PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Dopamine impacts your willingness to work

2012-05-02
(Press-News.org) Slacker or go-getter?

Everyone knows that people vary substantially in how hard they are willing to work, but the origin of these individual differences in the brain remains a mystery.

Now the veil has been pushed back by a new brain imaging study that has found an individual's willingness to work hard to earn money is strongly influenced by the chemistry in three specific areas of the brain. In addition to shedding new light on how the brain works, the research could have important implications for the treatment of attention-deficit disorder, depression, schizophrenia and other forms of mental illness characterized by decreased motivation.

The study was published May 2 in the Journal of Neuroscience and was performed by a team of Vanderbilt scientists including post-doctoral student Michael Treadway and Professor of Psychology David Zald.

Using a brain mapping technique called positron emission tomography (PETscan), the researchers found that "go-getters" who are willing to work hard for rewards had higher release of the neurotransmitter dopamine in areas of the brain known to play an important role in reward and motivation, the striatum and ventromedial prefrontal cortex. On the other hand, "slackers" who are less willing to work hard for a reward had high dopamine levels in another brain area that plays a role in emotion and risk perception, the anterior insula.

"Past studies in rats have shown that dopamine is crucial for reward motivation," said Treadway, "but this study provides new information about how dopamine determines individual differences in the behavior of human reward-seekers."

The role of dopamine in the anterior insula came as a complete surprise to the researchers. The finding was unexpected because it suggests that more dopamine in the insula is associated with a reduced desire to work, even when it means earning less money. The fact that dopamine can have opposing effects in different parts of the brain complicates the picture regarding the use of psychotropic medications that affect dopamine levels for the treatment of attention-deficit disorder, depression and schizophrenia because it calls into question the general assumption that these dopaminergic drugs have the same effect throughout the brain.

The study was conducted with 25 healthy volunteers (52 percent female) ranging in age from 18 to 29. To determine their willingness to work for a monetary reward, the participants were asked to perform a button-pushing task. First, they were asked to select either an easy or a hard button-pushing task. Easy tasks earned $1 while the reward for hard tasks ranged up to $4. Once they made their selection, they were told they had a high, medium or low probability of getting the reward. Individual tasks lasted for about 30 seconds and participants were asked to perform them repeatedly for about 20 minutes.

"At this point, we don't have any data proving that this 20-minute snippet of behavior corresponds to an individual's long-term achievement," said Zald, "but if it does measure a trait variable such as an individual's willingness to expend effort to obtain long-term goals, it will be extremely valuable."

The research is part of a larger project designed to search for objective measures for depression and other psychological disorders where motivation is reduced. "Right now our diagnoses for these disorders is often fuzzy and based on subjective self-report of symptoms," said Zald. "Imagine how valuable it would be if we had an objective test that could tell whether a patient was suffering from a deficit or abnormality in an underlying neural system. With objective measures we could treat the underlying conditions instead of the symptoms."

Further research is needed to examine whether similar individual differences in dopamine levels help explain the altered motivation seen in forms of mental illness such as depression and addiction. Additional research is under way to examine how medications specifically impact these motivational systems.

INFORMATION:

Robert Kessler, professor of radiology and radiological sciences, Ronald Cowan, associate professor of psychiatry, Joshua Buckholtz, assistant professor of psychology at Harvard, Neil Woodward, assistant professor of psychology, Rui Li, senior research specialist of radiology and radiological sciences, Sib Ansari, associate of radiology and radiological sciences, Ronald Baldwin, research associate professor of radiology and radiological sciences, and research assistant Ashley Schwartzman also contributed to the study. The National Institute of Drug Abuse funded the research..

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Big Easy CMS improves user experience

2012-05-02
Bold Endeavours announced launch of a new addition to its Big Easy Content Management System (CMS) - an integrated widget for adding videos on a webpage directly or add them from online video services such as YouTube and Vimeo. The new feature of CMS will allow placing videos with custom size player onto any area of a page quickly and would not require any special technical knowledge. Although embedding video clips onto a webpage is not something new, however it is a complex procedure that most content management systems still suffer from. Especially it causes some ...

Environment key to preventing childhood disabilities

2012-05-02
The United States government would get a better bang for its health-care buck in managing the country's most prevalent childhood disabilities if it invested more in eliminating socio-environmental risk factors than in developing medicines. That's the key conclusion of Prevention of Disability in Children: Elevating the Role of Environment, a new paper co-authored by a Simon Fraser University researcher. The paper is in the May issue of the Future of the Children journal, which is produced by the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs at Princeton University ...

Creative FX Help Sydenham High Break World Record

2012-05-02
On Friday 27th April 2012, students and staff at Sydenham High School held a 'Big Breakfast and Balloon Race' to set the world record for the biggest cereal breakfast and release over 3,500 balloons to raise money for charity. The outdoors event, part of Sydenham High School's 125th anniversary celebrations, took place on the school astroturf between 8 and 10am on Friday morning. 653 girls from the junior and secondary schools braved the weather to sit down together at 9am and officially break the Guinness World Record for biggest cereal breakfast. The record previously ...

Newborns should be screened for heart defects, study shows

2012-05-02
There is now overwhelming evidence that all babies should be offered screening for heart defects at birth, according to a major new study published online in The Lancet. Heart defects are the most common type of birth defects in the UK. Although newborns often show no visible signs of the condition, if not treated promptly it can be fatal. The research, led by a Queen Mary, University of London academic with a colleague from the University of Birmingham, shows that a non-invasive test called pulse oximetry offers an accurate and cost effective screening tool. Pulse ...

Evidence that BMI has an independent and causal effect on heart disease risk

2012-05-02
In addition to the many risk factors associated with poor health, reducing body mass index (BMI) will have a considerable and independent impact if you want to reduce the risk of developing ischemic heart disease (IHD). This is the key finding from new research, published in PLoS Medicine, which evaluated the causal relationship between BMI and heart disease in 76,000 individuals. BMI, alongside age, smoking, diabetes, high blood pressure, high blood cholesterol levels, and individuals who have family history of the disease, has been long recognised as a risk factor ...

Flooring Contractor Figures are Alarming

2012-05-02
According to a recent survey by the National Specialist Contractors Council in association with the School of the Built and Natural Environment at Northumbria University, flooring contractors fear a 'double dip' recession. The survey was carried out at the end of the last quarter of 2011. There has been a significant rise in specialist flooring contractors reporting a severe fall in new contracts being won, at nearly 50% compared to just 37% in the previous quarter. This is an alarming finding, especially as general enquiries have also fallen according to over a third ...

Squid and zebrafish cells inspire camouflaging smart materials

2012-05-02
Researchers from the University of Bristol have created artificial muscles that can be transformed at the flick of a switch to mimic the remarkable camouflaging abilities of organisms such as squid and zebrafish. They demonstrate two individual transforming mechanisms that they believe could be used in 'smart clothing' to trigger camouflaging tricks similar to those seen in nature. The study is published today, 2 May, in IOP Publishing's journal Bioinspiration and Biomimetics, and is accompanied by a video showing the camouflaging in action. "We have taken inspiration ...

Celebrate Cinco in the City with Cinco "D" Mayo in Detroit on May 5

2012-05-02
Join Chuck and Dave's for "Cinco 'D' Mayo" on Saturday May 5 in Foxtown at Bookie's Bar & Grille in Detroit. This FREE Cinco de Mayo party celebrates the Mexican holiday of freedom, democracy, heritage and pride - with a distinctively Detroit flair! Revelers are invited to join the party at this fun and flavorful event, featuring Latin dance demonstrations (and lessons), Mexican food, salsa and tequila sampling and music! Cinco "D" Mayo will take place inside Bookie's Bar & Grille and outside in a huge heated tent from 2 p.m. - 10 p.m. All ages ...

Heavy new arguments weigh in on the danger of obesity

2012-05-02
A true obesity epidemic is gradually advancing throughout the developed world. A large new Danish-British study from the University of Copenhagen and University of Bristol documents for the first time a definite correlation between a high BMI and the risk of developing life-threatening cardiac disease. Heart attack, atherosclerosis of the coronary arteries and angina – also called ischemic heart disease – are the most common causes of death in adults worldwide. In the US alone, 500,000 people die each year from heart disease. Now for the first time, researchers can ...

Gene mutation leads to impairment of 2 senses: Touch and hearing

2012-05-02
People with good hearing also have a keen sense of touch; people with impaired hearing generally have an impaired sense of touch. Extensive data supporting this hypothesis was presented by Dr. Henning Frenzel and Professor Gary R. Lewin of the Max Delbrück Center for Molecular Medicine (MDC) Berlin-Buch, Germany. The two researchers showed that both senses – hearing and touch – have a common genetic basis. In patients with Usher syndrome, a hereditary form of deafness accompanied by impaired vision, they discovered a gene mutation that is also causative for the patients' ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

ECMWF and European Partners win prestigious HPCwire Award for "Best Use Of AI Methods for Augmenting HPC Applications” – for AI innovation in weather and climate

Unearthing the City of Seven Ravines

Ancient sediments reveal Earth’s hidden wildfire past

Child gun injury risk spikes when children leave school for the day

Pennington Biomedical’s Dr. Leanne Redman recruited to lead the Charles Perkins Centre at the University of Sydney

Social media sentiment can predict when people move during crises, improving humanitarian response

Through the wires: Technology developed by FAMU-FSU College of Engineering faculty mitigates flaws in superconducting wires

Climate resilience found in traditional Hawaiian fishponds

Wearable lets users control machines and robots while on the move

Pioneering clean hydrogen breakthrough: Dr. Muhammad Aziz to unveil multi-scale advances in chemical looping technology

Using robotic testing to spot overlooked sensory deficits in stroke survivors

Breakthrough material advances uranium extraction from seawater, paving the way for sustainable nuclear energy

Emerging pollutants threaten efficiency of wastewater treatment: New review highlights urgent research needs

ACP encourages all adults to receive the 2025-2026 influenza vaccine

Scientists document rise in temperature-related deaths in the US

A unified model of memory and perception: how Hebbian learning explains our recall of past events

Chemical evidence of ancient life detected in 3.3 billion-year-old rocks: Carnegie Science / PNAS

Medieval communities boosted biodiversity around Lake Constance

Groundbreaking research identifies lethal dose of plastics for seabirds, sea turtles and marine mammals: “It’s much smaller than you might think”

Lethal aggression, territory, and fitness in wild chimpanzees

The woman and the goose: a 12,000-year-old glimpse into prehistoric belief

Ancient chemical clues reveal Earth’s earliest life 3.3 billion years ago

From warriors to healers: a muscle stem cell signal redirects macrophages toward tadpole tail regeneration

How AI can rig polls

Investing in nurses reduces physician burnout, international study finds

Small changes in turnout could substantially alter election results in the future, study warns

Medicaid expansion increases access to HIV prevention medication for high-risk populations

Arkansas research awarded for determining cardinal temps for eight cover crops

Study reveals how the gut builds long-lasting immunity after viral infections

How people identify scents and perceive their pleasantness

[Press-News.org] Dopamine impacts your willingness to work