Functional microcircuitry in the accumbens underlying drug addiction: insights from real-time signaling during behavior
- PMID: 15582381
- DOI: 10.1016/j.conb.2004.10.001
Functional microcircuitry in the accumbens underlying drug addiction: insights from real-time signaling during behavior
Abstract
An understanding of the neurobiological basis of drug addiction requires examination of real-time (subsecond) cellular and chemical responses in the brain reward system during drug-seeking and drug-taking behavior. Electrophysiological and electrochemical studies in the rodent nucleus accumbens have examined changes in cell firing and rapid dopamine signaling during crucial periods of behavioral responding for drugs, and show the associative nature of those signals. These findings are considered with respect to the functional microcircuitry in the nucleus accumbens that underlies goal-directed behavior and the role of this circuit in drug addiction.
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