Author: Fabiano de Abreu Agrela Rodrigues
ABSTRACT
Objective: To develop an operational model for quantitative correction of IQ estimates under the interference of situational anxiety, Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD), and Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD). *Methods:* An integrative analysis of neuropsychological and neurofunctional studies on cognitive performance under specific neuropsychiatric conditions, with a focus on the fronto-parietal network and its modulations. *Results:* A quantitative adjustment of 3-12 points for anxiety (mild-to-severe gradient), an average of 8 points for ADHD due to executive variability, 6 points for ASD due to attentional rigidity, and 10 points for twice-exceptionality is proposed. *Conclusion:* The model offers clinically calibratable operational parameters to approximate true cognitive potential in standardized assessment contexts.
Keywords: intelligence, neuropsychology, anxiety, autism, ADHD, cognitive assessment
INTRODUCTION
Psychometric measurement of intelligence through standardized batteries such as WAIS-IV and Stanford-Binet-5 presupposes ideal testing conditions that often do not reflect clinical reality. Neuropsychiatric interferences can mask true cognitive potential, leading to systematic underestimations in populations with situational anxiety, ASD, or ADHD.
The parieto-frontal theory of intelligence states that performance on reasoning tasks depends on the efficient integration between the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, superior parietal lobule, and intraparietal sulcus (Huang et al., 2022). This neural network is particularly vulnerable to attentional and affective interferences, justifying the need for specific corrective models.
The present study proposes a quantitative correction operational model based on neuroscientific evidence about attentional costs, autonomic hyperactivation, and cognitive rigidity in prevalent neuropsychiatric conditions.
NEUROBIOLOGICAL FOUNDATION
Neural Substrates of IQ Tests
The execution of standardized psychometric batteries recruits a distributed set of brain subregions. The executive axis involves the dorsolateral and ventrolateral prefrontal cortex, anterior cingulate cortex, supplementary motor area, and frontal eye fields. The parietal axis includes the superior parietal lobule, intraparietal sulcus, and angular and supramarginal gyri for calculation and mental rotation. The verbal axis activates the left inferior frontal gyrus and superior and middle temporal gyri, with semantic support from the temporal pole. Subcortical structures include the hippocampus for encoding/retrieval, mediodorsal thalamus for attentional selection, basal ganglia for sequencing, and cerebellum for motor timing (Huang et al., 2022).
Interferences from Situational Anxiety
Situational anxiety during testing generates amygdala hyperactivation, leading to dysregulation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis. Elevated cortisol interferes with working memory consolidation mediated by the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex. Autonomic hyperactivation reduces processing speed due to attentional competition between cognitive processing and threat monitoring. Functional neuroimaging demonstrates reduced fronto-parietal connectivity under acute stress, with specific degradation of the executive attentional network (Melby et al., 2020).
Neurocognitive Profile in ADHD
ADHD is characterized by hypofunction of the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex and anterior cingulate cortex, with reduced availability of dopamine and norepinephrine in fronto-striatal synapses. Intra-subject variability in performance reflects lapses in executive control mediated by oscillations of the attentional network. Genomic studies reveal an inverse overlap between risk polymorphisms for ADHD and intelligence, explaining the average 8-point reduction observed in clinical samples (Clarke et al., 2016).
Neural Substrate in ASD
ASD presents local hyperconnectivity with inter-hemispheric hypoconnectivity, leading to fragmented information processing. Attentional rigidity results from hyperfunction of the anterior cingulate cortex with difficulty in cognitive set-shifting. In twice-exceptionality (ASD + giftedness), a summation of attentional noise with affective overload is observed, amplifying the adaptive cost during formal assessments (Stephenson et al., 2023).
OPERATIONAL CORRECTION MODEL
Proposed Quantitative Parameters
Situational Anxiety:
Mild: +3 points (minimal muscle tension, preserved concentration)
Moderate: +7 points (sweating, tachycardia, attentional lapses)
Severe: +12 points (cognitive block, autonomic hyperactivation)
ADHD:
+8 average points for executive variability and lapses in inhibitory control
ASD without Intellectual Disability:
+6 points for attentional rigidity and set-shifting cost
Twice-Exceptionality (ASD + Giftedness):
+10 points* for the summation of attentional and affective interferences
Clinical Calibration
The proposed values function as initial operational parameters that should be adjusted according to:
* Severity of symptoms assessed by standardized scales
* Subtest heterogeneity (discrepancies >15 points suggest interference)
* Behavioral observation during administration
* Performance history in non-evaluative contexts
BEHAVIORAL INTENSITY GRADIENT
The intensity of behaviors typical of high ability scales with the IQ score. Individuals with an IQ of 140 show greater persistence of directed curiosity and stability of reasoning compared to those with an IQ of 130. This gradient reflects greater efficiency of the fronto-parietal network and anterior cingulate-prefrontal integration (Huang et al., 2022). In neurodivergent profiles, this expression varies due to attentional and affective interferences. The relationship between IQ, anxiety, and depression in ASD and ADHD is complex and heterogeneous, requiring individualized clinical interpretation (Wolff et al., 2022; Edirisooriya et al., 2021).
BEHAVIORAL PATTERN IN GIFTEDNESS
A replicable core of behaviors is observed along the IQ gradient:
Persistent curiosity oriented towards informational gaps
Accelerated learning with prolonged retention
Preference for complexity and cognitive challenges
Sustained focus on intrinsically motivating tasks
Early production of original solutions
Sensitivity to logical inconsistencies
Elevated self-correction pattern
In subgroups, perfectionism and greater emotional reactivity can interfere with the expression of potential during formal evaluation, requiring a joint reading of traits, comorbidities, and environmental variables.
CLINICAL IMPLICATIONS
Practical Application of the Model
The proposed model offers guidelines for:
Identifying underestimations in clinical populations
Approximating true potential through quantitative adjustment
Planning interventions based on preserved abilities
More accurate vocational guidance for neurodivergents
Limitations and Considerations
The presented parameters represent population-average values that should be individualized according to symptomatic severity and specific context. Empirical validation of the proposed adjustments requires longitudinal studies with retesting under controlled conditions.
CONCLUSION
Accurate intelligence measurement in clinical contexts demands recognition of systematic neuropsychiatric interferences that can mask true cognitive potential. The presented operational correction model offers clinically calibratable quantitative parameters to approximate more reliable IQ estimates in the presence of situational anxiety, ASD, and ADHD. The neurobiological foundation based on the parieto-frontal theory of intelligence supports the theoretical validity of the proposed adjustments, which should be empirically validated through controlled studies with specific clinical samples.
REFERENCES
Clarke, A. R., Barry, R. J., Dupuy, F. E., Clarke, D. C., Gruzelier, J. H., Pitson, D., … & Bond, D. (2016). Behavioural differences between EEG-defined subgroups of children with Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder. Clinical Neurophysiology, 127(1), 460-467. doi:10.1016/j.clinph.2015.05.018
Edirisooriya, M., Dykiert, D., Auyeung, B., & Chin, R. (2021). IQ and internalising symptoms in adolescents with ASD. Research in Autism Spectrum Disorders, 83, 101749. doi:10.1016/j.rasd.2021.101749
Huang, J., Zhang, Q., Yu, C., Liang, X., Wei, X., Fan, L., … & Liu, T. (2022). The neurobiological basis of intelligence: A meta-analysis of neuroimaging findings. Human Brain Mapping, 43(12), 3679-3694. doi:10.1002/hbm.25874
Melby, K., Brønnick, K., Graver, V., & Nordahl-Hansen, A. (2020). Cognitive performance in ASD: A systematic review and meta-analysis of intelligence quotient across the lifespan. Clinical Psychology Review, 78, 101859. doi:10.1016/j.cpr.2020.101859
Stephenson, K. G., Norris, M., Butter, E. M., Cramer, A., Lecavalier, L., & Bodfish, J. W. (2023). IQ-achievement discrepancy patterns in autism spectrum disorder. Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 53(2), 678-691. doi:10.1007/s10803-021-05376-8
Wolff, N., Stroth, S., Kamp-Becker, I., Roepke, S., & Roessner, V. (2022). Autism spectrum disorder and IQ – A complex interplay. Frontiers in Psychiatry, 13, 856084. doi:10.3389/fpsyt.2022.856084

Dr. Fabiano de Abreu Agrela Rodrigues MRSB holds a post-PhD in Neuroscience and is an elected member of Sigma Xi – The Scientific Research Honor Society (more than 200 members of Sigma Xi have received the Nobel Prize), as well as being a member of the Society for Neuroscience in the United States, the Royal Society of Biology and The Royal Society of Medicine in the United Kingdom, the European Society of Human Genetics in Vienna, Austria, and the APA – American Philosophical Association in the United States. He holds a Master’s degree in Psychology and a Bachelor’s degree in History and Biology. He is also a Technologist in Anthropology and Philosophy, with several national and international degrees in Neuroscience and Neuropsychology. Dr. Fabiano is a member of prestigious high IQ societies, including Mensa International, Intertel, ISPE High IQ Society, Triple Nine Society, ISI-Society, and HELLIQ Society High IQ. He is the author of more than 300 scientific studies and 30 books. He is currently a visiting professor at PUCRS in Brazil, UNIFRANZ in Bolivia and Santander in Mexico. He also serves as Director of CPAH – Centro de Pesquisa e Análises Heráclito and is the creator of the GIP project, which estimates IQ through the analysis of genetic intelligence. Dr. Fabiano is also a registered journalist, having his name included in the book of records for achieving four records, one of which is for being the greatest creator of characters in the history of the press.
