“…This novelty effect (or it’s inverse, the familiarity effect) is observed both at the macro-level using techniques such as EEG and fMRI in humans (Courchesne et al, 1975; Daffner et al, 2000; Hawco and Lepage, 2014), and at the single cell level using single unit recordings in animals (Li et al, 1993; Meyer and Rust, 2018; Xiang and Brown, 1998; Zhang et al, 2022). Contextual novelty effects such as repetition suppression, mismatch negativity, and deviance detection are thought to arise through adaptation (Braga and Schönwiesner, 2022; Garrido et al, 2009; Grill-Spector et al, 2006; Hu et al, 2021; Nelken and Ulanovsky, 2007). However, the cell types and circuits that underlie the lifetime history-dependent effects of absolute stimulus novelty are unknown.…”