Hemispheric specialization influences stimulus processing and behavioural control, affecting responses to relevant stimuli. However, most sensory input is irrelevant and must be filtered out to prevent interference with task-relevant behaviour, a process known as habituation. Despite habituation's vital role, little is known about hemispheric specialization for this brain function. We conducted an experiment with domestic chicks, an elite animal model to study lateralization. They were exposed to distracting visual stimuli while feeding when using binocular or monocular vision. Switching the viewing eye after habituation, we examined if habituation was confined to the stimulated hemisphere or shared across hemispheres. We found that both hemispheres learned equally to ignore distracting stimuli. However, embryonic light stimulation, influencing hemispheric specialization, revealed an asymmetry in interhemispheric transfer of the irrelevant information discarded via habituation. Unstimu...
Unlocking the Symmetric Transfer of Irrelevant Information: Gene-Environment Interplay and Enhanced Interhemispheric Cross-Talk / Chiandetti, Cinzia; Dissegna, Andrea; Rogers, ; Lesley, J.; Turatto, Massimo. - In: BIOLOGY LETTERS. - ISSN 1744-9561. - 19:10 (20230267)(2023). [10.1098/rsbl.2023.0267]
Unlocking the Symmetric Transfer of Irrelevant Information: Gene-Environment Interplay and Enhanced Interhemispheric Cross-Talk
Chiandetti, Cinzia
;Dissegna Andrea;Turatto, Massimo
2023-01-01
Abstract
Hemispheric specialization influences stimulus processing and behavioural control, affecting responses to relevant stimuli. However, most sensory input is irrelevant and must be filtered out to prevent interference with task-relevant behaviour, a process known as habituation. Despite habituation's vital role, little is known about hemispheric specialization for this brain function. We conducted an experiment with domestic chicks, an elite animal model to study lateralization. They were exposed to distracting visual stimuli while feeding when using binocular or monocular vision. Switching the viewing eye after habituation, we examined if habituation was confined to the stimulated hemisphere or shared across hemispheres. We found that both hemispheres learned equally to ignore distracting stimuli. However, embryonic light stimulation, influencing hemispheric specialization, revealed an asymmetry in interhemispheric transfer of the irrelevant information discarded via habituation. Unstimu...I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione



