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Saturday, December 06, 2014

Dopamine helps with math rules as well as mood

"The chemical messenger dopamine – otherwise known as the happiness hormone – is important not only for motivation and motor skills. It seems it can also help neurons with difficult cognitive tasks." reports Medical Xpress.

Torben Ott, Simon Jacob and Professor Andreas Nieder of Tübingen's Institute for Neurobiology have demonstrated for the first time how dopamine influences brain cells while processing rules. You can read the study in full in the early online edition of Neuron.

Nerve cells in the prefrontal cortex (marked) can process “greater than” and “less than” rules better under the influence of dopamine. Credit: LS Tierphysiologie/Tübingen University

The effects of dopamine become very clear when the brain gets too little of it, as is the case with Parkinson's disease. A dopamine imbalance leads to varied neurological disruptions – particularly movement – but also mental abilities. Our key cognitive center, the prefrontal cortex, which we use for abstract thought, rule-based decisions and logical conclusions, is intensively supplied with dopamine. Despite its major medical significance, we know little about dopamine's effects on information processing by neurons in the healthy brain.

To test this, the researchers trained rhesus monkeys to solve "greater than" and "less than" math problems. From other recent studies, the researchers knew that certain neurons in the prefrontal cortex answer such questions – one half of these "rule cells" was only activated when the "greater than" rule applied, and the other half was only activated when the "less than" rule applied.

Meanwhile, physiologically small amounts of various substances were being discharged near the relevant cells. These substances can have the same effect as dopamine – or the opposite effect – and could be adsorbed by dopamine-sensitive neurons. The surprising result was that stimulation of the allowed the "rule cells" to perform better and to more clearly distinguish between the "greater than" and "less than" rules. Dopamine had a positive effect on the "rule cells'" quality of work.
Read more... 

Additional resources 
Torben Ott, Simon N. Jacob, and Andreas Nieder: "Dopamine Receptors Differentially Enhance Rule Coding in Primate Prefrontal Cortex Neurons." Neuron, Online Early Edition, 4 Dec. 2014 
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuron.2014.11.012  

Source: Medical Xpress