Interaction of the dopaminergic system with mechanisms of associative learning and cognition: Implications for drug abuse |
Author(s):
Journal/Book: Psychol Sci. 1999; 10: 350 Main Street, Ste 6, Malden, MA 02148, USA. Blackwell Publishers. 199-202.
Abstract: The possible role of mechanisms of associative learning in drug abuse and addiction is considered with respect to psychomotor stimulant drugs such as cocaine and amphetamine. Although the initial sites of the reinforcing effects of these drugs are associated with the mesolimbic dopamine projection to the nucleus accumbens, other important neuromodulatory influences are identified These include the amygdala, which appears to mediate the associative processes by which environmental stimuli come to control drug-seeking behavior Possible parallel mechanisms by which stimulant drugs enhance effects of aversive as well as rewarding stimuli are discussed The importance of attribution and context in determining relative rewarding and aversive effects is pointed out. These attributional and contextual factors may be a function of cortical regions that may themselves be impaired by chronic drug abuse, leading to further dysexecutive control over cognition and behavior.
Note: Article Robbins TW, Univ Cambridge, Dept Expt Psychol, Downing St, Cambridge CB2 3EB, ENGLAND
Keyword(s): REWARD-RELATED PROCESSES; 2ND-ORDER SCHEDULE; D-AMPHETAMINE; COCAINE; REINFORCEMENT; LESIONS; ACQUISITION; BEHAVIOR; ADDICTION; AMYGDALA
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