Mechanisms of Motivation - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Mechanisms of Motivation

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Title: Mechanisms of Motivation


1
Mechanisms of Motivation
2
Motivation and Incentives
  • Motivation - factors within and outside an
    organism that cause it to behave a certain way at
    a certain time
  • Motivational state or drive - an internal
    condition, which can change over time, that
    orients an individual to a specific set of goals
    (e.g., hunger, thirst, sex, curiosity)
  • Incentives - goals or reinforcers in the external
    environment (e.g., good grades, food, a mate)

3
Drives as Tissue Needs
  • Homeostasis - the constancy of internal
    conditions that the body must actively maintain
  • Drives may be an upset in homeostasis, inducing
    behavior to correct the imbalance
  • Animals do behave in accordance with their tissue
    needs (e.g., increasing or decreasing caloric
    intake, drive for salt)
  • However, homeostasis cannot explain all drives

4
Types of Drives
  • Regulatory drives - helps preserve homeostasis
    (e.g., hunger, thirst, oxygen)
  • Nonregulatory drives - serve other purposes
    (e.g., sex, achievement)

5
Drives as States of the Brain
  • Central state theory of drives - different drives
    correspond to neural activity in different sets
    of neurons in the brain
  • Central drive system - set of neurons in which
    activity constitutes a drive

6
Drives as States of the Brain
  • Techniques for studying central drive systems
    include lesions and stimulation

7
Drives as States of the Brain
  • The hub of many central drive systems lies in the
    hypothalamus

8
Hunger Drive
  • Two areas of the hypothalamus, the lateral and
    ventromedial areas, play a central role in the
    hunger drive

9
Lateral Area
  • Electrical lesions to tract of axons connecting
    brainstem, hypothalamus and basal ganglia cause a
    loss of all goal-directed behavior
  • Stimulation causes drives in response to
    available incentives

10
Lateral Area
  • However, chemical lesions to specific cell bodies
    reduce hunger drive, but do not abolish it - most
    other drives appear normal

11
Ventromedial Area
  • Lesions alter digestive and metabolic processes
  • Food is converted into fat rather than energy
    molecules, causing animal to eat much more than
    normal and gain weight

12
Hunger Drive
  • Other stimuli that act on the brain to increase
    or decrease hunger include
  • satiety signals from the stomach
  • signals indicating the amount of food molecules
    in the blood
  • leptin, a hormone indicating the amount of fat in
    the body
  • the appetizer effect

13
Research on Weight Regulation and Dieting
  • No consistent personality trait differences found
    between obese and non-obese people (e.g.,
    willpower, anxiety)
  • Dieters and obese are more likely to eat in
    response to stress than non-dieters
  • Family environment of little importance in
    determining body weight - genetics plays a large
    role
  • Number of fat-storage cells is a major
    determinant of body weight

14
Research on Weight Regulation and Dieting
  • Fat cells are determined by genetics and food
    intake
  • They increase with weight gain, but merely shrink
    with weight loss - may stimulate hunger
  • Weight loss causes a decline in basal metabolism

15
Effects of Culture and Habits on Body Weight
  • Settling point - cluster of genetic and
    environmental factors that cause a persons
    weight to settle within a given range
  • Weight can be affected by factors like diet,
    exercise, and daily habits (e.g., stairs instead
    of elevator)

16
Sex Drive
  • Increased production of testosterone and estrogen
    at puberty is responsible for physical
    differentiation
  • Increased secretion of DHEA, primary adrenal sex
    hormone, is responsible for sexual feelings

17
Male Sex Drive
  • Testosterone maintains sex drive in adult males
  • castration decreases drive
  • testosterone injections or implantation to medial
    preoptic area restores drive

18
Female Sex Drive
  • Estrous cycle controls drive in nonhuman mammals
  • removal of ovaries abolishes drive, while hormone
    injections restore it
  • Also, lesions to ventromedial area abolish drive,
    while injection or implantation restores drive

19
Female Sex Drive
  • Female monkeys and apes depend less on hormones
    for sexual behavior
  • Human female sex drive may not be consistently
    affected by hormone cycle at all
  • ovarian hormones play small role
  • adrenal hormones like DHEA and testosterone play
    larger role

20
Early Effects of Testosterone
  • Presence of testosterone during critical period
    will cause rudimentary genitals of fetus to
    develop into male structures
  • Testosterone acts in brain to promote development
    of neural systems for male sex drive and inhibit
    systems for female drive
  • Absence causes development of female structures
  • Stressful events experienced by pregnant rats
    reduce level of prenatal testosterone

21
Human Sexual Orientation
  • Orientation is an early-emerging, ingrained
    aspect of the self that probably does not change
  • No consistent relationship between orientation
    and childhood experiences (e.g., parenting,
    abuse, sexual experience)
  • Controversial findings suggest a possible
    relationship among prenatal stress, androgens,
    and the development of brain systems that play a
    role in sexual attraction

22
Reward Pathways in the Brain
  • Medial forebrain bundle runs from the midbrain
    through the lateral area of the hypothalamus into
    the nucleus accumbens in the basal ganglia
  • neurons in this tract secrete dopamine
  • animals will self-stimulate this pathway
  • euphoria-producing drugs affect the level of
    dopamine in this tract
  • evolved to promote survival and reproduction
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