All Relations between reward and dopaminergic

Publication Sentence Publish Date Extraction Date Species
Clayton Hickey, Leonardo Chelazzi, Jan Theeuwe. Reward changes salience in human vision via the anterior cingulate. The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience. vol 30. issue 33. 2010-09-03. PMID:20720117. other results show that the magnitude of visual bias created by reward is predicted by the response to reward feedback in anterior cingulate cortex, an area with strong connections to dopaminergic structures in the midbrain. 2010-09-03 2023-08-12 human
Andrew H Evans, Andrew D Lawrence, Silke Appel Cresswell, Regina Katzenschlager, Andrew J Lee. Compulsive use of dopaminergic drug therapy in Parkinson's disease: reward and anti-reward. Movement disorders : official journal of the Movement Disorder Society. vol 25. issue 7. 2010-08-17. PMID:20461804. compulsive use of dopaminergic drug therapy in parkinson's disease: reward and anti-reward. 2010-08-17 2023-08-12 Not clear
Atsushi Sato, Osamu Nakagawasai, Koichi Tan-No, Hiroshi Onogi, Fukie Niijima, Takeshi Tadan. Effect of non-selective dopaminergic receptor agonist on disrupted maternal behavior in olfactory bulbectomized mice. Behavioural brain research. vol 210. issue 2. 2010-08-10. PMID:20219556. in addition, we conducted the sucrose preference test to examine the reward system which has a critical relationship to mesolimbic dopaminergic function and maternal behavior. 2010-08-10 2023-08-12 mouse
Ana Ada. [Circadian rhythmicity and addiction]. Adicciones. vol 22. issue 1. 2010-07-20. PMID:20300708. moreover, it has been shown that the clock-genes clock and per2 are associated with vulnerability to addiction, the first gene directly regulating dopaminergic activity in the reward system and the second participating in the sensitivity to and abstinence from drugs. 2010-07-20 2023-08-12 Not clear
Sharon R Grady, Ryan M Drenan, Scott R Breining, Daniel Yohannes, Charles R Wageman, Nikolai B Fedorov, Sheri McKinney, Paul Whiteaker, Merouane Bencherif, Henry A Lester, Michael J Mark. Structural differences determine the relative selectivity of nicotinic compounds for native alpha 4 beta 2*-, alpha 6 beta 2*-, alpha 3 beta 4*- and alpha 7-nicotine acetylcholine receptors. Neuropharmacology. vol 58. issue 7. 2010-07-19. PMID:20114055. both subtypes modulate release of dopamine from the dopaminergic neurons of the mesoaccumbens pathway thought to be essential for reward and addiction. 2010-07-19 2023-08-12 mouse
Balaji Krishnan, Marjorie Centeno, Sebastian Pollandt, Yu Fu, Kathy Genzer, Jie Liu, Joel P Gallagher, Patricia Shinnick-Gallaghe. Dopamine receptor mechanisms mediate corticotropin-releasing factor-induced long-term potentiation in the rat amygdala following cocaine withdrawal. The European journal of neuroscience. vol 31. issue 6. 2010-07-07. PMID:20377617. moreover, dopaminergic neurotransmission in the brain reward system including the amygdala plays a significant role in the pathology of cocaine addiction. 2010-07-07 2023-08-12 rat
Christoph von der Goltz, Anne Koopmann, Christina Dinter, Anne Richter, Christine Rockenbach, Martin Grosshans, Helmut Nakovics, Klaus Wiedemann, Karl Mann, Georg Winterer, Falk Kiefe. Orexin and leptin are associated with nicotine craving: a link between smoking, appetite and reward. Psychoneuroendocrinology. vol 35. issue 4. 2010-06-17. PMID:19828259. preclinical data suggest modulating effects of both orexin/hypocretin and leptin on dopaminergic transmission in mesolimbic reward pathways. 2010-06-17 2023-08-12 Not clear
Jessica R Cohen, Robert F Asarnow, Fred W Sabb, Robert M Bilder, Susan Y Bookheimer, Barbara J Knowlton, Russell A Poldrac. A unique adolescent response to reward prediction errors. Nature neuroscience. vol 13. issue 6. 2010-06-14. PMID:20473290. this suggests that heightened dopaminergic prediction error responsivity contributes to adolescent reward seeking. 2010-06-14 2023-08-12 human
Meg Waraczynski, Jennifer Salemme, Benjamin Farra. Brain stimulation reward is affected by D2 dopamine receptor manipulations in the extended amygdala but not the nucleus accumbens. Behavioural brain research. vol 208. issue 2. 2010-05-25. PMID:20085789. these results suggest that dopaminergic neurotransmission in the sleac is more important to reward processes than is dopamine in the nac. 2010-05-25 2023-08-12 rat
Jörn Lötsch, Gerd Geisslinger, Irmgard Tegede. Genetic modulation of the pharmacological treatment of pain. Pharmacology & therapeutics. vol 124. issue 2. 2010-05-24. PMID:19615406. finally, opioid dosage requirements may be increased depending on the risk of drug addiction (e.g., drd2 polymorphisms decreasing the functioning of the dopaminergic reward system). 2010-05-24 2023-08-12 Not clear
Jason Shumake, Anton Ilango, Henning Scheich, Wolfram Wetzel, Frank W Oh. Differential neuromodulation of acquisition and retrieval of avoidance learning by the lateral habenula and ventral tegmental area. The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience. vol 30. issue 17. 2010-05-24. PMID:20427648. previous work has linked lhb activation to the inhibition of dopaminergic neurons during loss of reward, as well as to deficits in escape and avoidance learning. 2010-05-24 2023-08-12 Not clear
Lei Phillip Wang, Fei Li, Xiaoming Shen, Joe Z Tsie. Conditional knockout of NMDA receptors in dopamine neurons prevents nicotine-conditioned place preference. PloS one. vol 5. issue 1. 2010-05-20. PMID:20062537. it is known that nicotine triggers tobacco addiction by activating nicotine acetylcholine receptors (nachrs) in the midbrain dopaminergic reward system, primarily via the ventral tegmental area. 2010-05-20 2023-08-12 mouse
Stefano Pett. Lifestyle risk factors for oral cancer. Oral oncology. vol 45. issue 4-5. 2010-05-14. PMID:18674956. these behaviours have common characteristics: (i) they are widespread: one billion men, 250 million women smoke cigarettes, 600-1200 million people chew betel quid, two billion consume alcohol, unbalanced diet is common amongst developed and developing countries; (ii) they were already used by animals and human forerunners millions of years ago because they were essential to overcome conditions such as cold, hunger, famine; their use was seasonal and limited by low availability, in contrast with the pattern of consumption of the modern era, characterized by routine, heavy usage, for recreational activities and with multiple exposures; (iii) their consumption in small doses is not recognized as detrimental by the human body and activates the dopaminergic reward system of the brain, thus giving instant pleasure, "liking" (overconsumption) and "wanting" (craving). 2010-05-14 2023-08-12 human
Enzo Emanuele, Marianna Boso, Francesco Cassola, Davide Broglia, Ilaria Bonoldi, Lara Mancini, Mara Marini, Pierluigi Polit. Increased dopamine DRD4 receptor mRNA expression in lymphocytes of musicians and autistic individuals: bridging the music-autism connection. Neuro endocrinology letters. vol 31. issue 1. 2010-05-13. PMID:20150884. previous studies have suggested a pivotal role for the dopaminergic system in the psychobiology of reward, including the pleasure of music. 2010-05-13 2023-08-12 Not clear
R Maldonad. [The endogenous opioid system and drug addiction]. Annales pharmaceutiques francaises. vol 68. issue 1. 2010-05-13. PMID:20176158. thus, opioid receptors and endogenous opioid peptides are largely distributed in the mesolimbic system and modulate dopaminergic activity within the reward circuits. 2010-05-13 2023-08-12 Not clear
Benjamin C Campbell, Anna Dreber, Coren L Apicella, Dan T A Eisenberg, Peter B Gray, Anthony C Little, Justin R Garcia, Richard S Zamore, J Koji Lu. Testosterone exposure, dopaminergic reward, and sensation-seeking in young men. Physiology & behavior. vol 99. issue 4. 2010-05-12. PMID:20026092. testosterone exposure, dopaminergic reward, and sensation-seeking in young men. 2010-05-12 2023-08-12 Not clear
Benjamin C Campbell, Anna Dreber, Coren L Apicella, Dan T A Eisenberg, Peter B Gray, Anthony C Little, Justin R Garcia, Richard S Zamore, J Koji Lu. Testosterone exposure, dopaminergic reward, and sensation-seeking in young men. Physiology & behavior. vol 99. issue 4. 2010-05-12. PMID:20026092. to test the relationship between androgen exposure, dopaminergic reward and sensation-seeking, we compared variation in salivary testosterone (t), 2d:4d digit ratio, facial masculinity, zuckerman's sensation-seeking scale (sss) and the d4 dopamine receptor (drd4) genes from 98 young men, between the ages of 18 and 23 years. 2010-05-12 2023-08-12 Not clear
Jonathan P Roiser, Klaas E Stephan, Hanneke E M den Ouden, Karl J Friston, Eileen M Joyc. Adaptive and aberrant reward prediction signals in the human brain. NeuroImage. vol 50. issue 2. 2010-05-11. PMID:19969090. as expected, cues associated with high relative to low reward probabilities elicited robust hemodynamic responses in a network of structures previously implicated in motivational salience; the midbrain, in the vicinity of the ventral tegmental area, and regions targeted by its dopaminergic projections, i.e. 2010-05-11 2023-08-12 human
Kenneth Blum, Thomas J H Chen, Amanda L H Chen, Margaret Madigan, B William Downs, Roger L Waite, Eric R Braverman, Mallory Kerner, Abdalla Bowirrat, John Giordano, Harry Henshaw, Mark S Gol. Do dopaminergic gene polymorphisms affect mesolimbic reward activation of music listening response? Therapeutic impact on Reward Deficiency Syndrome (RDS). Medical hypotheses. vol 74. issue 3. 2010-05-07. PMID:19914781. do dopaminergic gene polymorphisms affect mesolimbic reward activation of music listening response? 2010-05-07 2023-08-12 human
Howard S Smit. The role of genomic oxidative-reductive balance as predictor of complex regional pain syndrome development: a novel theory. Pain physician. vol 13. issue 1. 2010-05-05. PMID:20119466. diminished euphoric effects from opioids potentially due to drd2 polymorphisms decreasing the functioning of the dopaminergic reward system). 2010-05-05 2023-08-12 human