Abstract

ABSTRACTIt has previously been reported that the orienting reflex (OR) to the onset of a stimulus habituates more slowly than the OR to stimulus offset. In this paper, we attempted to account for this in terms of differences between the ON condition (whose presentation elicits the onset OR) and the OFF condition (whose “presentation” elicits the offset OR). Because the typical habituation paradigm begins with a period of adaptation to the OFF (stimulus absent) condition, the relative novelty of the ON condition is enhanced. This bias would contribute to the advantage of onset ORs over offset responses. This hypothesis was evaluated by comparing skin conductance responses (SCRs) to onset and offset of a 600 Hz tone in a group adapted in the presence of that tone (Tone Adaptation, TA) vs one adapted in its absence (Silent Adaptation, SA). The results supported our hypothesis; onset ORs habituated significantly more slowly than offset ORs in Group SA, but not in Group TA.

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