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The brain’s reward system and learning

Dopamine: between pleasure and behavioral reinforcement

Why do we do what we do? Beyond meeting the basic needs for our survival—food, rest, safety—we are motivated by what brings us pleasure, fun, and satisfaction. These activities are usually useful to us in some way, which is why our brain associates them with pleasure.

INDEX
The reinforcement mechanism Reward circuits The reward system short-circuit Reward, memory, and learning

The reinforcement mechanism

We are faced with the so-called positive reinforcement: a useful behavior is rewarded to encourage repeating it in the future. Negative reinforcement is the opposite: we tend to avoid repeating unpleasant experiences. Sometimes reinforcement can come from external sources: a material reward, expressions of affection, or compliments are excellent motivators. But the nervous system can provide its own rewards to reinforce behaviors via the reward circuits. How does our brain evaluate and deliver rewards, and why are they particularly important for learning?

Reward circuits

The reward system involves both the frontal cortex and deeper parts of the brain, such as the ventral tegmental area, substantia nigra, nucleus accumbens, and hippocampus. Neurons in the ventral tegmental area and substantia nigra are the main producers of dopamine. Dopamine is a neurotransmitter whose release underlies the sensation of pleasure and behavioral reinforcement.

For evolutionary reasons, performing advantageous actions increases our survival capabilities. Thus, the human and animal nervous system has gradually associated performing beneficial actions with the experience of pleasure, mediated here by dopamine. From the ventral tegmental area, dopamine travels through the mesolimbic pathway, a neural circuit inside the brain, to the nucleus accumbens. This area is responsible for encoding motor actions into repeatable processes: it effectively converts motivation into repeatable actions.

A second, more “external” circuit, the mesocortical pathway, runs from the ventral tegmental area to the prefrontal cortex, an area involved in decision-making and evaluating choices, where the association between emotion and reward is consolidated. Finally, dopamine release also strengthens synapses in memory and learning centers, like the hippocampus, and in emotion management areas such as the amygdala.

 


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The reward system short-circuit

The reasons that associate stimuli with pleasure and satisfaction are the same underlying the effects of common psychoactive substances. The intake of alcohol, nicotine, opioids, and cocaine stimulates dopamine production, creating an association in our brain between the use of these substances and pleasure. This can lead to substance dependence and, over time, tolerance, requiring increasing amounts to replicate the effect.

It’s not only about drugs: even if less harmful, “dopamine addiction” can occur with everyday stimuli. Social media, video games, and sugary foods can bombard us with constant rewards, sometimes intentionally designed to do so, and we must be careful not to overuse them. Emotional imbalances or attention deficits can also negatively affect the reward system, dissociating positive behaviors from rewards or linking them to negative ones.

Reward, memory, and learning

Because the reward system circuit is closely linked to memory, it’s no surprise that rewards are fundamental for learning. So-called associative learning consists in establishing a link between a behavior and a positive outcome, consolidating it via memory. Interestingly, it is more effective not for the reward itself, but for our expectations about it: learning occurs when the reward does not match what we anticipated.

If the reward exceeds expectations, we are pleasantly surprised, and dopamine release increases. If it falls short of expectations, so does dopamine release. We are disappointed by the outcome, and a negative association forms in our brain, making us unlikely to repeat the experience. A reward matching our expectations does not alter dopamine release, positively or negatively: we learn nothing new, and the experience has less impact both memorably and emotionally.

These mechanisms can be applied to stimulate learning in children, both at home and in school. Studies in U.S. primary schools on “token economies” seem to support this. In these systems, points, symbols, or small objects (tokens) are given by teachers to reward certain behaviors. Pro-social behaviors (being tidy, not fighting, paying attention, etc.) are rewarded, rather than academic performance itself. Tokens can later be exchanged like currency for prizes or special activities, though sometimes the act of receiving tokens is rewarding enough. Receiving a reward is highly motivating, often more than the reward’s actual value.

 

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Bibliography
  • Ewa Galaj, Robert Ranaldi, (2022), Neurobiology of Reward-Related Learning, Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews, Volume 124, May 2021, Pages 224-23
  • Ji Young Kim et al, (2021), Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of Token Economy Practices in K-5 Educational Settings, 2000 to 2019, Behaviour Modification, Volume 46, Issue, https://doi.org/10.1177/01454455211058077
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