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  lüll Nucleus accumbens dopamine and the regulation of effort in food-seeking behavior:  implications for studies of natural motivation, psychiatry, and drug abuse Salamone JD; Correa M; Mingote S; Weber SMJ Pharmacol Exp Ther  2003[Apr]; 305 (1): 1-8For several decades, it has been suggested that dopamine (DA), especially in  nucleus accumbens, mediates the primary reinforcing characteristics of natural  stimuli such as food, as well as drugs of abuse. Yet, several fundamental aspects  of primary food reinforcement, motivation, and appetite are left intact after  interference with accumbens DA transmission. Recent studies have shown that  accumbens DA is involved in responsiveness to conditioned stimuli and  activational aspects of motivation. In concurrent choice tasks, accumbens DA  depletions cause animals to reallocate their choice behavior in the direction of  instrumental behaviors that involve less effort. Also, an emerging body of  evidence has demonstrated that the effects of accumbens DA depletions on  instrumental food-seeking behavior can vary greatly depending upon the task. For  example, some schedules of reinforcement are insensitive to the effects of DA  depletions, whereas others are highly sensitive (e.g., large fixed ratios).  Accumbens DA depletions slow the rate of operant responding, blunt the  rate-facilitating effects of moderate-sized ratios, and enhance the  rate-suppressing effects of very large ratios (i.e., produce ratio strain).  Accumbens DA may be important for enabling rats to overcome behavioral  constraints, such as work-related response costs, and may be critical for the  behavioral organization and conditioning processes that enable animals to engage  in vigorous responses, such as barrier climbing, or to emit large numbers of  responses in ratio schedules in the absence of primary reinforcement. The  involvement of accumbens DA in activational aspects of motivation has  implications for energy-related disorders in psychiatry, as well as aspects of  drug-seeking behavior.|*Motivation[MESH]|Animals[MESH]|Dopamine/metabolism/*physiology[MESH]|Humans[MESH]|Nucleus Accumbens/metabolism/*physiology[MESH]|Psychiatry[MESH]|Reward[MESH]|Substance-Related Disorders/*psychology[MESH] |