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Biological Psychology

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Arcuate n. Pituitary. Medial forebrain bundle. Also (but less effective): prefrontal cortex ... Arcuate n. Pituitary. Nucleus accumbens. Mesolimbic pathway ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Biological Psychology


1
Biological Psychology
Reward and addiction
2
Olds and Milner, 1954
Journal of Comparative and Physiological
Psychology, 47, 419-427
Observed that a single animal appeared to enjoy
brain stimulation By the time the third
electrical stimulus had been applied the animal
seemed indubitably to be coming back for more
  • Subsequently showed that animals would press a
    lever repeatedly in order to receive electrical
    stimulation of specific brain areas.
  • effect was region specific
  • dependent on stimulus strength

This is self-stimulation
3
Self-stimulation
Animals will work (e.g. press a lever) in order
to receive electrical stimulation of certain
brain areas.
  • Best areas
  • median forebrain bundle
  • ventral tegmental area
  • Also (but less effective)
  • prefrontal cortex
  • nucleus accumbens

4
Factors affecting self-stimulation
  • Effects of stimulation current on press rate
  • Not supported below a certain current (threshold)
  • As the current increases the press rate increases
  • Effects of drugs/lesions on press rate
  • Threshold current is increased by dopamine
    antagonists
  • Press-rate is decreased by low doses of dopamine
    antagonists
  • Pressing abolished by lesions of MFB
  • Self-stimulation and dopamine release
  • Causes an incresse in dopamine release in nucleus
    accumbens

5
Dopamine and natural reward
  • Animals will work (e.g. press a lever) to receive
    reward
  • e.g. food, water, sex
  • Work rates are affected by dopaminergic drugs,
    given either systemically or locally into n.
    accumbens
  • e.g. dopamine antagonists decrease lever
    pressing for food reward

Dopamine release is increased during lever
pressing to receive reward (or a stimulus
associated with reward)
Dopamine release is increased during naturally
rewarding behaviours (e.g. feeding, drinking,
sex), and during neutral stimuli predictive of
either
6
Drug self-administration
  • Animals will work (e.g. press a lever) in order
    to receive drug infusions intra-venously, or
    intracerebrally, particularly
  • Nucleus accumbens
  • Ventral tegmantal area

7
Drugs which support self-administration
  • Drugs which animals will self-administer
    intravenously
  • amphetamine, cocaine
  • morphine, nicotine, ethanol
  • Drugs which animals will self-administer locally
  • amphetamine (into NAc)
  • morphine (into VTA)
  • Pharmacological actions of drugs which support
    self administration
  • Amphetamine increases dopamine release, blocks
    reuptake and inhibits enzymatic breakdown
  • Cocaine blocks dopamine reuptake
  • Morphine agonist at opiate receptors
  • Nicotine agonist at acetylcholine receptors
  • Ethanol mechanism of action uncertain

8
Effects of dopaminergic manipulations on
self-administration
  • Systemic self-administration of amphetamine or
    cocaine is
  • Potentiated by dopamine antagonists
  • Press rate increases in order to receive more
    drug to overcome the effect of the antagonist
  • Blocked by 6-OHDA lesions of nucleus accumbens
  • Lesion removes all dopamine neurones, therefore
    abolishing the mechanism by which the drugs are
    reinforcing

9
Reward or reinforcement?
  • Reward
  • A pleasurable experience
  • May or may not increase the likelihood of
    repeating the behaviour
  • Subjective
  • Objective
  • Positive reinforcement
  • Presentation of a stimulus which increases the
    likelihood of eliciting a behaviour
  • Does not necessarily imply pleasure

10
Conditioned place preference
  • Training
  • The rat is placed in the central chamber of a
    three chamber cage
  • R rewarded chamber (e.g. food)
  • C control chamber

C
R
Test The rat is again placed in the central
chamber, but there is no reward present. Measure
time spent in CR (conditioned reward) chamber
11
Data from DiChiara Imperato (1988)
12
Drugs which increase dopamine release
  • Brain microdialysis studies have shown a number
    of drugs which increase dopamine release in
    nucleus accumbens
  • (DiChiara Imperato, 1988)
  • Amphetamine
  • Cocaine
  • Nicotine
  • Morphine
  • Ethanol
  • Larger responses in nucleus accumbens than
    striatum

13
Dopamine and reward is it that simple?
  • Evidence that dopamine release in nucleus
    accumbens signals reward
  • self-stimulation and effects of dopaminergic
    drugs
  • drug self-administration (systemic and local)
  • conditioned place preference
  • dopamine release in nucleus accumbens during
    rewarded behaviour
  • drugs which enhance these behaviours, all evoke
    dopamine release in nucleus accumbens when given
    alone
  • BUT
  • aversive stimuli also evoke dopamine release in
    nucleus accumbens

Therefore dopamine release in nucleus accumbens
signals more than just reward
Is it perhaps salience ?
14
A link with addiction?
  • Many drugs , when administered systemically, have
    been shown to enhance dopamine release in nucleus
    accumbens
  • amphetamine, cocaine
  • nicotine, ethanol, opiates (morphine heroine),
    barbiturates
  • Release is relatively specific to nucleus
    accumbens
  • These are the same drugs which
  • enhance self-stimulation
  • support self-administration
  • show conditioned place preference
  • enhance reinforced behaviours
  • have addictive potential in humans

Therefore there is believed to be a link between
dopamine release in nucleus accumbens, reward and
addiction
15
Addictive drugs and dopamine
  • Addictive drugs have several different
    behavioural effects
  • CNS Stimulants amphetamine, cocaine, nicotine,
    caffeine
  • CNS depressants alcohol, opioids, barbiturates,
    benzodiazipines, volatile solvents
  • Hallucinogens LSD, ecstacy, ketamine, cannabis
  • Act via several different neuronal/pharmacological
    mechanisms
  • Therefore addictive potential is unlikely to be
    related to primary pharmacology
  • All these drugs have in common the ability to
    increase dopamine release in the mesolimbic
    pathway
  • Why are direct dopamine agonists not addictive?

16
Interactions of addictive drugs with dopamine (1)
Amphetamine Increases dopamine release,
decreases uptake and breakdown Cocaine
Decreases dopamine uptake Nicotine Stimulates
dopamine neurones, by activating nicotinic Ach
receptors on VTA cell bodies Caffeine
Antagonist action on adenosine receptors.
Unclear whether stimulation of dopamine neurones
is through this mechanism. Alcohol Has
effects on opioid, GABA and glutamate systems.
Stimulation of dopamine neurones may be direct or
may be through one of these. Opioids Stimulates
dopamine neurones, by inhibiting GABAergic
neurones in VTA, which inhibit VTA dopamine
neurones (disinhibition) Barbiturates
benzodiazipines Stimulates dopamine neurones,
by enhancing GABAergic inhibition of inhibitory
neurones in VTA (i.e. disinhibition) Volatile
solvents Stimulates dopamine neurones, by
unknown
17
Interactions of addictive drugs with dopamine (2)
LSD Stimulates dopamine neurones, by via 5HT
receptors, probably in VTA. Ecstacy Stimulates
dopamine neurones, possibly by a direct
amphetamine-like effect or via 5HT
mechanisms Ketamine Stimulates dopamine
neurones, by activating glutamatergic input to
VTA Cannabis Acts through cannabanoid
receptors. May interact with opioid systems to
increase mesolimbic dopamine release.
18
Addictive behaviour
  • Many behaviours and/or stimuli associated with
    drug taking become reinforced
  • Promote drug taking
  • Induce craving for drugs
  • Induce physical symptoms similar to withdrawal
    symptoms
  • This implies a link with conditioning
  • Behaviours associated with reward (actual or
    potential) may also become addictive
  • Gambling (addiction of impulse-control disorder)
  • Exercise
  • Eating disorders
  • Can this explain psychological dependence?
  • Behaviours which activate dopamine systems

19
Further reading
Joseph MH, Young AMJ and Gray JA (1996) Are
neurochemistry and reinforcement enough Can the
abuse potential of drugs be explained by common
actions on a dopamine reward system in the brain?
Human Psychopharm 11, S55-S63. Robbins TW
Everitt BJ (1999) Drug addiction bad habits add
up. Nature 398, 567-570. Wise RA (1996)
Neurobiology of addiction. Current Opinion in
Neurobiology, 6, 243-251
20
Models of drug addiction
  • Incentive salience model
  • Incentive salience is a distinct component of
    motivation and reward, and is distinguishable
    from hedonic impact and reward learning.
  • Dopamine provides the driving force to perform a
    behaviour
  • Dopamine systems drive wanting incentives, but
    not liking them nor do they drive learning new
    likes and dislikes.
  • Drugs which increase dopamine tap into this
    innate mechanism, and thus reinforce the drug
    taking behaviour
  • The behaviour is not necessarily pleasurable
  • May also lead to physiological changes in
    neurotransmitter systems, leading to a state
    where normal function requires the presence of
    the drug.

21
Recommended Reading
  • General reviews on Neurochemical basis of
    addiction
  • Di Chiara, G. (1999) Drug addiction as
    dopamine-dependent associative learning disorder.
    European Journal of Pharmacology 375 13?30
  • Everitt BJ, Dickinson A and Robbins TW
    (2001)The neuropsychological basis of addictive
    behaviour,Brain Research Reviews, Volume 36,
    Pages 129-138 
  • Koob, G.F., Sanna P.P., and Bloom F.E. (1998).
    Neuroscience of addiction. Neuron, 21, 467-476.
  • Wise, R.A. (1996) Neurobiology of addiction.
    Current Opinion in Neurobiology, 6243-251
  • There are also some papers at this link, if you
    want to follow up on specific aspects (Do not be
    overwhelmed by this list I only suggest these
    papers if you want further depth I am not
    suggesting you read them all! http//www.le.ac.uk
    /pc/amjy1\Tutorials\Addiction_papers.htm

22
Summary of action of drugs affecting reinforced
behaviour
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