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  lüll Cortico-Basal Ganglia reward network: microcircuitry Sesack SR; Grace AANeuropsychopharmacology  2010[Jan]; 35 (1): 27-47Many of the brain's reward systems converge on the nucleus accumbens, a region  richly innervated by excitatory, inhibitory, and modulatory afferents  representing the circuitry necessary for selecting adaptive motivated behaviors.  The ventral subiculum of the hippocampus provides contextual and spatial  information, the basolateral amygdala conveys affective influence, and the  prefrontal cortex provides an integrative impact on goal-directed behavior. The  balance of these afferents is under the modulatory influence of dopamine neurons  in the ventral tegmental area. This midbrain region receives its own complex mix  of excitatory and inhibitory inputs, some of which have only recently been  identified. Such afferent regulation positions the dopamine system to bias  goal-directed behavior based on internal drives and environmental contingencies.  Conditions that result in reward promote phasic dopamine release, which serves to  maintain ongoing behavior by selectively potentiating ventral subicular drive to  the accumbens. Behaviors that fail to produce an expected reward decrease  dopamine transmission, which favors prefrontal cortical-driven switching to new  behavioral strategies. As such, the limbic reward system is designed to optimize  action plans for maximizing reward outcomes. This system can be commandeered by  drugs of abuse or psychiatric disorders, resulting in inappropriate behaviors  that sustain failed reward strategies. A fuller appreciation of the circuitry  interconnecting the nucleus accumbens and ventral tegmental area should serve to  advance discovery of new treatment options for these conditions.|*Reward[MESH]|Animals[MESH]|Basal Ganglia/anatomy & histology/*physiology[MESH]|Cerebral Cortex/anatomy & histology/*physiology[MESH]|Humans[MESH]|Models, Neurological[MESH]|Neural Pathways/anatomy & histology/physiology[MESH]|Nucleus Accumbens/anatomy & histology/physiology[MESH]|Ventral Tegmental Area/anatomy & histology/physiology[MESH] |