This figure

Their examples for each of the above are ADHD, childhood-onset schizophrenia (COS) and Down's syndrome respectively. The evidence for ADHD children ending up with similar looking brains to their peers when they reach adulthood lines up really well with the evidence that people tend to "grow out" of ADHD. It may be that as the ADHD trajectory converges on the "normal" trajectory the ADHD symptoms desist.
I like this paper because in the Bunge lab we're working on a very large longitudinal study of normal childhood development of reasoning skills, and this evidence really supports the motivation of fully understanding the meaning of "normal development". Hopefully in the future we can identify children who are not developing along with their peers and use brain imaging to guide interventions.
Shaw P, Gogtay N, Rapoport J.
Hum Brain Mapp. 2010 Jun;31(6):917-25.Review. PMID: 20496382
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