Title: REWARD SYSTEMS OF THE BRAIN?
1REWARD SYSTEMS OF THE BRAIN?
2ICSS and brain reward centers? A series of
misinterpretations.
- The lateral hypothalamus (LH)/
- The reward center?
3Animal Models of reward
- James Olds and Intra-cranial Self-stimulationInti
al studies of learning and RAS stimulation..serend
ipity! - Place preference
- 2 lever choice
4BUT! The medial Forebrain Bundle (MFB) runs
through the LH
The MFB is a large tract that arises from many
different nuclei and projects to many forebrain
regions
5The Ventral tegmental Area (VTA) Dopaminergic
pathways
A component of MFB axons arise from the VTA-DA
projection paths.
VTA
6mesolimbic and Mesocortical Dopaminergic pathways
The VTA projects to the nucleus accumbens and to
the medial prefrontal cortex
7DA agonist and antagonist effectson ICSS
- DA Antagonist (drugs that block the effects of
DA ) reduce ICSS potency ( actually increase
rates of responding suggesting the reward value
has diminished) - DA Agonist (drugs that enhance the effects of
DA ) Increase ICSS potency ( actually decrease
rates of responding suggesting the reward value
has increased)
8Microdialysis Studies support the role of DA in
Reward
Microdialysis probe
9Microdialysis probe an ultra small cellular
fluid collection system
10When Implanted in targeted brain regions
11Extracellular fluids can be collected and
analyzed for neurochemical content. Different
chemicals produced different Chemical
signaturesincluding DA.
12ICCS increases DA release in Nucleus Accumbens
13Drugs increase DA release in accumbens
14Brain reward and Humans
- Functional brain imagery of brain activity after
administration of a learned reward in humans has
found changes in brain activity in the nucleus
accumbens, medial orbitofrontal cortex and
anterior cingulate cortex.
15What about ICSS in Humans
- In humans, a well-known case was B-19, a young
man implanted with stimulation electrodes by
Heath and colleagues in the 1960s. - B-19 self-stimulated at very high rates and
would be upset when the stimulation was
disallowed. - Appeared to produce feelings of pleasure,
alertness, and warmth. - He also reported sexual arousal and described a
compulsion to masturbate (p. 6, Heath, 1972).
16But was this pleasure?
- Perhaps not.
- B19s electrode stimulation evoked desire to
stimulate again and strong sexual arousal while
never producing sexual orgasm or clear evidence
of actual pleasure sensation. - Alternatively The stimulation may not have
affected reward but may have produced a want
to do sexual acts.
17The Incentive-Sensitization Theory 'wanting' is
not 'liking'
- The neural system are proposed to be separate ..
(Robinson and Berridge)
18Then what is the role of meso-cortical,
mesolimbic DA systems?
- ..to increase the salience' of stimuli and
events associated with activation of the system. -
- Stimuli are imbued with salience, making them
attractive, 'wanted', incentive stimuli.
19The Incentive-Sensitization theory and Drug
Addiction ?
- Drug-induced sensitization of DA pathways cause
pathological incentive motivation (wanting) for
drugs (Robinson and Berridge, 2008) - Dopamine normally functions to trigger reward
wanting. In drug dependence, drugs alter
this system. - Repeated use of such drugs makes the dopamine
system hyper-responsive to drug cues - Drug cues become difficult for addicts to
ignore, and lead to intense wanting (cravings
and/or relapse).
20The Incentive-Sensitization theory and Implicit
perceptions?
- The incentivesensitization theory holds that
drugs can activate wanting in the absence of
conscious awareness. - Activation of the DA pathways can sometimes
produce goal-directed - behavior (wanting) not only in the absence of
subjective pleasure, but in the absence of
conscious awareness of wanting itself.
21Evidence supporting the Incentive-Sensitization
Theory
- Lesions studies, and studies using selective
dopamine agonists or antagonists, as well as
other similar manipulations have no effect on
rats judgements of hedonic properties of taste
stimuli1 (for reviews, see Berridge ). - Many studies show that dopamine and accumbens
neurons often become most active in anticipation
of rewards, not during the reward phase - DA systems are also activated by aversive,
stimuli and events. - In humans DA antagonists, such as pimozide or
haloperidol, do not reduce amphetamine-induced
pleasure.
22But What About Pleasure?
- Rewarding/pleasurable stimuli activate Opioid,
anandamine ( an endogenous cannabis-like
neurotransmitter) and GABA release in the
Accumbens. - Crucial for pleasurable feelings associated with
delicious foods, sex, drugs, and other rewards (a
role previously thought to be played mostly by
brain dopamine systems).
23Evidence for separate pleasure circuits?
- Enjoyable sweet tastes produce characteristic
licking responses in rats. Aversive bitter
tastes produce gaping and head shaking. - An opioid drug (Damgo) was micro-injected into
the VTA of rats - Rats ate much more food and had significantly
greater number of "liking" expressions when they
tasted the food. - "Liking" expressions were defined as positive
facial lip licking expressions that are similar
in rats, monkeys, apes and even human infants.
24PLEASURE/LIKING?
- In this fashion Several brain areas have been
found to produce changes in Liking - E.g... activation of opioid circuits in the
nucleus accumbens (e.g., by microinjecting
morphine there) causes increased pleasure
liking. - Thus the VTA- Accumbens pathway appears important
in wanting (DA) and Liking (opioids etc)
25Relation of incentive sensitization to cognitive
dysfunction
- Other brain changes contribute importantly to
addiction too, including damage or dysfunction in
cortical mechanisms that underlie cognitive
choice and decision making (Robinson Berridge
2000, 2003). - Many studies have indicated changes in executive
functions, involving how alternative outcomes
are evaluated and decisions and choices made,
occur in addicts and animals given drugs (Jentsch
Taylor 1999 Rogers Robbins 2001 Bechara et
al. 2002 Schoenbaum Shaham 2008). - The impairment of executive control plays an
important role in making bad choices about drugs,
especially when combined with the pathological
incentive motivation for drugs induced by
incentive sensitization.