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My AMAAS-PCP-SR report

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Experimental instrument. AMAAS-PCP-SR is an experimental instrument in development. It has not been validated: no norms, no validated cutoffs, no established accuracy. Every answer is an approximate self-estimate, so every score here is approximate. Results are a structured self-reflection, not a screening result and not a diagnosis. A diagnosis of ADHD requires a clinician, evidence of childhood onset, symptoms across more than one setting, functional impairment, and exclusion of other explanations. For a validated free self-report, see the ASRS-v1.1.

Every answer on AMAAS-PCP-SR is a rough self-estimate, not a precise count. Treat all scores here as approximate.

Adult Multi-perspective Attentional Attributes Scale (Self-Report form) · Last taken 2026052722 · Retake

AMAAS-PCP-SR results

DomainAverageItems estimatedBand (descriptive)
Inattention59%9 of 9Some traits endorsed
Hyperactivity55%6 of 6Some traits endorsed
Impulsivity54%6 of 6Some traits endorsed
Functional interference64%6 of 6Moderate reported interference

Average is the mean of the items you estimated in that domain ("Not sure" items are left out). Bands are arithmetic thirds of the range, not validated clinical cutoffs.

What your scores mean

Counting items you estimated at 60% of the time or higher: 6 of 9 inattention items, and 8 of 12 hyperactivity / impulsivity items.

For conceptual reference, DSM-5 describes an adult symptom-count landmark of about 5 endorsed symptoms within a dimension. AMAAS-PCP-SR uses more items per dimension than DSM lists symptoms, and every answer here is an approximate estimate, so this is a way of thinking about the pattern, not a direct score comparison and not a threshold.

AMAAS-PCP-SR is experimental, approximate, and not a diagnostic instrument. Every answer is a rough self-estimate, so every figure above is approximate. A diagnosis of ADHD is made by a clinician and requires evidence of childhood onset, difficulty in more than one setting, real functional impairment, and ruling out other explanations. This report is a structured reflection on what you estimated, nothing more. For a validated, free self-report covering the same ground, the ASRS-v1.1 is the standard option.

Top-endorsed items per domain

Within each symptom domain, the items you estimated highest. Reverse-worded items are inverted before ranking.

Inattention
  • 5. What percent of the time do you struggle to keep yourself organized? you estimated 100%
  • 9. What percent of the time do you forget to do routine tasks, such as errands or chores? you estimated 91%
  • 7. What percent of the time do you misplace everyday things such as your keys, phone, or wallet? you estimated 81%
  • 4. What percent of the time do you move on to something new before you finish what you were doing? you estimated 73%
Hyperactivity
  • 12. What percent of the time do you find it hard to unwind, even when there is nothing you need to do? you estimated 73%
  • 14. What percent of the time can you sit still comfortably for a long time? you estimated 27%
  • 15. What percent of the time do you feel an urge to get up and move when you are expected to stay seated? you estimated 69%
  • 13. What percent of the time do you fidget with your hands or feet when you stay in one place? you estimated 65%
Impulsivity
  • 19. What percent of the time do you think carefully about whether to say something before you say it? you estimated 21%
  • 18. What percent of the time do you find it hard to wait your turn, such as in a line? you estimated 77%
  • 21. What percent of the time do you feel impatient when things move more slowly than you would like? you estimated 77%
  • 20. What percent of the time do you buy things on impulse that you did not plan to buy? you estimated 68%

All 30 responses

#ItemYour estimate
1What percent of the time do you lose focus on a task before you finish it?65%
2What percent of the time do you make careless mistakes by missing small details?20%
3What percent of the time can you read or listen to someone for a long time without your mind wandering? (reverse-worded)87%
4What percent of the time do you move on to something new before you finish what you were doing?73%
5What percent of the time do you struggle to keep yourself organized?100%
6What percent of the time do you put off tasks that take a long stretch of concentration?67%
7What percent of the time do you misplace everyday things such as your keys, phone, or wallet?81%
8What percent of the time can you tune out noise and activity around you and stay on what you are doing? (reverse-worded)75%
9What percent of the time do you forget to do routine tasks, such as errands or chores?91%
10What percent of the time do you feel restless inside even when you are sitting quietly?15%
11What percent of the time do you feel driven to stay busy, as though you cannot slow down?35%
12What percent of the time do you find it hard to unwind, even when there is nothing you need to do?73%
13What percent of the time do you fidget with your hands or feet when you stay in one place?65%
14What percent of the time can you sit still comfortably for a long time? (reverse-worded)27%
15What percent of the time do you feel an urge to get up and move when you are expected to stay seated?69%
16What percent of the time do you act on impulse without thinking things through?15%
17What percent of the time do you interrupt others while they are speaking?8%
18What percent of the time do you find it hard to wait your turn, such as in a line?77%
19What percent of the time do you think carefully about whether to say something before you say it? (reverse-worded)21%
20What percent of the time do you buy things on impulse that you did not plan to buy?68%
21What percent of the time do you feel impatient when things move more slowly than you would like?77%
22What percent of the time do these patterns get in the way of your work or studies? (interference item)13%
23What percent of the time do these patterns get in the way of handling everyday tasks at home? (interference item)89%
24What percent of the time do these patterns get in the way of your close relationships? (interference item)65%
25What percent of the time do these patterns get in the way of managing your time? (interference item)81%
26What percent of the time do these patterns get in the way of managing your money? (interference item)73%
27What percent of the time do these patterns get in the way of taking care of yourself day to day? (interference item)61%
28What percent of the time do you get lost inside your own home? (validity item)13%
29What percent of the time do you forget the names of your own close family members? (validity item)0%
30What percent of the time do you lose track of where you put everyday items like your keys or phone? (validity item)85%

Each answer is the percent of the time you estimated, on a 0 to 100 slider. "Not sure" items were left out of scoring.

About AMAAS-PCP-SR

AMAAS-PCP-SR is the self-report form of the Adult Multi-perspective Attentional Attributes Scale, an instrument developed for this wiki. It is original, written from the DSM-5 ADHD construct rather than adapted from any existing rating scale. Each item asks, on a 0 to 100 slider, what percent of the time an experience applies; every answer is a rough self-estimate.

It is experimental and not validated. It has no norms, no validated cutoffs, and no established sensitivity or specificity. Subscale scores are prorated over the items you estimated ("Not sure" items are excluded); the descriptive bands are arithmetic thirds of the range, chosen for readability, not clinical thresholds. The instrument is on a validation roadmap (expert review, pilot testing, factor analysis, reliability and criterion-validity studies, norming); the experimental label is removed only when that work supports it.

A planned observer-report form (AMAAS-PCP-OR) will let someone who knows the respondent well rate the same domains, producing a self-versus-observer concordance report. That form is not yet built.

References: American Psychiatric Association, DSM-5 (ADHD diagnostic criteria); Faraone et al. 2015 (PMID 27189265); Kooij et al. 2019 (PMID 30453134); Faraone et al. 2021 (PMID 33549739). These support the construct and the adult-presentation framing; they are not item sources.