| Literature DB >> 19803592 |
Greg Murray1, Christian L Nicholas, Jan Kleiman, Robyn Dwyer, Melinda J Carrington, Nicholas B Allen, John Trinder.
Abstract
Existing literature on reward motivation pays scant attention to the fact that reward potential of the environment varies dramatically with the light/dark cycle. Evolution, by contrast, treats this fact very seriously: In all species, the circadian system is adapted to optimize the daily rhythm of environmental engagement. We used 3 standard protocols to demonstrate that human reward motivation, as measured in the dynamics of positive affect (PA), is modulated endogenously by the circadian clock. Under naturalistic conditions, 13.0% of PA variance was explained by a 24-hr sinusoid. In a constant routine protocol, 25.0% of PA variance was explained by the unmasked circadian rhythm in core body temperature (CBT). A forced desynchrony study showed PA to align with CBT in exhibiting circadian periodicity independent of a 28-hr sleep/wake cycle. It is concluded that the circadian system modulates reward activation, and implications for models of normal and abnormal mood are discussed.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19803592 DOI: 10.1037/a0017080
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emotion ISSN: 1528-3542