality in favor of long institutional causality. The student is asked to sit still in the present for a future that is years away. The worker is asked to complete paperwork whose consequences are abstract and delayed. The child is asked to inhibit movement, curiosity, and environmental monitoring for the sake of a symbolic task.
This is the central mismatch claim:
ADHD may reflect a mismatch between ecological causality and institutional causality.
The ADHD phenotype may be responsive to the kinds of causality that organisms encounter directly, but poorly suited to the delayed symbolic chains that modern institutions impose.
6.9 Genetics, selection, and the need for caution
The adaptive interpretation must be constrained by genetics. ADHD is highly polygenic, with common variants of small effect and rare variants contributing to risk. A major genetics review estimated ADHD heritability at approximately 74% and emphasized that much of ADHD’s liability reflects many common variants with small effects, alongside other genetic contributions.
Moreover, ancient-DNA analyses complicate a simple adaptive story. One study reported that the frequency of variants associated with ADHD has decreased since Paleolithic times and interpreted the results as evidence of long-standing selective pressures acting against ADHD-associated alleles, while also noting compatibility with mismatch theory.
This means the paper should not claim that ADHD was preserved because it was broadly advantageous. A more careful interpretation is needed. ADHD may involve a mixture of:
conditional adaptive tuning,
developmental calibration,
gene-environment interaction,
exaptation,
byproduct,
deleterious load,
modern mismatch,
and genuine pathology.
The theory does not require ADHD as a diagnostic category to have been positively selected. It only requires that the underlying systems are evolved, plastic, stress-sensitive systems that can be tuned toward different information-processing priorities. A shortened causal horizon could be locally useful in some contexts, harmful in others, and clinically impairing when expressed strongly or mismatched to institutional demands.
6.10 Summary
The evolutionary and comparative evidence supports a cautious version of the hypothesis. ADHD-like traits can sometimes improve performance in foraging-like environments. DRD4 findings suggest that trait-linked genetic variation can have different consequences in nomadic versus settled contexts. Stress can shift human and animal cognition from hippocampal, flexible control toward striatal stimulus-response learning. Rodent models show that ADHD-like behavior can arise through multiple biological pathways, including catecholamine and developmental stress pathways. Food-caching birds demonstrate that memory systems can be shaped by ecological demand. Reser’s prior work provides a framework for understanding stress-linked psychiatric traits as possible products of phenotypic plasticity and neuroecological recalibration.
The conclusion should remain careful. ADHD is not proven to be an adaptation, and natural-selection accounts remain under-tested. But the evidence is consistent with a more modest claim: ADHD-associated traits may sometimes reflect a coherent short-horizon information-processing tradeoff. In volatile environments, this tradeoff may support rapid updating, exploration, movement, salience detection, and short-loop learning. In modern institutions, the same tradeoff produces impairment because success depends on stillness, delayed reward, symbolic planning, and long causal chains.
7. Predictions, Tests, and Falsification Criteria
A useful hypothesis must make predictions that can be tested and, at least in principle, falsified. The shortened causal horizon hypothesis predicts that ADHD symptoms should not appear uniformly across all tasks or contexts. They should be strongest when the environment requires sustained representation of delayed, abstract, low-feedback goals, and weaker when the environment supplies immediate, concrete, emotionally meaningful, feedback-rich contingencies. It also predicts that developmental stress should not merely increase “impairment” in a nonspecific way. Rather, stress-linked ADHD profiles should show a distinctive pattern: stronger present-focus, steeper delay discounting, faster updating, greater salience capture, and greater dependence on immediate reinforcement.
The theory therefore generates predictions at several levels: behavioral, developmental, neural, stress-related, ecological, and clinical. These predictions distinguish the model from a simple deficit account. A pure deficit account predicts impairment broadly. A short-horizon tradeoff account predicts impairment under long-horizon task demands, but possible advantages under volatile, feedback-rich, patchy, or rapidly changing conditions.
7.1 Behavioral predictions: where ADHD impairment should be strongest
The hypothesis predicts that ADHD impairment should increase as tasks become longer, more abstract, less rewarding, and more dependent on internally sustained goal representations. Tasks should be especially difficult when they involve delayed rewards, weak feedback, unclear action-outcome mapping, low novelty, and many intermediate steps.
Examples include:
homework,
paperwork,
long lectures,
taxes,
budgeting,
slow bureaucratic processes,
manuscript preparation,
multi-step planning,
studying for distant exams,
saving money for future goals,
and maintaining routines whose benefits appear only after weeks or months.
These tasks are difficult not simply because they are boring, but because they require a distal causal chain to remain behaviorally active. The individual must keep representing a future benefit that is not perceptually present and not immediately reinforced. The theory predicts that ADHD symptoms should be especially pronounced when the task requires self-generated task context. That is, the individual must internally maintain the goal, the rule, the sequence, the rationale, and the delayed reward without sufficient external refresh.
By contrast, ADHD performance should improve when the same long-term goal is converted into shorter causal loops. For example, studying should become easier when broken into visible units with immediate feedback. Writing should become easier when progress is visible, goals are concrete, and the next action is clearly specified. Exercise should become easier when it is social, gamified, physically engaging, or immediately rewarding. Administrative tasks should become easier when the environment supplies reminders, checklists, deadlines, accountability, and rapid confirmation.
The theory therefore predicts that ADHD impairment is strongly related to the causal structure of the task. The critical variable is not merely task duration. A video game can last for hours but remain engaging because it supplies continuous action-feedback-reward loops. A form may take only fifteen minutes but become difficult because its reward is delayed, abstract, and institutionally mediated.
This is a key testable prediction:
ADHD impairment should track causal-chain length, feedback density, and reward immediacy more strongly than task duration alone.
7.2 Reward timing and delay-discounting predictions
The shortened causal horizon hypothesis predicts that individuals with ADHD should show steeper discounting of delayed rewards, especially when those rewards are abstract, symbolic, probabilistic, or dependent on many intermediate steps. This is consistent with meta-analytic evidence that ADHD is associated with steeper monetary delay discounting and greater preference for smaller immediate rewards over larger delayed rewards. The present hypothesis extends this finding by arguing that ADHD involves not only delay discounting, but causal chain discounting.
Causal chain discounting means that outcomes lose motivational force not only as they become more delayed in time, but also as they become more inferentially distant. A reward may be delayed by only a short period but still be psychologically distant if it depends on multiple steps, social mediation, institutional approval, or abstract symbolic value.
For example:
finish form → office processes request → account changes later → future benefit
This is a long causal chain even if the first step is short. By contrast:
move joystick → see effect → earn point → adjust action
This is a short causal chain even if the task continues for hours.
The theory predicts that ADHD participants should show stronger motivation when delayed rewards are made causally transparent. If the chain from action to outcome is visualized, shortened, emotionally framed, or broken into immediate sub-rewards, ADHD performance should improve. This is not merely because the reward is larger. It is because the causal relation becomes more behaviorally real.
A useful experimental design would compare four conditions:
- immediate reward with clear feedback,
- delayed reward with clear causal mapping,
- delayed reward with ambiguous causal mapping,
- delayed reward embedded in a multi-step institutional chain.
The hypothesis predicts that ADHD impairment will be greatest in the fourth condition and least in the first. It also predicts that making delayed rewards more visible and causally transparent will reduce ADHD-related performance gaps.
7.3 Predictions about procrastination and urgency
The model predicts that procrastination in ADHD is not simply failure of willpower. It is a consequence of causal horizon shortening. A distant deadline requires the person to act under the influence of a future consequence. An imminent deadline collapses the causal chain and turns the future into an immediate threat.
Thus, the theory predicts that ADHD individuals should show a strong increase in task engagement as deadlines approach, especially when the deadline becomes emotionally salient or socially consequential. This increase should be accompanied by increased arousal, narrower focus, and improved short-term mobilization. The deadline functions as an external mechanism for making the distal goal present.
This also predicts a cost. If ADHD individuals repeatedly rely on urgency to activate long-term tasks, they may learn to use stress as a cognitive prosthetic. This can improve short-term performance while increasing chronic stress, sleep disruption, emotional exhaustion, and avoidance. Over time, the person becomes dependent on acute stress to restore causal persistence.
A testable prediction follows:
ADHD-related procrastination should be reduced when distant deadlines are converted into frequent proximal deadlines with immediate feedback and meaningful accountability.
The theory further predicts that arbitrary deadlines will be less effective than deadlines tied to visible consequences, social accountability, or emotionally meaningful goals. The issue is not time pressure alone. It is whether the deadline shortens the causal chain.
7.4 Predictions about hyperfocus
Hyperfocus is often treated as paradoxical because ADHD is defined by inattention. The shortened causal horizon hypothesis predicts that hyperfocus should occur when the task environment continuously refreshes the relevant representation.
Tasks that produce hyperfocus should tend to have one or more of the following features:
immediate feedback,
visible progress,
emotional meaning,
novelty,
uncertainty,
competition,
social salience,
urgency,
embodied action,
or rapid correction of errors.
In such tasks, the individual does not need to sustain the entire goal internally. The environment keeps reactivating it. A game, emergency, debate, creative project, or technical problem supplies repeated cues that maintain the task state.
The hypothesis predicts that hyperfocus should be less common in tasks that are important but low-feedback, such as long-term paperwork, passive studying, or abstract planning. It should be more common in tasks where the causal chain is short and the next action matters immediately.
This leads to a useful distinction:
ADHD is not a failure of sustained attention in all contexts. It is a difficulty sustaining attention when the task requires internally maintained distal causality rather than externally refreshed immediate causality.
7.5 Developmental predictions: stress-linked ADHD profiles
The developmental version of the hypothesis predicts that prenatal stress, early-life adversity, chronic unpredictability, low controllability, or severe deprivation should not merely increase ADHD symptoms in general. They should bias specific dimensions of ADHD-like behavior:
steeper delay discounting,
greater immediate reward preference,
reduced tolerance for low-feedback tasks,
stronger salience capture,
greater emotional reactivity,
greater impulsive action,
and stronger reliance on external structure.
These effects should be strongest in children with genetic liability for ADHD or related externalizing traits. The model predicts gene-by-environment interaction rather than simple environmental causation. Developmental stress may amplify, canalize, or reveal ADHD liability by tuning reward, arousal, prefrontal control, and salience systems toward short-horizon processing.
The theory also predicts that severe, objective, cumulative, or deprivation-based stressors should be more informative than mild self-reported stress. This follows from the developmental-stress literature: severe adversity and institutional deprivation show stronger evidence for ADHD-like outcomes than ordinary prenatal stress, which is more vulnerable to familial and genetic confounding.
A particularly useful future design would combine:
polygenic risk scores,
prenatal and early-life adversity measures,
objective stress exposures,
longitudinal ADHD symptom tracking,
delay discounting,
reward-timing tasks,
working-memory persistence measures,
and ecological decision tasks.
The model predicts that the strongest short-horizon phenotype will appear in individuals with both genetic liability and developmental adversity.
7.6 Timing and sex predictions
The hypothesis predicts that developmental timing matters because different stress exposures affect different neural systems at different stages. Prenatal stress may affect placental function, fetal glucocorticoid exposure, catecholamine systems, and early brain patterning. Infant adversity may affect attachment, arousal regulation, threat learning, and caregiver-dependent regulation. Early childhood unpredictability may affect reward learning, prefrontal development, and expectations about environmental reliability.
The theory predicts that different timing windows may bias different ADHD dimensions. For example:
prenatal stress may influence arousal systems, catecholamine regulation, and broad neurodevelopmental vulnerability;
infancy stress may influence stress reactivity, salience thresholds, and attachment-related regulation;
early childhood unpredictability may influence delay tolerance, reward learning, and causal confidence;
middle childhood adversity may increase externalizing, impulsive action, and reliance on immediate reinforcement.
Sex differences should also be expected. The theory predicts that boys and girls may show different expressions of short-horizon calibration, partly because ADHD presentation and diagnosis differ by sex. Boys may be more likely to show disruptive hyperactivity and externalizing behavior, while girls may be more likely to show inattentive symptoms, internal salience capture, emotional dysregulation, or underrecognized impairment. This is not a claim that the mechanism is sex-specific, but that the behavioral expression of a shortened causal horizon may differ by developmental and social context.
A useful prediction is:
Stress-linked causal horizon shortening may appear as externalized action capture in some children and internalized attentional capture in others.
In hyperactive-impulsive presentations, immediate causality may capture movement and action. In inattentive presentations, immediate causality may capture thought, fantasy, worry, associative drift, or internal novelty.
7.7 Neural predictions: prefrontal persistence and salience updating
The neural version of the hypothesis predicts that ADHD should involve reduced stability of task-relevant prefrontal and frontoparietal representations during low-feedback, delayed-reward, or abstract tasks. It also predicts increased updating by salient internal or external stimuli.
A strong test would use fMRI, EEG, MEG, or computational modeling to measure the stability of task representations across time. The model predicts that ADHD participants should show faster decay or greater instability of task-relevant neural patterns during delay periods, especially when reward is delayed and feedback is sparse. When feedback is immediate, emotional, or frequent, group differences should decrease.
The theory also predicts that interventions that improve ADHD symptoms should increase the stability of task-relevant representations. These interventions could include stimulant medication, non-stimulant medication, immediate reward, external reminders, emotionally meaningful framing, visible progress, or urgency.
Possible neural predictions include:
reduced representational stability in PFC during low-feedback tasks;
weaker maintenance of task rules across delay;
greater intrusion of default-mode activity during long-horizon tasks;
greater salience-network reactivity to task-irrelevant stimuli;
stronger striatal response to immediate reward than delayed reward;
and improved task-network stability when reinforcement is immediate or external structure is provided.
The hypothesis also predicts stress effects in non-ADHD individuals. Acute stress should temporarily push neurotypical participants toward a more ADHD-like short-horizon mode: weaker working-memory maintenance, stronger salience capture, greater reliance on immediate feedback, and increased use of striatal stimulus-response strategies. This prediction follows directly from the stress-neuroecology framework, which argues that stress shifts cognition away from prefrontal and hippocampal top-down processing and toward amygdala and caudate systems.
7.8 Ecological performance predictions
The adaptive component of the hypothesis requires more than evidence of impairment. It predicts selective advantages in environments where short-horizon cognition is useful.
ADHD traits should sometimes improve performance in tasks involving:
patch depletion,
foraging-like search,
rapid opportunity detection,
volatile reward schedules,
reversal learning,
active exploration,
short-loop feedback,
threat detection,
social-salience monitoring,
and environments where overcommitment to a stable plan is costly.
The theory does not predict that ADHD individuals will outperform controls in all such tasks. The prediction is more specific: ADHD traits should confer advantages when the environment rewards fast updating, frequent switching, immediate feedback, and sensitivity to changing local contingencies.
This distinction matters. In a stable environment, excessive switching is costly. In a volatile environment, excessive persistence is costly. The shortened causal horizon hypothesis predicts that ADHD should be most costly in stable, low-feedback, delayed-reward environments and most potentially useful in volatile, feedback-rich environments.
A decisive test would compare ADHD and non-ADHD participants across matched environments:
stable reward environment,
volatile reward environment,
depleting-patch environment,
delayed-reward institutional task,
immediate-feedback action task.
The theory predicts that ADHD impairment will be largest in the delayed-reward institutional task and smallest, or possibly reversed, in volatile or patchy tasks.
7.9 Intervention predictions: lengthening the causal horizon
The hypothesis predicts that effective ADHD interventions should work partly by lengthening the causal horizon or externally supporting it.
Interventions should be most effective when they:
make the future visible,
make progress concrete,
shorten feedback loops,
increase causal transparency,
externalize working memory,
create immediate reinforcement,
provide social accountability,
reduce chronic background stress,
allow movement,
and convert long projects into short action-feedback cycles.
For example, a vague instruction such as “work on your paper” is a long causal chain. A causally supported version would be:
write one paragraph,
check it off,
receive immediate feedback,
see visible progress,
connect the paragraph to the paper’s thesis,
and receive a short reward.
The theory predicts that such restructuring should reduce impairment more than general encouragement or moral exhortation. It also predicts that shame-based approaches should worsen symptoms because shame increases stress, narrows flexibility, and may further destabilize prefrontal control.
Medication can also be interpreted within this framework. Stimulant and non-stimulant treatments may help stabilize prefrontal representations, reduce noise, improve salience filtering, and make distal goals more behaviorally present. The theory predicts that medication effects should be especially visible in tasks requiring sustained goal representation across delay and distraction.
7.10 Falsification criteria
The shortened causal horizon hypothesis is falsifiable. Several findings would weaken or disconfirm it.
First, the hypothesis would be weakened if ADHD neural findings were shown to be entirely diffuse, nonspecific, or unrelated to systems that regulate goal persistence, temporal context, reward timing, salience filtering, or action selection. The model depends on the claim that ADHD-relevant systems form a coherent information-processing package. If future imaging and computational work showed no meaningful convergence on these systems, the theory would lose force.
Second, the hypothesis would be weakened if stress and ADHD were found to affect the relevant systems in opposite directions. The theory predicts overlap between stress-induced state changes and ADHD-like trait patterns: reduced prefrontal persistence, weaker hippocampal or goal-directed control, increased salience capture, and greater striatal or immediate-reward influence. If better evidence showed that stress reliably produces a neural pattern unrelated or contrary to ADHD, the stress-calibration model would need revision.
Third, the developmental version would be weakened if associations between prenatal stress, early adversity, unpredictability, and ADHD-like short-horizon traits disappeared completely under genetically informed designs. The model does not require stress to cause all ADHD, but it does require that developmental adversity sometimes calibrates or amplifies short-horizon traits. If all such associations were explained by familial confounding, the developmental-calibration component would be substantially weakened.
Fourth, the adaptive component would be weakened if ADHD traits never produced advantages in volatile, feedback-rich, patchy, or rapidly changing tasks. A pure impairment profile across all environments would favor pathology or deleterious-load explanations over tradeoff explanations. The theory predicts selective benefits, not global benefits.
Fifth, the hypothesis would be weakened if immediate reinforcement sensitivity and delay discounting were shown to be peripheral to ADHD rather than central. The causal horizon framework depends on the idea that delayed, abstract outcomes lose control while immediate, feedback-rich outcomes gain control. If this pattern were not robust, the theory would require major revision.
Sixth, the HPA-axis and stress-recalibration component would be weakened if stress physiology in ADHD proved unrelated to developmental history, comorbidity, subtype, or reward-control systems. The theory does not require high cortisol, but it does require meaningful stress-system involvement or stress-sensitive modulation of causal horizon.
Seventh, the evolutionary framing would be weakened if genetic and longitudinal evidence pointed only to deleterious load, developmental injury, or broad dysfunction with no evidence of context-dependent tradeoffs, plasticity, or ecological fit. Existing evidence already requires caution here. The theory should not be defended as a simple adaptation unless future data support context-specific advantages.
7.11 What would strengthen the hypothesis
The strongest support would come from studies that connect developmental stress, neural calibration, behavioral short-horizon traits, and ecological performance in the same individuals.
An ideal study would follow children longitudinally from prenatal or early postnatal life, measure genetic liability, adversity, unpredictability, stress physiology, PFC and striatal function, delay discounting, salience capture, ADHD symptoms, and performance across stable versus volatile environments.
The model would be strongly supported if such studies found that:
developmental adversity plus ADHD genetic liability predicts shortened causal horizon;
shortened causal horizon predicts ADHD symptoms;
prefrontal persistence and salience updating mediate this relationship;
immediate reinforcement and external structure reduce impairment;
stress-linked ADHD profiles perform better in volatile or patchy tasks than in stable institutional tasks;
and these effects remain after controlling for SES, IQ, sleep, trauma symptoms, parental ADHD, comorbidity, and medication.
This would show that ADHD-like traits are not merely symptoms of damage, nor simply inherited deficits, but part of a stress-sensitive developmental pattern with both costs and context-dependent benefits.
7.12 Summary
The shortened causal horizon hypothesis makes a clear set of predictions. ADHD impairment should be strongest when behavior depends on delayed, abstract, low-feedback, multi-step outcomes. ADHD performance should improve when the environment supplies immediate feedback, visible progress, emotional meaning, movement, urgency, and external structure. Developmental stress should amplify short-horizon traits in genetically susceptible individuals. Neural evidence should show reduced stability of distal task representations and greater salience-driven updating. Ecological tests should reveal selective advantages under volatile, patchy, or rapidly changing conditions.
The theory can also be falsified. It would fail if ADHD showed no coherent relationship to temporal control, reward timing, salience updating, stress-sensitive neural systems, or environmental fit. It would also fail if ADHD traits conferred no context-dependent advantages under any ecologically relevant conditions.
The purpose of these predictions is to make the hypothesis scientifically productive. The article does not claim that ADHD is simply adaptive. It proposes a testable tradeoff: when the causal horizon shortens, the future loses control, the present gains power, and behavior becomes more responsive to immediate ecological contingencies.
8. Implications, Limitations, and Conclusion
The shortened causal horizon hypothesis has practical implications, but these implications should be stated carefully. The model does not imply that ADHD is merely a bad fit with school, that support should replace treatment, or that impairment is socially constructed. ADHD is associated with real functional costs, and genetic research indicates that it is highly heritable, with one major review estimating heritability at approximately 74%. The present hypothesis instead suggests that some ADHD-related impairments may become more understandable when viewed as failures of long causal chain control: distal goals lose behavioral force, while immediate contingencies become disproportionately powerful.
8.1 Clinical implications: lengthening the causal horizon
If ADHD involves a shortened causal horizon, then treatment should not be conceptualized only as “increasing attention.” It should also aim to lengthen the causal horizon. This means helping future consequences remain psychologically real, emotionally salient, and behavior-guiding long enough to organize action.
Several intervention principles follow from this framing.
First, working memory should be externalized. Written plans, visible reminders, checklists, calendars, alarms, whiteboards, and structured routines can help preserve task context when internal representations decay too quickly. These tools do not merely compensate for forgetfulness. They keep distal goals perceptually available.
Second, long tasks should be converted into short action-feedback loops. A vague goal such as “write the paper” leaves the person dependent on a long causal chain. A better structure is: write one paragraph, see visible progress, receive feedback, mark completion, and connect the paragraph to the larger argument. Each short loop refreshes the distal goal.
Third, reinforcement should be made immediate, concrete, and meaningful. ADHD motivation is often strongest when the action-outcome relation is clear and close in time. This does not mean that individuals with ADHD are incapable of caring about the future. It means that the future often needs to be made present through feedback, visibility, emotion, accountability, or reward.
Fourth, interventions should reduce background stress. Chronic stress can weaken prefrontal control and increase reliance on bottom-up, salience-driven, and habitual systems. Reser’s chronic stress model argues that prolonged stress shifts cognition away from time-intensive, explicit, top-down processing and toward faster, implicit, bottom-up processing. If ADHD already involves shortened causal control, stress may further shorten the horizon.
Fifth, shame should be avoided as a motivational strategy. Shame may produce temporary urgency, but it also increases stress, avoidance, and emotional dysregulation. From the causal horizon perspective, shame is a crude and costly way of making the future feel immediate. Better supports make goals visible, meaningful, and tractable without adding threat.
Medication can also be interpreted within this framework. Stimulant and non-stimulant treatments may help stabilize prefrontal control states, improve signal-to-noise, reduce excessive updating, and make distal goals more behaviorally present. This does not reduce medication to one mechanism, but it suggests a useful conceptual frame: medication may help the individual hold the future online.
8.2 Educational implications: designing environments for causal transparency
Modern educational environments often require children to act for consequences that are delayed, symbolic, and institutionally mediated. A child is asked to complete assignments because they affect grades, transcripts, future educational opportunities, and eventual adult outcomes. These chains are real, but they are long, abstract, and often emotionally weak.
The shortened causal horizon hypothesis suggests that many ADHD accommodations work because they improve causal transparency. They make the link between action and outcome shorter, clearer, and more visible.
This includes:
shorter task segments,
immediate feedback,
visible progress markers,
movement breaks,
gamified learning,
frequent check-ins,
social accountability,
emotionally meaningful framing,
and concrete subgoals.
Such interventions are sometimes treated as superficial behavioral supports. In this framework, they are more fundamental. They alter the causal structure of the task. They convert long institutional causality into shorter ecological causality.
This also helps explain why children with ADHD may perform better in hands-on, interactive, socially engaging, or high-feedback learning environments than in passive, delayed-reward environments. The difference is not simply “interest.” It is whether the task continuously refreshes its own relevance.
8.3 Implications for self-understanding
The model may also help reduce moralized interpretations of ADHD. Many people with ADHD report knowing what they should do while still being unable to do it consistently. The causal horizon framework explains this distinction.
The problem is not necessarily lack of knowledge, lack of values, or lack of concern. It may be that distal goals are not sufficiently sustained across working-memory states, while proximal stimuli and short-loop rewards are repeatedly refreshed by the environment. The future is understood, but it is not behaviorally present.
This reframing can support more compassionate self-management. Instead of asking, “Why can’t I just care about the future?” the individual can ask, “How can I make the future more present?” This shifts the emphasis from self-blame to environmental design.
8.4 Implications for research and subtype identification
The hypothesis suggests that ADHD may not be one uniform condition. It may include multiple pathways into overlapping behavioral symptoms. Some cases may be more strongly driven by inherited neurodevelopmental liability. Some may be shaped by early adversity or deprivation. Some may involve sleep, trauma, emotional dysregulation, sensory processing, or comorbid externalizing problems. Some may involve especially strong short-loop reinforcement sensitivity.
Future research should therefore look for a stress-linked short-horizon subtype or dimension, rather than assuming that all ADHD has the same developmental origin. The most informative studies would combine genetic liability, prenatal and early-life stress measures, objective adversity indicators, reward-timing tasks, prefrontal persistence measures, salience updating measures, HPA-axis function, and ecologically valid task performance.
A particularly important test would be whether stress-linked ADHD profiles show selective strengths in volatile, feedback-rich, or patchy environments. Without evidence of context-specific benefit, the adaptive component of the theory remains speculative.
8.5 Limitations of the hypothesis
The limitations are substantial.
First, ADHD is highly heterogeneous. The diagnosis includes inattentive, hyperactive-impulsive, and combined presentations, and the same symptom profile may arise from different developmental pathways. The shortened causal horizon may be a dimension within ADHD rather than the essence of ADHD as a whole.
Second, the model should not be interpreted as a simple stress-causation theory. Developmental stress is associated with ADHD symptoms, but familial and genetic confounding are major concerns. Many parents exposed to stress also carry genetic liability for ADHD, depression, anxiety, impulsivity, or emotional dysregulation. Thus, stress may sometimes cause, sometimes amplify, sometimes reveal, and sometimes merely correlate with ADHD liability.
Third, cortisol findings do not support a simple high-cortisol account. A recent systematic review and meta-analysis reported hypocortisolemia in children with ADHD, with the strongest cortisol reduction in the hyperactive-impulsive subtype, while ACTH, cortisol awakening response, and hair cortisol were not clearly altered. The theory must therefore emphasize stress-system recalibration rather than chronic hypercortisolism.
Fourth, the evolutionary evidence remains limited. A systematic review of natural-selection-based evolutionary accounts of ADHD found that very few empirical studies had directly tested such accounts and concluded that these theories remained hypothetical. The present article therefore should not claim that ADHD has been proven adaptive. It should claim that ADHD-like traits may sometimes reflect context-sensitive tradeoffs produced by evolved, plastic, stress-sensitive systems.
Fifth, ADHD is associated with serious impairment and adverse outcomes. Evolutionary interpretations must not romanticize those costs. The same systematic review noted the challenge posed by ADHD’s impairment, morbidity, and increased mortality for simple adaptive accounts. Long-term cohort research has also linked childhood ADHD or subthreshold symptoms to increased mortality risk across follow-up. These realities are compatible with mismatch and tradeoff models, but they argue strongly against describing ADHD as globally beneficial.
Sixth, novelty seeking is not always a straightforward consequence of adversity. Stress and unpredictability can sometimes increase exploration, but they can also produce caution, habit, familiarity seeking, or threat avoidance. The model should therefore emphasize short-horizon updating and immediate reinforcement rather than assuming generalized novelty seeking in all stress-linked ADHD profiles.
Seventh, direct evidence for reduced prefrontal sustained firing in human ADHD is indirect. Human studies rely mostly on behavior, neuroimaging, EEG, pharmacology, and computational inference rather than single-neuron recordings. The sustained-firing account is mechanistically plausible, but it remains an inference.
8.6 Avoiding teleology
The model should avoid saying that genes “intend” to create ADHD. Genes do not intend, and brain systems do not consciously choose to shorten the causal horizon. The appropriate framework is evolved reaction norms, phenotypic plasticity, gene-by-environment interaction, developmental calibration, and ecological mismatch.
Reser’s schizophrenia paper provides a useful precedent for this type of argument. It framed severe psychiatric traits through phenotypic plasticity and predictive adaptive response theory, while emphasizing that costly traits may sometimes arise from environmental cues that alter developmental trajectories. The ADHD hypothesis is more modest. It does not claim that ADHD is one adaptive phenotype. It claims that some ADHD-like traits may emerge when stress-sensitive systems calibrate toward shorter temporal horizons.
The strongest wording is therefore:
ADHD may involve conditionally expressed, genetically mediated, developmentally inducible alterations in information-processing priorities.
This avoids literal intentionality while preserving the possibility of evolutionary coherence.
8.7 Conclusion
ADHD is usually described in terms of inattention, impulsivity, and hyperactivity. This article has proposed that these symptoms may share a deeper structure: a shortened causal horizon. In this phenotype, delayed, abstract, multi-step outcomes lose behavioral force, while immediate, concrete, emotionally meaningful, feedback-rich contingencies gain control.
The central mechanism is two-sided. The future leaks out when distal goals are not sustained strongly enough across successive mental states. The world leaks in when immediate stimuli, internal associations, emotional cues, bodily urges, and reward opportunities are not gated out aggressively enough. Together, these processes make behavior more responsive to the present than to the absent future.
Developmental stress may contribute to this phenotype in some individuals. Prenatal stress, severe maternal trauma, early deprivation, ACEs, and chronic unpredictability may signal that long causal chains are unreliable and that immediate cues carry high ecological value. In genetically susceptible children, these cues may bias neurodevelopment toward a short-horizon, high-update, feedback-dependent style of cognition.
This framework does not deny impairment. ADHD can be disabling, and its costs in modern society are substantial. Nor does it claim that ADHD is simply caused by stress or that ADHD is universally adaptive. Rather, it proposes a mixed model: ADHD may include conditional adaptive tuning, developmental calibration, exaptation, byproduct, pathology, and mismatch in different proportions across individuals.
The neuroecological value of the model is that it changes the question. Instead of asking only what is deficient, it asks what information-processing priority has changed. A long causal horizon supports planning, restraint, symbolic achievement, delayed gratification, and institutional success. A short causal horizon supports rapid updating, movement, exploration, salience detection, short-loop learning, and opportunistic action. ADHD may reflect a shift toward the second style.
In volatile environments, that shift may sometimes be useful. In classrooms, offices, bureaucracies, and long institutional chains, it becomes impairing.
The central conclusion is therefore:
ADHD may not be best understood only as a deficit of attention, nor as a simple evolutionary advantage. It may be a family of neurodevelopmental outcomes in which genetic liability and developmental cues alter the balance between long-horizon prefrontal-hippocampal control and short-horizon salience, striatal, motor, and reward systems. When this balance shifts toward immediate updating, the causal horizon shortens: distal goals lose behavioral force, immediate stimuli gain leverage, and behavior becomes organized around short-loop ecological causality.
Long-term planning requires the mind to protect an absent future from the pressure of the present. ADHD makes that protection porous.