Stimulus-specific adaptation, habituation and change detection in the gaze control system

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Abstract

This prospect article addresses the neurobiology of detecting and responding to changes or unexpected events. Change detection is an ongoing computational task performed by the brain as part of the broader process of saliency mapping and selection of the next target for attention. In the optic tectum (OT) of the barn owl, the probability of the stimulus has a dramatic influence on the neural response to that stimulus; rare or deviant stimuli induce stronger responses compared to common stimuli. This phenomenon, known as stimulus-specific adaptation, has recently attracted scientific interest because of its possible role in change detection. In the barn owl’s OT, it may underlie the ability to orient specifically to unexpected events and is therefore opening new directions for research on the neurobiology of fundamental psychological phenomena such as habituation, attention, and surprise.

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Gutfreund, Y. (2012). Stimulus-specific adaptation, habituation and change detection in the gaze control system. Biological Cybernetics, 106(11–12), 657–668. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00422-012-0497-3

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