Giftedness remains conceptually imprecise in both scientific literature and educational practice, frequently conflated with talent and inconsistently operationalized. Whereas talent is inherently visible and validated by observable performance in culturally valued domains, giftedness may remain invisible throughout an individual's lifetime, precisely because of its latent nature. This article proposes a neuroscientific framework that reconceptualizes giftedness as a non-dysfunctional neurodevelopmental condition, characterized by a qualitatively different mode of neurological functioning. Drawing on recent advances in neuroscience, this framework establishes that gifted individuals exhibit not only high scores on intelligence tests, but also a distinct pattern of parieto-frontal connectivity, atypical cortical development trajectory, and enhanced structural-functional coupling. These neurobiological features are expressed in a recognizable combination of behavioral markers, including extreme curiosity, rapid and self-taught learning, early abstract and complex reasoning, expressive communication, excellent memory, and perfectionism. Reconceptualizing giftedness as a non-dysfunctional neurodevelopmental condition supports the development of individualized strategies in clinical and educational contexts. Without appropriate identification and support, gifted individuals remain at risk for underachievement, social-emotional difficulties, and misdiagnosis.
Fernanda Rodrigues Fernandes (Wed,) studied this question.
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