When Clumsiness Isn’t a Phase: What Parents Reveal About a Hidden Childhood Disability

“Clumsy” Isn’t Harmless: The Human Cost of a Hidden Diagnosis Many children are labeled “clumsy,” “messy,” or “uncoordinated,” and the assumption is that they’ll grow out of it. But for a significant group—about 5–6%—those motor challenges point to Developmental Coordination Disorder (DCD), a neurodevelopmental condition that shapes school, friendships, self-esteem, and family life. The research […]
Where We Look Shapes What We See: How Fixation Patterns Drive Face Processing in Autism

Why Eye Contact Feels Different—and What Fixations Reveal Eye contact is a social shortcut. With a glance, we gauge interest, trust, and intent. But for many autistic people, those few seconds can feel complicated—less like a shortcut and more like a traffic jam. A new research paper, Pattern of fixation explains atypical eye processing during […]
Three Quick Clues, One Big Decision: How Screening Tools Can Speed Up Adult Autism Assessments

When a Diagnosis Takes Years, Smart Triage Can Save Months Many adults wait months—or years—for a formal autism assessment, all while living with uncertainty, limited support, and stress in work and relationships. Clinics are overwhelmed by rising referrals, and clinicians must balance thoroughness with the reality of long queues. A new research paper, Investigating the […]
Parents on the Front Line of the SEND System: What Helps, What Hurts, and What Changes Lives

When Getting Help Becomes a Full-Time Job for Parents For many families in England, getting support for a child with special educational needs and disabilities (SEND) feels less like a service and more like a battle. The stakes are high: the right help can unlock learning, protect a child’s mental health, and make family life […]
Coping Beats Raw Brainpower: What Drives Grades for University Students in Southern Ethiopia

When Stress Management Outweighs Memory Tricks Grades are often treated like a scoreboard of intelligence, but this study suggests something far more practical: how students handle stress may be just as important as how quickly they process information. In the Psychosocial and cognitive predictors of academic achievement among higher education students in Southern Ethiopia, a […]
A Clearer Window into Mentalizing: Validating a French Tool for Clinics and Everyday Life

Why Seeing Others Clearly Begins with You Misunderstandings derail teams, strain families, and make therapy harder than it needs to be. At the heart of many of these struggles is mentalization—the capacity to make sense of our own thoughts and feelings and to grasp what might be going on in someone else’s mind. It’s a […]
From Coaching to Connection: How a Hong Kong Parent Program Transformed Caregivers and Relationships

When Helping Turns Into Connecting: Why This Study Matters Autism support often focuses on a child’s behavior—more words, fewer meltdowns, better eye contact. But behind every goal sheet is a parent trying to make daily life calmer and more connected. The research paper Caregiver transformation and relational growth in a parent-mediated intervention for autism in […]
When School Becomes a Battle: How Children’s Non-Attendance Reverberates Through Parents’ Minds and Homes

When School Stops, Life Doesn’t: The Hidden Toll on UK Parents Every school day missed by a child sends a ripple through family life. For many UK parents, those ripples turn into waves that are hard to manage. The research paper Exploring the experiences of having a child who regularly does not attend school on […]
Cutting Weight, Carrying Worry: Food, Mood, and Performance in Lebanon’s Taekwondo Elite

When the Fight Extends Beyond the Mat In weight-class sports, the scoreboard isn’t the only place athletes feel pressure. The scale can become a second opponent. That tension is at the heart of the research paper Mental health, eating disorder risk, and disordered eating patterns among Lebanese National Taekwondo Players: A cross-sectional study, which takes […]
When Movement Meets Focus What Brain Signals Reveal About Attention and Repetitive Behaviors

Why Small Repetitive Movements Could Matter for Big Moments of Focus What helps you lock onto the right thing at the right time? In daily life, this might look like quickly noticing a friend waving across a busy café or catching a hazard in traffic just in time. Psychologists call this ability spatial attention—shifting your […]