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A Stentor ciliate under a microscope. Video: Alexander Klepnev/CC BY-SA 4.0
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.
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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.