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At What Stage of Neural Processing Does Cocaine Act to Boost Pursuit of Rewards?

Overview of attention for article published in PLOS ONE, November 2010
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Title
At What Stage of Neural Processing Does Cocaine Act to Boost Pursuit of Rewards?
Published in
PLOS ONE, November 2010
DOI 10.1371/journal.pone.0015081
Pubmed ID
Authors

Giovanni Hernandez, Yannick-André Breton, Kent Conover, Peter Shizgal

Abstract

Dopamine-containing neurons have been implicated in reward and decision making. One element of the supporting evidence is that cocaine, like other drugs that increase dopaminergic neurotransmission, powerfully potentiates reward seeking. We analyze this phenomenon from a novel perspective, introducing a new conceptual framework and new methodology for determining the stage(s) of neural processing at which drugs, lesions and physiological manipulations act to influence reward-seeking behavior. Cocaine strongly boosts the proclivity of rats to work for rewarding electrical brain stimulation. We show that the conventional conceptual framework and methods do not distinguish between three conflicting accounts of how the drug produces this effect: increased sensitivity of brain reward circuitry, increased gain, or decreased subjective reward costs. Sensitivity determines the stimulation strength required to produce a reward of a given intensity (a measure analogous to the KM of an enzyme) whereas gain determines the maximum intensity attainable (a measure analogous to the vmax of an enzyme-catalyzed reaction). To distinguish sensitivity changes from the other determinants, we measured and modeled reward seeking as a function of both stimulation strength and opportunity cost. The principal effect of cocaine was a two-fourfold increase in willingness to pay for the electrical reward, an effect consistent with increased gain or decreased subjective cost. This finding challenges the long-standing view that cocaine increases the sensitivity of brain reward circuitry. We discuss the implications of the results and the analytic approach for theories of how dopaminergic neurons and other diffuse modulatory brain systems contribute to reward pursuit, and we explore the implications of the conceptual framework for the study of natural rewards, drug reward, and mood.

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Mendeley readers

The data shown below were compiled from readership statistics for 76 Mendeley readers of this research output. Click here to see the associated Mendeley record.

Geographical breakdown

Country Count As %
Canada 3 4%
United Kingdom 3 4%
Australia 1 1%
Spain 1 1%
United States 1 1%
Unknown 67 88%

Demographic breakdown

Readers by professional status Count As %
Researcher 20 26%
Student > Ph. D. Student 16 21%
Student > Master 8 11%
Student > Postgraduate 5 7%
Student > Bachelor 4 5%
Other 16 21%
Unknown 7 9%
Readers by discipline Count As %
Psychology 22 29%
Agricultural and Biological Sciences 14 18%
Neuroscience 9 12%
Medicine and Dentistry 5 7%
Computer Science 4 5%
Other 14 18%
Unknown 8 11%