Chapter 3C: Neurobiology of Reward Flashcards
Who was Thorndike?
Developed the law of effect
Rewarded behaviour is learned
Punished behaviour is eliminated
Who was Skinner?
Reinforcement: behaviour is controlled by its consequences
Operant conditioning
“Skinner box”
What are the steps involved in operant conditioning?
- Situation: the learning environment
- Response: the behaviour emitted
- Consequence: stimulus, reinforcement and punishment, positive or negative
- Result: perform behaviour (reinforcement) or do not perform behaviour (punishment)
What are the differences between classical and operant conditioning?
Classical: stimulus precedes response and elicits it, elicited responses, learning as a result of association, Pavlov
Operant: stimulus (result) follows response and strengthens it, emitted responses, learning as a result of consequences, Skinner
What does motivational stated or drive have to do with learning?
An internal condition (changing with time), that orients an individual to a specific set of goals
e.g. hunger, thirst, curiosity, mating
Hypothalamus: homeostatic regulation
What are incentives?
Goals or reinforcers in the external environment
e.g. food, water, good grades, a mate
Brain mechanisms?
What did Olds and Milner find out about brain stimulation-induced reward?
Stimulation of lateral hypothalamic sites (medial forebrain bundle) induced a preference for the spot for which it was received: conditioned place preference
When the rat had the opportunity to deliver its own stimulation it would do so at a high rate (self-stimulation)
Reward/reinforcement centre?
Pleasure centre?
What is the mesocorticolimbic dopamine?
Ascending pathway from Ventral Tegmental Area (VTA) to forebrain structures
Nucleus Accumbens (NAcc) & Striatum
Limit structures (hippocampus, amygdala)
Prefrontal cortex
Self stimulation either directly or indirectly activated dopamine release in the NAcc
What is the relationship between reward and addiction?
Self stimulation “seems” similar to addictive behaviours, promoted by substances of abuse
Can addition be explained by changes in the reward system?
self administration paradigms
What are the cognitive elements of craving?
The way everything gets associated
Stimuli associated with different outcomes
Wiring set up to take stimuli and create a desire for what’s associated with that
Addiction looks like every other kind of learning and memory