Sensory Integration/SEN-sor-ee in-te-GRAY-shun/

How the brain combines input from different senses to guide movement, learning, and comfort.

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Andy says:

It’s your brain’s “mixing desk” for senses—when the sliders fit you, life feels smoother.

Updated 2025-08-17
Sources: Community Contributors
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Detailed Explanation

Integration blends sight, sound, touch, movement (vestibular), body sense (proprioception), taste, and smell. Differences can cause clumsiness, overwhelm, or difficulty focusing. Supports adjust the environment and offer clearer signals.

Community Context

Common discussion in autism/ADHD and dyspraxia communities. Focus is on access, not “fixing.”

Quick Tips

  • Reduce multi‑source noise; prefer steady inputs
  • Use visual anchors for movement tasks
  • Offer breaks and safe stimming

Do / Don't

  • Do: provide choice of lighting, seating, and tools
  • Don't: force exposure as “practice”

Scientific Context

Research links sensory integration to motor planning and attention; environmental adaptations improve participation.

Language Notes

Related: SPD, gating, interoception.

Related Terms

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