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The role of dopamine in dynamic effort-reward integration

Jochen Michely, Shivakumar Viswanathan, Tobias U. Hauser, Laura Delker, Raymond J. Dolan, Christian Grefkes

2020Neuropsychopharmacology58 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

When deciding to act, the neurotransmitter dopamine is implicated in a valuation of prospective effort and reward. However, its role in dynamic effort-reward integration during action, a process central to everyday behaviour, remains unclear. In a placebo-controlled, within-subject, study, we probed the impact of increasing brain dopamine levels (150 mg of levodopa) and blocking dopamine receptors (1.5 mg of haloperidol) in the context of a novel dynamic effort task in healthy human subjects. We show that modulating homoeostatic dopamine balance distinctly alters implicit and explicit effort allocation as a function of instantaneous reward. Pharmacologically boosting dopamine enhanced motor vigour, reflected in an implicit increase in effort allocation for high rewards. Conversely, pharmacological blockade of dopamine attenuated sensitivity to differences in reward context, reflected in reduced strategic effort discounting. These findings implicate dopamine in an integration of momentary physical experience and instantaneous reward, suggesting a key role of dopamine in acting to maximise reward on the fly.

Topics & Concepts

DopaminePsychologyNeuroscienceContext (archaeology)NeurotransmitterLevodopaDopamine agonistCognitive psychologyDopaminergicMedicineParkinson's diseaseBiologyInternal medicineCentral nervous systemDiseasePaleontologyNeural and Behavioral Psychology StudiesNeurotransmitter Receptor Influence on BehaviorBehavioral Health and Interventions