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Author Topic: Medical Study Confirms Albinos are genetically, "slackers"
Narmerthoth
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Brain's Dopamine Levels May Explain Why Some Are "Slackers" and Others "Go-Getters"

A person’s willingness to work may be determined by the levels of dopamine in three different parts of their brain, new research suggests.

Researchers from the new study, published Wednesday in The Journal of Neuroscience, used an imaging technique called positron emission tomography (PET scan) and found that “go-getters,” or people who were willing to work hard to earn rewards, had higher levels release of the neurotransmitter dopamine in the striatum and ventromedial prefrontal cortex, areas of the brain that play an important role in reward and motivation.

However, researchers were surprised to find that “slackers” or those who were least likely to work hard for a reward, had higher levels of greater release of dopamine in the anterior insula, the brain region involved in emotion, perception, social behavior, and self-awareness.

The study consisted of 25 healthy participants aged 18 to 29. Researchers measured participants’ willingness to work for a monetary reward.

Participants were asked to rapidly press a button to earn different amounts of money, and they could choose whether they wanted an easy of difficult button-pushing task. Participants would earn $1 for easy tasks and up to $4 for hard tasks.

While, dopamine has generally been linked to motivation, researchers said that they were surprised to find that participants increased dopamine activity in the insula were the least likely to put in effort.

"These results show for the first time that increased dopamine in the insula is associated with decreased motivation — suggesting that the behavioral effects of dopaminergic drugs may vary depending on where they act in the brain," said Treadway.

The latest findings, which show that dopamine can have contrasting effects in different regions of the brain, make the use of psychotropic medications that affect dopamine levels for treating disorders like attention-deficit disorder, depression and schizophrenia more complex because it questions the accepted assumption that dopaminergic drugs have the same effect throughout the brain.

"At this point, we don't have any data proving that this 20-minute snippet of behavior corresponds to an individual's long-term achievement but if it does measure a trait variable such as an individual's willingness to expend effort to obtain long-term goals, it will be extremely valuable," co-author David Zald, a professor of psychology at Vanderbilt University, said in a news release.

More research is needed to determine whether difference s in dopamine levels can lower levels of motivation seen in people with certain mental disorders like ADD, depression and schizophrenia.

"Right now our diagnoses for these disorders is often fuzzy and based on subjective self-report of symptoms," said Zald. "Imagine how valuable it would be if we had an objective test that could tell whether a patient was suffering from a deficit or abnormality in an underlying neural system. With objective measures we could treat the underlying conditions instead of the symptoms."

While Dopamine acts differently on the three different regions of the brain, in Albinos, where dopamine levels are genetically far below normal levels, slackness is the "norm" and explains why Albinos have developed other survival mechanisms such as;
Lying, cheating, deceit, etc.

Posts: 4693 | From: Saturn | Registered: Apr 2012  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
Ase
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proof????
Posts: 2508 | From: . | Registered: Nov 2011  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
Narmerthoth
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^ Isn't it obvious?

If not, I pity the fool.

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Posts: 4693 | From: Saturn | Registered: Apr 2012  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
   

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