Literature DB >> 19073424

Dopamine and reward: the anhedonia hypothesis 30 years on.

Roy A Wise1.   

Abstract

The anhedonia hypothesis--that brain dopamine plays a critical role in the subjective pleasure associated with positive rewards--was intended to draw the attention of psychiatrists to the growing evidence that dopamine plays a critical role in the objective reinforcement and incentive motivation associated with food and water, brain stimulation reward, and psychomotor stimulant and opiate reward. The hypothesis called to attention the apparent paradox that neuroleptics, drugs used to treat a condition involving anhedonia (schizophrenia), attenuated in laboratory animals the positive reinforcement that we normally associate with pleasure. The hypothesis held only brief interest for psychiatrists, who pointed out that the animal studies reflected acute actions of neuroleptics whereas the treatment of schizophrenia appears to result from neuroadaptations to chronic neuroleptic administration, and that it is the positive symptoms of schizophrenia that neuroleptics alleviate, rather than the negative symptoms that include anhedonia. Perhaps for these reasons, the hypothesis has had minimal impact in the psychiatric literature. Despite its limited heuristic value for the understanding of schizophrenia, however, the anhedonia hypothesis has had major impact on biological theories of reinforcement, motivation, and addiction. Brain dopamine plays a very important role in reinforcement of response habits, conditioned preferences, and synaptic plasticity in cellular models of learning and memory. The notion that dopamine plays a dominant role in reinforcement is fundamental to the psychomotor stimulant theory of addiction, to most neuroadaptation theories of addiction, and to current theories of conditioned reinforcement and reward prediction. Properly understood, it is also fundamental to recent theories of incentive motivation.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 19073424      PMCID: PMC3155128          DOI: 10.1007/BF03033808

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neurotox Res        ISSN: 1029-8428            Impact factor:   3.911


  123 in total

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  192 in total

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Review 3.  Anxiety, depression, and cigarette smoking: a transdiagnostic vulnerability framework to understanding emotion-smoking comorbidity.

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4.  The designer methcathinone analogs, mephedrone and methylone, are substrates for monoamine transporters in brain tissue.

Authors:  Michael H Baumann; Mario A Ayestas; John S Partilla; Jacqueline R Sink; Alexander T Shulgin; Paul F Daley; Simon D Brandt; Richard B Rothman; Arnold E Ruoho; Nicholas V Cozzi
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5.  [Life-threatening fentanyl and propofol addiction: interview with a survivor].

Authors:  C Maier; J Leclerc-Springer
Journal:  Anaesthesist       Date:  2012-07       Impact factor: 1.041

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Authors:  Ana-João Rodrigues; Pedro Leão; Miguel Carvalho; Osborne F X Almeida; Nuno Sousa
Journal:  Psychopharmacology (Berl)       Date:  2010-11-19       Impact factor: 4.530

Review 7.  Opponency revisited: competition and cooperation between dopamine and serotonin.

Authors:  Y-Lan Boureau; Peter Dayan
Journal:  Neuropsychopharmacology       Date:  2010-09-29       Impact factor: 7.853

8.  In vivo 1H-magnetic resonance spectroscopy study of the attentional networks in autism.

Authors:  Silvia Bernardi; Evdokia Anagnostou; Jun Shen; Alexander Kolevzon; Joseph D Buxbaum; Eric Hollander; Patrick R Hof; Jin Fan
Journal:  Brain Res       Date:  2010-12-23       Impact factor: 3.252

9.  Affective status in relation to impulsive, motor and motivational symptoms: personality, development and physical exercise.

Authors:  Tomas Palomo; Richard J Beninger; Richard M Kostrzewa; Trevor Archer
Journal:  Neurotox Res       Date:  2008-10       Impact factor: 3.911

10.  Qualitative differences between C57BL/6J and DBA/2J mice in morphine potentiation of brain stimulation reward and intravenous self-administration.

Authors:  Greg I Elmer; Jeanne O Pieper; Lindsey R Hamilton; Roy A Wise
Journal:  Psychopharmacology (Berl)       Date:  2009-12-15       Impact factor: 4.530

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