top of page
Dr David P Ruttenberg
PhD, FRSA, FIoHE, AFHEA, HSRF
Neuroscientist & AI-Ethics Specialist
Honorary Senior Research Fellow & Fulbright Specialist
Creator of Neuro-adaptive/Sensory Sensitivity Technologies
University College London: Institute of Education | Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience | Institute of Healthcare Engineering
University of Cambridge: Centre for Attention Learning & Memory | Cognition & Brain Sciences Unit
Contacts: t.: +1.561.206.2160 | e.: david@davidruttenberg.com | e.: d.ruttenberg@ucl.ac.uk | LinkedIn | UCL Profile
I help organisations deploy AI that enhances human cognition—ethically and inclusively.
Blog
Search


Anxiety or Accommodation? How Wearable Tech Reveals What Your Body Actually Needs
Is work stress making hearts race because of real anxiety or is it simply too many meetings, bad lighting, and constant interruptions? The dilemma of distinguishing clinical anxiety from bad environments used to rely on guesswork, but advances in wearable tech and real-time biosignal analytics are transforming how we answer this question (Dao et al., 2024; Lazarou & Exarchos, 2024).


Why 'Masking' is Literally Killing Us: The Physiological Cost of Pretending to Be Neurotypical
Ever wonder what happens when autistic or neurodivergent adults feel forced to hide their true selves? Masking isn’t just emotionally exhausting—it has real, measurable health impacts that wearable tech is helping to expose.


End All ‘Cure’ Research Now—Redirect Trillions and Celebrate Neurodivergence and Destroy Ableism
<5 minute read Copyright © 2018-2025 Dr David P Ruttenberg. All rights reserved. An illustration of a group of diverse people using a...


Declare Neurodivergent Data a Human Rights Frontier—Enact Data Sovereignty with Legal and Technological Weapons
AI and wearables promise empowerment but often extract neurodivergent data—sensory patterns, emotional fluctuations—without consent, fueling discriminatory algorithms. As a developer of ethical wearables, I declare this a human rights crisis. Data Sovereignty demands we reclaim control. Neurodivergent data must be sovereign: owned by individuals, not corporations.


From NIH Review to the Frontlines of COVID: Why Science and Compassion Must Conquer Misinformation
Two weeks ago, COVID-19 put me flat on the couch. Between bouts of fever I kept replaying a scene from earlier this year: scrolling through an unpublished NIH funding announcement for the Autism Data Science Initiative (ADSI)—before NIH had officially released it. The document, labeled OTA-25-006, outlined a $50 million pot, a lightning-fast 30-day application window, and a review process run largely inside NIH.


The Atlanta CDC Shooting: A Stark Warning on the Deadly Power of Health Misinformation
The recent tragic shooting at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in Atlanta is the clearest warning yet that health misinformation is more than a nuisance—it is lethal. The shooter’s misguided fury was fueled by persistent anti-vaccine conspiracies, including the long-discredited myth falsely linking vaccines to autism. Decades of rigorous scientific research have thoroughly debunked this claim, yet it continues to cause destruction in families and communiti


Got4titude: The Community Fathers of Children With Disabilities Have Been Waiting For
Got4titude—a safe, intentional space designed exclusively for fathers raising children with disabilities or complex medical needs.


When Wearable Tech Meets Love: My Journey in Autism Innovation (Thank You, Gabi!)
Sometimes, life throws you curveballs wrapped in inspiration. As a father, neuroscientist, and serial “let’s-try-this!” tinkerer, I’m used to chasing big dreams and bigger questions. But nothing prepared me for the wild, beautiful ride of raising our daughter Phoebe—a brilliant force of nature with her own unique sensory world.


Standing at the Intersection of Science and Advocacy: Why Evidence-Based Autism Research Matters More Than Ever
In a world where misinformation can spread faster than facts, where policy decisions affecting millions can be made without consulting those most impacted, I find myself at a crossroads that feels both deeply personal and profoundly urgent. My role on the Scientific Review Board of the Autism Data Science Initiative (ASDI) isn't just another line on my CV—it's a calling that emerged from the intersection of my life as a research scientist, a father, and an advocate.


The Sound of Success - How Aspiritech is Orchestrating the Future of Neurodivergent Employment
This year, Forbes named Aspiritech to their inaugural Accessibility 100 list, recognizing them among the nation's leading innovators in disability inclusion (Forbes, 2025). Simultaneously, Crain's Chicago Business highlighted the organization as a key player in Chicago's evolution as an accessibility leadership hub, noting how the city continues its legacy from the early days of accessible curb cuts to today's cutting-edge neurodiversity initiatives (West, 2025). But accolade


Traditional Workplace Accommodations Aren't Working
Despite decades of accommodation laws and corporate diversity initiatives, 85% of college-educated autistic individuals remain unemployed or underemployed (Work Design Magazine, 2025). This stark statistic reveals a fundamental truth: traditional accommodations are failing neurodivergent employees at scale.
After years of developing wearable technology for academic, workplace, and social inclusion, I've discovered why: we're solving the wrong problem with outdated tools th


Why Your 'Smart' Campus is Making Students Dumber
Universities across the globe are investing billions in "smart campus" initiatives, promising enhanced learning experiences through cutting-edge technology and innovative design. Yet research reveals a troubling paradox: these same campuses are systematically creating barriers for about 15% of students—the neurodivergent population (Ebooks IOS Press, 2024).


The Great Listening Project: When Researchers Finally Asked the Right People the Right Questions (a/k/a: What Happens When You Actually Listen To Autistic Adults)
Picture this: You're designing a car, but instead of asking drivers what they need, you spend decades interviewing mechanics about engine parts. Sounds ridiculous, right? Well, that's essentially what autism research has been doing for years—studying autistic experiences without actually listening to autistic adults.


🕵️ The Great Autism Research Plot Twist That'll Blow Your Mind
We've been studying autism all wrong! 🤯
Picture this: You're trying to solve a modern cybercrime... using evidence from the 1950s.
Sound ridiculous? Well, that's exactly what autism research has been doing for decades.
The Shocking Truth 📊
Only 0.4% of autism research focuses on adults.
Let that sink in.
We've been trying to understand adult autism challenges by studying kindergarteners.
Meanwhile, 90% of autistic adults are out there describing their


When Your Brain Runs on a Different Operating System: Building Tech That Actually Gets It
You're trying to focus on an important presentation at work, but the fluorescent lights are humming like angry wasps, your colleague's perfume feels like it's attacking your nostrils, and that person three cubicles over is clicking their pen with the rhythm of a demented woodpecker. For most people, these might be minor annoyances. For 90% of autistic adults, these everyday sensory experiences can feel like navigating a world designed to overwhelm them.


Announcing Beyond Barriers – The Podcast Where Neurodivergent Voices Take Center Stage!
Welcome to Beyond Barriers! Written by Dr David Ruttenberg, Fulbright Specialist & PhD neuroscientist, breaks down barriers for neurodivergent minds—empowering you to thrive in school, work, and social life. Explore sensory, attention, anxiety, and fatigue solutions with actionable insights for neurodivergent listeners and allies. Let’s innovate inclusion together!


Phoebe's Journey: Supporting Our 22yo/AuDHD/Epilepsy Daughter's Neurodivergent Strengths for Success
Just before age two, our daughter Phoebe was diagnosed with autism, ADHD, and epilepsy. Rather than focusing on deficits, we chose to see her neurological differences as unique strengths requiring support, not correction. Over 20 years, we prioritized accommodations, personalized technologies, and inclusive education, enabling Phoebe to thrive academically and socially. Today, she is completing her first year of college, confidently embracing her neurodivergent identity.
bottom of page