Neural adaptation or sensory adaptation is a gradual decrease over time in the responsiveness of the sensory system to a constant stimulus.
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Neural adaptation or sensory adaptation is a gradual decrease over time in the responsiveness of the sensory system to a constant stimulus.
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Also, in neural adaptation there is a sense of returning to baseline from a stimulated response.
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Varying rates or speed of Neural adaptation is an important indicator for tracking different rates of change in the environment or the organism itself.
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Current research shows that although Neural adaptation occurs at multiple stages of each sensory pathway, it is often stronger and more stimulus specific at "cortical" level rather than "subcortical stages".
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In short, neural adaptation is thought to happen at a more central level at the cortex.
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Fast adaptation occurs immediately after a stimulus is presented i e, within hundreds of milliseconds.
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Brief stimulation produces Neural adaptation which occurs and recovers while more prolonged stimulation can produce slower and more lasting forms of Neural adaptation.
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Neural adaptation defined sensations as the "raw elements" of conscious experience that required no learning, and perceptions as the meaningful interpretations derived from the senses.
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Neural adaptation studied the physical properties of the eye and vision, as well as acoustic sensation.
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Neural adaptation's brain was able to adapt to the change and perceive the world as normal.
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Sensory Neural adaptation tends to blend sounds into one, variable sound, rather than having several separate sounds as a series.
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Perceptual Neural adaptation is a phenomenon that occurs for all of the senses, including smell and touch.
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Habituation is a behavioral phenomenon while neural adaptation is a physiological phenomenon, although the two are not entirely separate.
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Neural adaptation is tied very closely to stimulus intensity; as the intensity of a light increases, one's senses will adapt more strongly to it.
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The rate of neural adaptation is affected by the area of the brain and by the similarity between sizes and shapes of previous stimuli.
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Neural adaptation has been observed in these movements in response to training or altered external conditions.
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Once this Neural adaptation had occurred, TMS was used to disrupt the subjects' visual cortex again, and the flashes of light viewed by the subject were the same color as the constant stimulus before the disruption.
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Neural adaptation is often critical for an animal's survival after an injury.
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