Genetics, Molecular Control and Clinical Relevance of Habituation Learning

Radboudumc 7: Neurodevelopmental disorders DCMN: Donders Center for Medical Neuroscience Radboud University Medical Center 03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine Neurodevelopmental Disorders Animals Humans Learning behavioral_sciences_behavioral_neuroscience Human Genetics - Radboud University Medical Center Autistic Disorder Habituation, Psychophysiologic Molecular Biology
DOI: 10.20944/preprints202201.0186.v1 Publication Date: 2022-01-13T10:08:36Z
ABSTRACT
Habituation, the most ancient and fundamental form of learning, manifests already before birth. Neuroscientists have been fascinated for decades by its function as a firewall protecting our brains from sensory information overload and its indispensability for higher cognitive processing. Evidence that habituation learning is affected in autism and related monogenic neurodevelopmental syndromes and their animal models has exponentially grown, but the potential of this convergence to advance both fields is still largely unexploited.In this review, we provide a systematic overview of the genes that to date have been demonstrated to underlie habituation across species. We describe the biological processes they converge on, and highlight core regulatory pathways and repurposable drugs that may alleviate the habituation deficits associated with their dysregulation. We also summarize currently used habituation paradigms and extract the most important arguments from literature that support the crucial role of habituation for cognition in health and disease. We conclude that habituation is a powerful tool to overcome current bottlenecks in research, diagnostics and treatment of neurodevelopmental disorders.
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