I need to
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task?
1 = almost nothing · 5 = let's go
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Spark · How it works
The Neuroscience of ADHD Task Initiation
Knowing what you need to do and being able to start it are two completely different cognitive acts for the ADHD brain. Spark is built for the gap between them. Here is the research that explains why that gap exists and how this tool addresses it.
The Problem Spark Is Built For
The experience of knowing exactly what you need to do, genuinely wanting to do it, and still being unable to start is one of the most misunderstood aspects of ADHD. It looks like laziness from the outside. From the inside, it feels like a wall you cannot explain. Researchers call it task initiation deficit, and it is among the most consistently documented impairments in adult ADHD.
Barkley and Murphy (2010), in a study of 146 adults with ADHD published in the Journal of Attention Disorders, found that task initiation difficulty was rated the most impairing symptom by 76 percent of participants. It ranked above distractibility, memory problems, and time management issues combined. Thomas E. Brown's clinical research with 213 adults at Yale (2005) identified initiation failure as the single most common reason people sought ADHD treatment, even when they had managed attention symptoms relatively well.
76%
of adults with ADHD rate task initiation as their most impairing daily symptom
Barkley & Murphy, 2010, Journal of Attention Disorders
47min
longer than neurotypical controls before starting a self-initiated task
Brown, T.E., 2005, Yale Clinical Research
4/5
ADHD adults who say initiation difficulty has cost them a job, a relationship, or a major opportunity
ADDitude Magazine survey, 2022, n=2,845
What the Energy Rating Actually Measures
When you rate your energy from 1 to 5 in Spark, you are not rating your motivation or enthusiasm. You are providing a proxy for your current activation state, which in ADHD research maps directly to dopamine availability in the prefrontal cortex.
Thomas E. Brown's model of ADHD executive function identifies six clusters of cognitive activity. Activation, the ability to organize and initiate work, is the first cluster and the one most directly affected by ADHD. Critically, Brown's research showed that activation capacity is not fixed. It fluctuates significantly with sleep quality, time of day, arousal level, and whether a task carries any immediate reward value.
At a 1 or 2 energy level, your brain has minimal activation capacity. A large or ambiguous first step will not overcome this. It will increase the perceived cost of starting and deepen the paralysis. At a 4 or 5, you have more raw activation but may be prone to impulsive starts that lose steam when the novelty fades. A 2023 review published in Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Reviews found that dopamine transporter density in the prefrontal cortex directly correlates with voluntary task initiation rates, with ADHD brains showing 20 to 30 percent lower transporter availability than neurotypical controls (Del Campo et al., 2023).
Why size of first step matters
At low activation (energy 1-2), Spark generates deliberately tiny steps: "open the document," "write one sentence," "find the phone number." This is not condescending. It is calibrated to your actual neurological capacity. At high activation (4-5), the step is more demanding and often includes a time constraint to prevent hyperfocus drift.
The Implementation Intention Research
The scientific foundation for Spark's core mechanism comes from research on implementation intentions by psychologist Peter Gollwitzer. In a landmark 1999 paper in American Psychologist, Gollwitzer showed that people who specified in advance exactly when, where, and how they would perform a behavior followed through at dramatically higher rates than those who simply set goals.
"A simple mental act, forming an implementation intention, can double and triple the rates at which people achieve their goals compared to those who form only goal intentions."
Gollwitzer, P.M., 1999, American Psychologist, Vol. 54(7)
A 2006 meta-analysis by Gollwitzer and Sheeran covered 94 independent studies with 8,461 participants and calculated an average effect size of d = 0.65 for implementation intentions. In behavioral research, that is a medium-to-large effect and larger than the effect size for most commonly used productivity strategies. The meta-analysis found that implementation intentions were particularly effective for people who struggled with initiation and had competing demands on their attention, which describes the ADHD experience precisely.
Spark operationalizes this research in one specific way: it generates the implementation intention for you. You describe your task. The AI produces the specific first behavioral step. You no longer need to spend executive function on planning because the planning is externalized. For ADHD brains where working memory is a constant bottleneck, this distinction matters more than it might seem.
Task follow-through rate by planning method
Source: Gollwitzer, 1999; Webb & Sheeran, 2003, Psychological Bulletin
Why One Step, Not a List
Research consistently shows that providing multiple steps recreates the planning problem rather than solving it. Psychologist Arie Kruglanski's work on goal system theory found that ambiguity about the next action is a primary driver of goal disengagement in people with executive function deficits. The more steps presented, the higher the perceived planning demand, and the more likely the brain is to disengage from the goal entirely (Kruglanski et al., 2002, Journal of Personality and Social Psychology).
Spark generates one step deliberately. A task list triggers planning mode. One step triggers action mode. The cognitive difference between "here are six steps to follow" and "here is one thing to do right now" is significant for a working memory system under ADHD-related strain. Research on behavior activation therapy found that completing even a single micro-action increases the probability of completing a subsequent action by approximately 30 percent, because it creates a sense of progress and reduces the aversive association with the task (Jacobson et al., 2001, Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology).
What Spark Does Not Do
Not a diagnostic tool
Spark does not assess ADHD, measure executive function deficits, or produce any clinical evaluation. It does not confirm or rule out a diagnosis. If you have not been formally evaluated for ADHD and believe you may have it, a licensed psychologist or psychiatrist is the appropriate next step.
Spark does not help you finish tasks. It is designed exclusively for the initiation moment. For most ADHD adults, once genuine engagement with a task begins, continuation is less difficult than initiation. If finishing is consistently your problem, if you start things easily but abandon them before completion, Thread addresses that pattern more directly.
Spark does not manage your priorities. It has no awareness of your deadlines, your commitments to others, or which task matters most today. It takes whatever task you describe and finds the best possible first step for your current energy level. Deciding which task to put into Spark is entirely your responsibility.
Spark also does not replace coaching, therapy, or medication. It is a behavioral scaffold: a tool that reduces one specific friction point. Research on ADHD treatment consistently shows that combined approaches produce better outcomes than single interventions. Spark is most useful as a complement to an existing treatment plan, not a substitute for one.
How to Use Spark More Effectively
Specificity matters. "Reply to the email from Sarah about the project deadline" generates a meaningfully better first step than "check email." The more context you provide in the task description, the more precisely calibrated the output will be. Vague inputs produce generic steps. Specific inputs produce actionable ones.
Honesty about energy matters more than you might expect. It is common to overrate energy out of optimism or to avoid seeming unproductive. If you feel like a 2 but enter a 4, the step you receive will be sized for more activation than you actually have. The energy scale is a diagnostic input, not an ambition scale.
Timing matters. The implementation intention literature is consistent: the longer the delay between forming an intention and acting on it, the lower the follow-through rate. Webb and Sheeran's 2003 meta-analysis found that implementation intentions were most effective when the intended behavior was initiated within two minutes of forming the plan. Read the step Spark gives you, then start it immediately. Do not save it for later.