Emotion 2 Flashcards
what is a reward?
an object or event that elicits approach and is worked for. It is associated with wanting an liking. Wanting is characterised by feeling of desire and approach behaviour. Liking is characterised by deeling of pleasure and other objective responses e.g. facial expressions
what is clinical relevance?
- Alterations in the brain substrates of reward-related processes are likely mechanisms underlying addiction.
- Our experience of pleasure and desire can also be altered in neuropsychiatric disorders, including depression.
what is instrumental conditioning?
- operant conditioning
- e.g. making an animal work for food
what is intracranial electrical self-stimulation
- if an animal can realise that a stimuli elicits a response then they will work to administer this stimuli
what is intracranial drug self-administration?
if an animal realises that a drug results in a positive feeling then they will work to administer the drug
what is Intracerebral microdialysis to measure neurotransmitters associated with rewarding stimuli?
- measures neurotransmitters from extracellular space
- can be analysed chemically
- depending on how much neurotransmitter it can be investigated on how animals may be feeling
what is the Mesolimbic/mesocortical dopamine system?
- originates in the ventrotegmental area of the midbrain to the nucleus acumbuns
- release of dopamine in the NA is associated with reward
Electrical stimulation of self-stimulation sites, Fiorino et al. (1993)
- study finds animals will work to release dopamine in the nucleus accumbus
- In the VTA increases accumbal dopamine levels measured by in vivo microdialysis
Food increases accumbal dopamine, Radhakishun et al. (1988)
dopamine increases when an animal encounters a rewarding stimuli such as food
Drug of abuse increase accumbal dopamine, Dichiara and Imperato (1988)
- when administering addictive drugs to animals, dopamine in the NA increases
- suggesting we chase for more as we seek this increase in dopamine as it results in feelings of pleasure
how can we measure dopamine releasie in the nucleus accumbus in humans
you can indirectly measure dopamine released by measuring a tracer bind to dopamine
meso-corticolimbic dopamine system
- rewards increase NAC dopamine
- systemic and intra-NAC dopamine antagonists block responses normally maintained by reward
cholinergic projection from PPTg to VTA
- electrical self-stimulation
- Cholinergic drugs are self-administered into VTA
Glutamate projections from mPFV to VTA
- electrical self-stimulation
- stimulate dopamine release in NAc
Facial expressions associated with liking, Berridge and Robinson (2003)
- found animals and humans showed a dislike to aversive stimuli such as a bitter taste, and showed a liking response to a sweet taste