Sensory
Which ICF domain does Sensory map to in early childhood?
In the WHO ICF, sensory functioning in early childhood maps principally to the Body Functions component — Chapter 2, Sensory functions and pain — which covers seeing, hearing, vestibular and proprioceptive functions. Because sensory processing shapes everyday play, learning and self-care, it also reaches into the Activities and Participation component and is modified by Environmental Factors. The ICF-CY children and youth version refines these codes for developmental contexts, framing sensory difference as an interaction rather than an isolated deficit.
Where a child's sensory functioning sits within the world's shared language of human functioning — that is what the ICF helps us map.
In short
In the WHO International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF), sensory functioning in early childhood maps principally to the Body Functions component — specifically Chapter 2: Sensory functions and pain (which covers seeing, hearing, vestibular, proprioceptive and other sensory functions). Sensory processing as it expresses in daily life also reaches across into the Activities and Participation component, because how a child registers and responds to sensory input shapes play, learning and self-care. The ICF frames sensory difference as one strand of functioning interacting with the environment — never a standalone deficit.How sensory functioning sits within the ICF
The ICF is a biopsychosocial framework, not a diagnostic list. It describes functioning across Body Functions and Structures, Activities and Participation, and Environmental and Personal Factors. Sensory functions — the physiological detection of visual, auditory, vestibular and tactile-proprioceptive input — are coded within Body Functions Chapter 2. However, sensory modulation, integration and praxis as observed in a toddler's everyday behaviour cannot be captured by Body Functions alone: a child's tolerance of textures at mealtimes, response to noise in a classroom, or seeking of movement during play all live in the Activities and Participation domain, and are powerfully shaped by Environmental Factors (sensory load of a setting, caregiver responses, supports available).For early childhood specifically, clinicians often use the ICF-CY (Children and Youth version) lens, which sharpens these codes for developmental contexts. The practical takeaway for researchers and clinicians: sensory profiles are best documented as an interaction — body-level sensory functions described alongside their participation impact and the environmental modifiers — rather than reduced to a single code.
Why this mapping matters
Mapping sensory to ICF domains makes assessment shareable, goal-setting participation-focused, and outcomes comparable across teams. It moves the conversation from "the child has a sensory problem" to "here is how sensory functioning interacts with the contexts the child lives and learns in" — which is where meaningful support is designed.The Pinnacle way
This is general framework information, not a diagnosis — a clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care, never from an app or form. Our occupational therapy teams document sensory functioning in ICF-aligned, participation-focused terms, so a child's profile is understood as part of the [whole picture](/) of their development.Trusted sources
WHO International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF) and the ICF-CY children and youth derivation; WHO conceptual guidance on the biopsychosocial model of functioning.Next step — If you are building ICF-aligned sensory documentation or pathways, partner with our clinical team to align assessment language and participation-focused outcomes.
What to watch
How a child registers and responds to sensory input across real contexts — texture tolerance at meals, response to noise in busy rooms, movement-seeking in play — since these participation-level patterns, not body-level codes alone, guide support.
Try this at home
When documenting sensory observations, note not just the sensory function itself but where and how it affects participation — at mealtimes, in group play, during dressing — so the picture stays ICF-aligned and useful.
Trusted sources
Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-10 · reviewed every 365 days
This is general information, not a diagnosis. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care.
Frequently asked
Which ICF component covers sensory functions?
Sensory functions are coded within the Body Functions component of the ICF — specifically Chapter 2, Sensory functions and pain, which includes visual, auditory, vestibular and proprioceptive functions.
Why does sensory also appear in Activities and Participation?
Because sensory modulation and integration express themselves in daily life — in play, learning, mealtimes and self-care — how a child responds to sensory input shapes participation and is therefore documented across that component too, modified by Environmental Factors.
What is the ICF-CY and why use it for young children?
The ICF-CY is the Children and Youth derivation of the ICF, which sharpens codes for developmental and growth contexts. It is the appropriate lens for describing sensory functioning in early childhood.