Theoretical assumptions and exemplar trials. a-c Predicted spider distances for baseline (red dots), habituation (green dots) and dishabituation comparisons (blue dots). Habituation can manifest either in equal inter-spider distances (solid line) as in the baseline comparison or in an increase of distances (dashed line). What is referred to as baseline in this context is the dishabituation trial of the previous comparison (see Table 2). Distance samples are predicted to fall into distributions as shown in b. Contrasts between baseline, habituation and dishabituation comparisons would result in distributions as shown in c. d-f An exemplar trial consisting of baseline, habituation and dishabituation comparisons from the first session of trials is shown. The short-term dishabituation comparison shows a decrease of inter-spider distances, indicating increasing interest in a different individual than the previously perceived one (habituation comparison). g-i; j-l Two exemplar trials from the third session of Experiment 2 are shown, where a presentation of an individual novel and unseen across the three experimental sessions triggered a great rebound in interest (i,l, ‘Dishabituation - habituation’).