A dog learns to sit on command, a person hears and eventually tunes out the hum of a washing machine while reading … The capacity to learn and adapt is central to evolution and, indeed, survival.
Habituation — adaptation’s less-glamorous sibling — involves the lessening response to a stimulus after repeated exposure. Think the need for a third espresso to maintain the same level of concentration you once achieved with a single shot.
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Up until recently, habituation — a simple form of learning — was deemed the exclusive domain of complex organisms with brains and nervous systems, such as worms, insects, birds, and mammals.
Authorship, funding, disclosures
Additional authors included Lina Eckert, Maria Sol Vidal-Saez, Ziyuan Zhao, and Jordi Garcia-Ojalvo.
The research was supported by a doctoral fellowship 2021-FI-B-00408 from the Agència de Gestió d’Ajuts Universitaris i de Recerca from the Generalitat de Catalunya; a Harvard University Program for Research in Science and Engineering Award; the Spanish State Research Agency and FEDER Project PID2021-127311NB-I00; Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation and the Generalitat de Catalunya; EMBO Fellowship ALTF683–2019, RYC2021-033860-I funded by MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033 and by European Union NextGenerationEU/PRTR; with additional support from the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation through the Centro de Excelencia Severo Ochoa (CEX2020-001049-S, MCIN/AEI/10.13039/ 501100011033) and the Generalitat de Catalunya through the CERCA programme; and with funding from AFOSR Grant FA9550-22-1-0345.