2017
DOI: 10.1038/nrn.2017.130
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The dopamine motive system: implications for drug and food addiction

Abstract: Behaviours such as eating, copulating, defending oneself or taking addictive drugs begin with a motivation to initiate the behaviour. Both this motivational drive and the behaviours that follow are influenced by past and present experience with the reinforcing stimuli (such as drugs or energy-rich foods) that increase the likelihood and/or strength of the behavioural response (such as drug taking or overeating). At a cellular and circuit level, motivational drive is dependent on the concentration of extrasynap… Show more

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Cited by 709 publications
(557 citation statements)
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“…47,48 Imbalance in this pathway has also been found in depression both in PD and in the general population. First, dopaminergic imbalance of the mesolimbic pathway is considered the hallmark of both addiction and PD-ICD.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 95%
“…47,48 Imbalance in this pathway has also been found in depression both in PD and in the general population. First, dopaminergic imbalance of the mesolimbic pathway is considered the hallmark of both addiction and PD-ICD.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 95%
“…As reported in previous reviews (Steward et al, ; Treasure et al, ; Hebebrand et al, ; Volkow & Wise, ; Volkow et al, ; Gordon, Ariel‐Donges, Bauman, & Merlo, ), proponents of the FA model argue that there is sufficient scientific evidence to show that intake of certain high‐calorie/palatable foods and addictive drugs produce similar neural responses (linked to reward pathways modulated by dopamine) and therefore, to some extent, support the assumption that some types of overeating and obesity constitute a food addiction (Gearhardt, Davis, Kuschner, & Brownell, ; Schulte, Avena, & Gearhardt, ; Schulte, Yokum, Potenza, & Gearhardt, ; Smith & Robbins, ; Wiss, Criscitelli, Gold, & Avena, ; Michaud, Vainik, Garcia‐Garcia, & Dagher, ).…”
mentioning
confidence: 79%
“…Reward has been traditionally linked to the function of the midbrain dopamine circuit (Garc ıa-Garc ıa et al, 2017;Volkow et al, 2017). Dopamine signals arise from the ventral tegmental area (VTA) and adjacent substantia nigra pars compacta (SNc; Figure 4).…”
Section: Reward Sensitivitymentioning
confidence: 99%