You've finished a screening and have a breakdown of your traits across several areas. Here's how to read your results and what you can do with them.
What your results show
Each domain (for example social interaction, sensory processing, or attention) gets a score. Higher scores mean your responses align more with traits commonly linked to that area. This is a snapshot of patterns in your answers, not a diagnosis.
- Scores show where your responses sit compared to research norms
- They're for self-understanding, not clinical cut-offs
- Traits like autism and ADHD tend to be stable over time; your results reflect how you answered when you took the assessment
- If you save results and take more assessments, your Blueprint shows how different traits overlap
How to use your results
Lots of people use their report to understand their own style better, ask for accommodations at work or school, or bring it to a healthcare provider as a starting point for a deeper conversation.
When you save your results, you can compare assessments or build a fuller picture in your Blueprint. That helps you see how different traits interact.
If you want a formal evaluation
If your results resonate and you'd like a formal diagnosis or treatment, a psychologist, psychiatrist, or other qualified specialist can do a full evaluation and talk through support options.
Unfamiliar terms?
If you see words like neurodiversity, masking, or sensory processing and want a quick explainer, our neurodiversity glossary defines them in plain language.