Not sure if this might be helpful—I asked an AI how to tell the difference between “smart, autistic, and ADHD” and “smart, autistic, but no ADHD”, and it gave me the following:
There are similarities between the two, because both autism and ADHD involve some executive dysfunction; social avoidance/exhaustion looks similar to ADHD avoidance; autistic burnout looks similar to ADHD inattention; being tired from masking looks similar to ADHD lack of focus; and high intelligence can mask both through compensation.
The differences:
Suppose that you need to read a boring technical book to understand something that is very important for you. Could you read it? (Autism only: if it is perfectly clear why the books is important, and you have a lot of time, and a quiet room only for yourself: yes. ADHD: sorry, after 10 minutes you will drop the book and go research something else.)
Do you lose hours of time without noticing? (Autism only: only when engaged with something interested. ADHD: yes, all the time.)
If you have a clear task, proper environment, and interest; can you start doing the task? (Autism only: usually yes. ADHD: probably no.)
Do you make major decisions on impulse—such as buy something expensive, quit your job, start a new project, start driving too fast—and then wonder “why did I do this”? (Autism only: no. ADHD: often.)
...I found this interesting, because I was operating under assumption that I have both autism and ADHD, but now it seems more like autism only. (Then again, this is AI, they like to hallucinate.)
Not sure if this might be helpful—I asked an AI how to tell the difference between “smart, autistic, and ADHD” and “smart, autistic, but no ADHD”, and it gave me the following:
There are similarities between the two, because both autism and ADHD involve some executive dysfunction; social avoidance/exhaustion looks similar to ADHD avoidance; autistic burnout looks similar to ADHD inattention; being tired from masking looks similar to ADHD lack of focus; and high intelligence can mask both through compensation.
The differences:
Suppose that you need to read a boring technical book to understand something that is very important for you. Could you read it? (Autism only: if it is perfectly clear why the books is important, and you have a lot of time, and a quiet room only for yourself: yes. ADHD: sorry, after 10 minutes you will drop the book and go research something else.)
Do you lose hours of time without noticing? (Autism only: only when engaged with something interested. ADHD: yes, all the time.)
If you have a clear task, proper environment, and interest; can you start doing the task? (Autism only: usually yes. ADHD: probably no.)
Do you make major decisions on impulse—such as buy something expensive, quit your job, start a new project, start driving too fast—and then wonder “why did I do this”? (Autism only: no. ADHD: often.)
...I found this interesting, because I was operating under assumption that I have both autism and ADHD, but now it seems more like autism only. (Then again, this is AI, they like to hallucinate.)