“…Clinically, tic usually onsets at 4–6 years of age, exhibiting a waxing and waning course, and typically improving in adolescence (Browne et al., 2015). Remarkably, TS patients are commonly associated with co‐occurring comorbidities and overlapping behavioral and emotional conditions, including obsessive–compulsive disorder, attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), other possible autism spectrum disorder (ASD) symptoms, and co‐existing mental illnesses (depression, anxiety, antagonistic defiant disease, conduct disorder, and/or personality disorder) (Freeman et al., 2000; Robertson, 2006, 2015; Robertson et al., 2015; Clarke et al., 2012; Tsetsos et al., 2016), highlighting the overlapping circuitry alterations and the existence of connectional co‐substrates in brain networks that are potentially linked in TS and other neuropsychiatric disorders (Cauda et al., 2015; Church et al., 2009; Cravedi et al., 2017; Cross‐Disorder Group of the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium, et al, 2013; Harrison & Weinberger, 2005; Hirschtritt et al., 2015; Huisman‐van Dijk et al., 2016; Cross‐Disorder Group of the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium et al, 2013; Lee et al, 2019; Mathews & Grados, 2011; Robertson et al., 2017; Robertson et al., 2015; van den Heuvel & Sporns, 2019; Vissers et al., 2012). Neurobiologically, convergent results strongly support brain connectivity abnormalities and dysfunction of cortico‐striato‐thalamo‐cortical (CSTC) networks and dopaminergic systems in individuals with TS (Church et al., 2009), which play a critical role in movement control and output and are consistent with imaging evidence.…”