Search results for "reward system"

showing 10 items of 21 documents

Acetaldehyde Oral Self-Administration: Evidence from the Operant-Conflict Paradigm

2011

Background: Acetaldehyde (ACD), ethanol's first metabolite, has been reported to interact with the dopaminergic reward system, and with the neural circuits involved in stress response. Rats self-administer ACD directly into cerebral ventricles, and multiple intracerebroventricular infusions of ACD produce conditioned place preference. Self-administration has been largely employed to assess the reinforcing and addictive properties of most drugs of abuse. In particular, operant conditioning is a valid model to investigate drug-seeking and drug-taking behavior in rats. Methods: This study was aimed at the evaluation of (i) the motivational properties of oral ACD in the induction and maintenanc…

MalePunishment (psychology)media_common.quotation_subjectAdministration OralMedicine (miscellaneous)Self AdministrationAcetaldehydePharmacologyToxicologyDevelopmental psychologyConflict PsychologicalReward systemAnimalsRats WistarReinforcementmedia_commonAcetaldehyde Lever-Pressing Punishment Reinforcement Relapse.AddictionDopaminergicAbstinenceConditioned place preferenceRatsPsychiatry and Mental healthSettore BIO/14 - FarmacologiaConditioning OperantSelf-administrationPsychology
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Children's reward responses to picture- and odor-cued food stimuli: a developmental analysis between 6 and 11years.

2013

International audience; The reward system is largely involved in the control of food intake. Whether components of this system (i.e., wanting and liking) change during development remains understudied, as well as how proximate factors (sensory cues, motivational state) modulate reward reactivity across development. We examined the developmental pattern of wanting and liking for sensorily-cued food stimuli in 6-11year old children as a function of the child's motivational state (hunger/satiety), gender, and the nature of foods. School children were exposed before or after their lunch on alternative days to visual and odor stimuli representing different categories of familiar foods. Their tas…

MalelikingvisionVisual perception030309 nutrition & dieteticsHunger[ SDV.AEN ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Food and Nutritionmedia_common.quotation_subject030209 endocrinology & metabolismeating behaviorwantingSatiationreward processesDevelopmental psychology03 medical and health sciencesReward systemFood Preferences0302 clinical medicineChild DevelopmentSex FactorschildrenRewardPerceptionHumansChildSensory cuedevelopmentGeneral Psychologymedia_common2. Zero hungerCued speech0303 health sciencesAnalysis of VarianceNutrition and Dieteticsdigestive oral and skin physiologyCognitionChild developmentSmellgender differenceVisual PerceptionFemaleAnalysis of variancefood preferenceCuesPsychologySocial psychology[SDV.AEN]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Food and NutritionolfactionAppetite
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Pleasurable music affects reinforcement learning according to the listener.

2013

Mounting evidence links the enjoyment of music to brain areas implicated in emotion and the dopaminergic reward system. In particular, dopamine release in the ventral striatum seems to play a major role in the rewarding aspect of music listening. Striatal dopamine also influences reinforcement learning, such that subjects with greater dopamine efficacy learn better to approach rewards while those with lesser dopamine efficacy learn better to avoid punishments. In this study, we explored the practical implications of musical pleasure through its ability to facilitate reinforcement learning via non-pharmacological dopamine elicitation. Subjects from a wide variety of musical backgrounds chose…

PleasureDopamineAffective neuroscienceEVERYDAY LIFE0302 clinical medicinePARKINSONS-DISEASEReinforcement learningDOPAMINE RELEASEsubjectivityReinforcement learningPsychologyBRAIN-REGIONSOriginal Research ArticleGeneral Psychologyrewardmedia_commonCORRELATEMusic psychology05 social scienceshumanitiesdopaminePsychologypsychological phenomena and processesCognitive psychologyPREDICT INDIVIDUAL-DIFFERENCESreinforcement learningMusic therapymedia_common.quotation_subjectlcsh:BF1-990pleasurebehavioral disciplines and activities050105 experimental psychologyMECHANISMSPleasure03 medical and health sciencesReward systemRewardEMOTION0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesActive listeningmusicmusical experienceListening strategySubjectivitylcsh:PsychologyMusic and emotionhuman activitiesMusic030217 neurology & neurosurgeryRESPONSESMusical experiencelistening strategyFrontiers in psychology
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Nuevas herramientas y nuevas ideas para los responsables de recursos humanos. Validez estructural y predictiva del cuestionario de satisfacción ponde…

2013

One of the fundamental tasks for an Human Resource Management (HRM) practitioner consists in designing a reward system that can be broadly understood and can influence the attitudes and, subsequently, the behavior of individuals to permit achievement of organizational objectives. To do so, appropriate tools are necessary to allow key actions to be identified in terms of motivating employees; thereby, avoiding opportunistic costs derived from allocating resources needed to close the gap in employee satisfaction, with regard to non-priority factors for workers in satisfying their own personal needs. This article, thus, presents a dual assessment scale consisting of 44 items, categorized into …

Predictive validityExpectancy theoryprédisposition à abandonnerGeneral Arts and Humanitiespredisposición a abandonarmotivaciónSample (statistics)théorie des attentessatisfacción laboralDual (category theory)satisfaction au travailReward systemmotivationsistemas de recompensasHuman resource managementJob satisfactionexpectancy theoryPsychologyteoría de las expectativasSocial psychologyrewardjob satisfactionintention to quitsystèmes de récompensesFace validityCuadernos de Administración
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The Key Role of Human Resource Practices for the Promotion of Creativity and Innovation: A Spanish Case Study

2013

Management literature suggests that employee creativity can contribute substantially to organisational innovation, effectiveness and survival. In addition, the ability to innovate has also emerged as a basic strategic option. Innovation models express the need to implement specific human resource practices (HRP) for the development of skills, knowledge and innovation-oriented behaviours. Human resource practices can be extremely important when organisations intend to foster creativity and innovation which are key factors in competing effectively. With this aim in mind, we suggest that the existence of certain HRP such as training, performance appraisal and reward systems have a positive eff…

Reward systemPerformance appraisalPromotion (rank)Knowledge managementbusiness.industryProduct innovationmedia_common.quotation_subjectLeadership stylebusinessHuman resourcesCreativityAutonomymedia_common
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Out of time? - Music, consciousness states and neuropharmacological mechanisms of an altered temporality

2009

Drug-induced altered temporality is a well-known effect of cannabis action that is utilised from musicians and music listeners for music appreciation since the early days of jazz. Cannabis has an influence on timing processes at short time scales of hundreds of milliseconds as O’Leary et al (2003) have shown in their tapping studies, proving evidence of an altered cerebellar functioning. This paper will focus on cannabis and its action on timing and aims to discuss selected scientific streams of research on the neurophysiological and neuropharmacological base of timing mechanisms in terms of an social pharmacology of music (Fachner, 2009). The mechanisms behind this altered temporality rema…

cannabisreward systembrainconsciousnessneuropharmacologytemporality
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Oxytocin Signaling as a Target to Block Social Defeat-Induced Increases in Drug Abuse Reward

2021

There is huge scientific interest in the neuropeptide oxytocin (OXT) due to its putative capacity to modulate a wide spectrum of physiological and cognitive processes including motivation, learning, emotion, and the stress response. The present review seeks to increase the understanding of the role of OXT in an individual’s vulnerability or resilience with regard to developing a substance use disorder. It places specific attention on the role of social stress as a risk factor of addiction, and explores the hypothesis that OXT constitutes a homeostatic response to stress that buffers against its negative impact. For this purpose, the review summarizes preclinical and clinical literature rega…

drug addictionSubstance-Related Disordersmedia_common.quotation_subjectContext (language use)ReviewOxytocinCatalysisneuroinflammationlcsh:ChemistrySocial DefeatInorganic ChemistrySocial defeat03 medical and health sciencesReward system0302 clinical medicineRewardmedicineAnimalsHumansPhysical and Theoretical Chemistrylcsh:QH301-705.5Molecular BiologySpectroscopymedia_commonInflammationSocial stresssocial stressAddictionOrganic Chemistrycorticotropin-releasing factorCognitionGeneral Medicinemedicine.diseaseanimal models030227 psychiatryComputer Science ApplicationsSubstance abuselcsh:Biology (General)lcsh:QD1-999reward systemPsychological resiliencehuman researchPsychologyNeuroscienceStress Psychologicalhormones hormone substitutes and hormone antagonists030217 neurology & neurosurgeryInternational Journal of Molecular Sciences
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Premorbid Personality Traits as Risk Factors for Behavioral Addictions: A Systematic Review of a Vulnerability Hypothesis

2023

The debate on personality structure and behavioral addictions is an outstanding issue. According to some authors, behavioral addictions could arise from a premorbid personality, while for others, it could result from a pathological use of technological tools. The current study aims to investigate whether, in the latest literature, personality traits have been identified as predictors of behavioral addictions. A literature search was conducted under the PRISMA methodology, considering the most relevant studies of the five-factor model from the past 10 years. Overall, most studies on addiction, personality traits, and personality genetics proved that behavioral addiction may be an epiphenomen…

gamblingSettore M-PSI/01 - Psicologia GeneraleSettore M-PSI/02 - Psicobiologia E Psicologia FisiologicaPediatrics Perinatology and Child Healthinternet gaming disordervideo games addictionneuroticismbrain reward systempremorbid personalityChildren
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Analysis of DRD2 Gene Polymorphism in the Context of Personality Traits in a Group of Athletes

2021

The presented study showed the relationship between dopamine receptor gene polymorphism and personality traits in athletes training in martial arts. Behavioral modulation resulting from a balance of the neurotransmitters dopamine and norepinephrine to inactivation of the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex and dysregulation of various pathways involved in attention and impulse control processes

media_common.quotation_subjectQH426-470ArticleReward systemDorsolateral Prefrontal CortexmedicineHumansPsychological testinggeneticsGenetics (clinical)media_commonPsychological TestsMartial artsPolymorphism GeneticbiologyAthletesReceptors Dopamine D2AddictionDopaminergicmedicine.diseasebiology.organism_classificationD2 receptorathletesReward dependencepersonality traitsHarm avoidancedopaminePsychologyClinical psychologyPersonalityGenes
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Cortical Patterns of Pleasurable Musical Chills Revealed by High-Density EEG

2020

Music has the capacity to elicit strong positive feelings in humans by activating the brain’s reward system. Because group emotional dynamics is a central concern of social neurosciences, the study of emotion in natural/ecological conditions is gaining interest. This study aimed to show that high-density EEG (HD-EEG) is able to reveal patterns of cerebral activities previously identified by fMRI or PET scans when the subject experiences pleasurable musical chills. We used HD-EEG to record participants (11 female, 7 male) while listening to their favorite pleasurable chill-inducing musical excerpts; they reported their subjective emotional state from low pleasure up to chills. HD-EEG results…

medicine.medical_specialtyhigh density EEGmedia_common.quotation_subjectemotionAudiologyElectroencephalography050105 experimental psychologylcsh:RC321-571PleasureArousal03 medical and health sciencesReward system0302 clinical medicinecerebral activitymedicinemusic0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesEEGPrefrontal cortexlcsh:Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. NeuropsychiatryOriginal Researchmedia_commonSupplementary motor areamedicine.diagnostic_testGeneral Neuroscience05 social scienceschillsAnticipationmusical rewardmedicine.anatomical_structureOrbitofrontal cortexPsychology030217 neurology & neurosurgeryNeurosciencepeak pleasureFrontiers in Neuroscience
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