“…The relation between spontaneous changes in tonic pupil size and behaviour follows an inverted u-shape, with optimal performance being associated with intermediate pupil size, evoking Yerkes-Dodson law [63,72,48,47,58]. Large tonic pupil sizes are concurrent with mind-wandering, distractibility and exploratory behaviour [33,30,76,29,77] while very low tonic pupil sizes are associated with low vigilance and sleepiness [78,79,80,63,36,71,72,47]. However, in contrast with aforementioned spontaneous changes, increases in tonic size that are task-induced occur, on the contrary, in conditions of high task demand: when taxing working memory [81], when counting stimuli silently [82], following changes of contingency [25,83,21,10,30,25,26] or in conditions of high uncertainty [12].…”