Sensory Processing vs ADHD: What’s the Difference?
■ Key Takeaway
Sensory processing disorder and ADHD often look similar but stem from different neurological patterns — and getting the distinction wrong leads to ineffective treatment. Both involve nervous system dysregulation, but SPD centers on how the brain processes sensory input while ADHD centers on how it regulates attention and impulse control. Many children have both.

Sensory Processing vs ADHD: What’s the Difference?
How Sensory Processing Works in the Nervous System
Sensory processing is how the nervous system receives, interprets, and responds to information from the environment. When this system is working well, incoming sensory information gets filtered, prioritized, and acted upon in an organized way. When sensory processing is disrupted, the nervous system loses the ability to filter effectively. Everything comes in at the same volume. A 2007 study in Pediatrics found that approximately 5–16% of children experience sensory processing difficulties significant enough to interfere with daily functioning.[1] Critically, a significant proportion of children diagnosed with ADHD also meet criteria for sensory processing dysfunction — suggesting the two frequently overlap but are neurologically distinct.What ADHD Looks Like at the Nervous System Level
ADHD, at its neurological core, is a dysregulation of the prefrontal-subcortical networks responsible for executive function. Sensory processing disorder, by contrast, involves disruption at the level of sensory integration — how the brain is processing and organizing the incoming sensory stream before it even gets to higher executive functions. Research published in NeuroImage found that children with ADHD and children with sensory processing dysfunction show distinct patterns of white matter organization in the brain — different circuits, different mechanisms, different interventions.[2] Misidentifying one as the other leads to interventions that don’t fit the actual neurological picture.The Overlap — and Why It Gets Confusing
Both ADHD and sensory processing challenges frequently share a common underlying factor: a nervous system stuck in sympathetic overdrive. The Moro reflex — a primitive startle reflex that should integrate in the first few months of life — when retained, keeps the nervous system in chronic hypervigilance. This produces both the sensory sensitivity characteristic of sensory processing dysfunction and the dysregulated arousal characteristic of ADHD. Two labels, one neurological mechanism.Why Getting This Right Matters
If a child’s primary challenge is sensory processing, behavioral strategies designed for ADHD attention regulation won’t address it. When we look at the objective data — INSiGHT scan findings, primitive reflex assessment, patterns of sensory reactivity — we can see what’s actually driving the presentation. And when we know what’s driving it, we can address it directly. Families across Knoxville, Maryville, and Morristown are finding that this kind of precision changes the experience for their child.If you’re not sure whether what you’re seeing is ADHD, sensory processing challenges, or both — the answer starts with an objective nervous system assessment. Book your NeuroFoundation Assessment at The Wellness Path.
Book a NeuroFoundation Assessment →Related Resources
📄 Condition Page
Sensory Processing Disorder in Children
🏥 Service Page
📍 Location
The Wellness Path — Morristown Office
🔗 Related Blogs
References
- [1] Ahn, R., Miller, L., Milberger, S., & McIntosh, D. (2004). Prevalence of parents’ perceptions of sensory processing disorders among kindergarten children. American Journal of Occupational Therapy, 58(3), 287–293.
- [2] Owen, J., et al. (2013). Abnormal white matter microstructure in children with sensory processing disorders. NeuroImage: Clinical, 2, 844–853.
