keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38376459/exploring-yarigai-the-meaning-of-working-as-a-physician-in-teaching-medical-professionalism
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Hiroshi Nishigori, Yosuke Shimazono, Jamiu Busari, Tim Dornan
INTRODUCTION: The shift in medical professionalism now considers the well-being of physicians, given the prevalence of burnout and the importance of work-life balance. To reconsider the question 'Why do doctors work for the patient?' and explore the meaning of working as a physician, this study adopts the concept of ' yarigai ,' which represents fulfillment and motivation in meaningful work. The authors' research questions are: How do doctors recount experiences of yarigai in caring for patients? What kind of values are embodied in their stories about yarigai ? METHOD: They adopted narrative inquiry as the methodology for this study...
February 20, 2024: Medical Teacher
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38358716/the-controllosphere-the-neural-origin-of-cognitive-effort
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Clay B Holroyd
Why do some mental activities feel harder than others? The answer to this question is surprisingly controversial. Current theories propose that cognitive effort affords a computational benefit, such as instigating a switch from an activity with low reward value to a different activity with higher reward value. By contrast, in this article, I relate cognitive effort to the fact that brain neuroanatomy and neurophysiology render some neural states more energy-efficient than others. I introduce the concept of the "controllosphere," an energy-inefficient region of neural state space associated with high control, which surrounds the better known "intrinsic manifold," an energy-efficient subspace associated with low control...
February 15, 2024: Psychological Review
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38354564/theories-of-motivation-a-comprehensive-analysis-of-human-behavior-drivers
#23
REVIEW
Din Bandhu, M Murali Mohan, Noel Anurag Prashanth Nittala, Pravin Jadhav, Alok Bhadauria, Kuldeep K Saxena
This paper explores theories of motivation, including instinct theory, arousal theory, incentive theory, intrinsic theory, extrinsic theory, the ARCS model, self-determination theory, expectancy-value theory, and goal-orientation theory. Each theory is described in detail, along with its key concepts, assumptions, and implications for behavior. Intrinsic theory suggests that individuals are motivated by internal factors like enjoyment and satisfaction, while extrinsic theory suggests that external factors like rewards and social pressure drive behavior...
February 13, 2024: Acta Psychologica
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38351131/the-paraventricular-thalamic-nucleus-and-its-projections-in-regulating-reward-and-context-associations
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Dillon S McDevitt, Quinn W Wade, Greer E McKendrick, Jacob Nelsen, Mariya Starostina, Nam Tran, Julie A Blendy, Nicholas M Graziane
The paraventricular thalamic nucleus (PVT) is a brain region that mediates aversive and reward-related behaviors as shown in animals exposed to fear conditioning, natural rewards, or drugs of abuse. However, it is unknown whether manipulations of the PVT, in the absence of external factors or stimuli (e.g., fear, natural rewards, or drugs of abuse) are sufficient to drive reward-related behaviors. Additionally, it is unknown whether drugs of abuse administered directly into the PVT are sufficient to drive reward-related behaviors...
February 13, 2024: ENeuro
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38331128/using-caffeine-as-a-chemical-means-to-induce-flow-states
#25
REVIEW
Niklas Reich, Michael Mannino, Steven Kotler
Flow is an intrinsically rewarding state characterised by positive affect and total task absorption. Because cognitive and physical performance are optimal in flow, chemical means to facilitate this state are appealing. Caffeine, a non-selective adenosine receptor antagonist, has been emphasized as a potential flow-inducer. Thus, we review the psychological and biological effects of caffeine that, conceptually, enhance flow. Caffeine may facilitate flow through various effects, including: i) upregulation of dopamine D1/D2 receptor affinity in reward-associated brain areas, leading to greater energetic arousal and 'wanting'; ii) protection of dopaminergic neurons; iii) increases in norepinephrine release and alertness, which offset sleep-deprivation and hypoarousal; iv) heightening of parasympathetic high frequency heart rate variability, resulting in improved cortical stress appraisal, v) modification of striatal endocannabinoid-CB1 receptor-signalling, leading to enhanced stress tolerance; and vi) changes in brain network activity in favour of executive function and flow...
February 6, 2024: Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Reviews
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38328783/collective-privacy-recovery-data-sharing-coordination-via-decentralized-artificial-intelligence
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Evangelos Pournaras, Mark Christopher Ballandies, Stefano Bennati, Chien-Fei Chen
Collective privacy loss becomes a colossal problem, an emergency for personal freedoms and democracy. But, are we prepared to handle personal data as scarce resource and collectively share data under the doctrine: as little as possible, as much as necessary? We hypothesize a significant privacy recovery if a population of individuals, the data collective, coordinates to share minimum data for running online services with the required quality. Here, we show how to automate and scale-up complex collective arrangements for privacy recovery using decentralized artificial intelligence...
February 2024: PNAS Nexus
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38291315/clinical-care-of-patients-with-neurocognitive-disorders-a-qualitative-study-of-the-psychiatric-residency-training-experience
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Karen T Duong, Siddharth Khasnavis, William J Welsh, Mary E Camp
OBJECTIVE: Few data describe how general psychiatry residencies prepare trainees to care for individuals with neurocognitive disorders (NCDs), despite increasing recognition of the need for psychiatrists to provide care for the growing numbers of patients with NCD. This study aims to identify training needs and approaches, as the resident experience is one important perspective that can be added to others, such as milestones developed by expert educators. METHODS: The authors conducted three focus groups of third- and fourth-year general adult psychiatry residency trainees from three different training programs in May and June of 2021...
January 30, 2024: Academic Psychiatry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38291308/motivated-with-joy-or-anxiety-does-approach-avoidance-goal-framing-elicit-differential-reward-network-activation-in-the-brain
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Michiko Sakaki, Kou Murayama, Keise Izuma, Ryuta Aoki, Yukihito Yomogita, Ayaka Sugiura, Nishad Singhi, Madoka Matsumoto, Kenji Matsumoto
Psychological research on human motivation repeatedly observed that approach goals (i.e., goals to attain success) increase task enjoyment and intrinsic motivation more strongly than avoidance goals (i.e., goals to avoid failure). The present study sought to address how the reward network in the brain-including the striatum and ventromedial prefrontal cortex-is involved when individuals engage in the same task with a focus on approach or avoidance goals. Participants reported stronger positive emotions when they focused on approach goals, but stronger anxiety and disappointment when they focused on avoidance goals...
January 30, 2024: Cognitive, Affective & Behavioral Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38263217/curiosity-primate-neural-circuits-for-novelty-and-information-seeking
#29
REVIEW
Ilya E Monosov
For many years, neuroscientists have investigated the behavioural, computational and neurobiological mechanisms that support value-based decisions, revealing how humans and animals make choices to obtain rewards. However, many decisions are influenced by factors other than the value of physical rewards or second-order reinforcers (such as money). For instance, animals (including humans) frequently explore novel objects that have no intrinsic value solely because they are novel and they exhibit the desire to gain information to reduce their uncertainties about the future, even if this information cannot lead to reward or assist them in accomplishing upcoming tasks...
January 23, 2024: Nature Reviews. Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38260244/neuronal-subtypes-and-connectivity-of-the-adult-mouse-paralaminar-amygdala
#30
David Saxon, Pia J Alderman, Shawn F Sorrells, Stefano Vicini, Joshua G Corbin
UNLABELLED: The paralaminar nucleus of the amygdala (PL) is comprised of neurons which exhibit delayed maturation. PL neurons are born during gestation but mature during adolescent ages, differentiating into excitatory neurons. The PL is prominent in the adult amygdala, contributing to its increased neuron number and relative size compared to childhood. However, the function of the PL is unknown, as the region has only recently begun to be characterized in detail. In this study, we investigated key defining features of the adult PL; the intrinsic morpho-electric properties of its neurons, and its input and output connectivity...
January 12, 2024: bioRxiv
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38248436/the-role-of-estrogen-signaling-and-exercise-in-drug-abuse-a-review
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Rania Ahmed, Samuel Zyla, Nikki Hammond, Kenneth Blum, Panayotis K Thanos
BACKGROUND: Discovering how sex differences impact the efficacy of exercise regimens used for treating drug addiction is becoming increasingly important. Estrogen is a hormone believed to explain a large portion of sex differences observed during drug addiction, and why certain exercise regimens are not equally effective between sexes in treatment. Addiction is currently a global hindrance to millions, many of whom are suffering under the influence of their brain's intrinsic reward system coupled with external environmental factors...
January 8, 2024: Clinics and Practice
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38234858/pharmacological-modulation-of-dopamine-d1-and-d2-receptors-reveals-distinct-neural-networks-related-to-probabilistic-learning-in-non-human-primates
#32
Atsushi Fujimoto, Catherine Elorette, Satoka H Fujimoto, Lazar Fleysher, Peter H Rudebeck, Brian E Russ
The neurotransmitter dopamine (DA) has a multifaceted role in healthy and disordered brains through its action on multiple subtypes of dopaminergic receptors. How modulation of these receptors controls behavior by altering connectivity across intrinsic brain-wide networks remains elusive. Here we performed parallel behavioral and resting-state functional MRI experiments after administration of two different DA receptor antagonists in macaque monkeys. Systemic administration of SCH-23390 (D1 antagonist) disrupted probabilistic learning when subjects had to learn new stimulus-reward associations and diminished functional connectivity (FC) in cortico-cortical and fronto-striatal connections...
December 28, 2023: bioRxiv
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38233142/neuronal-excitability-in-the-medial-habenula-and-ventral-tegmental-area-is-differentially-modulated-by-nicotine-dosage-and-menthol-in-a-sex-specific-manner
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nathan A Olszewski, Samuel Tetteh-Quarshie, Brandon J Henderson
The medial habenula (MHb) has been identified as the limiting factor for nicotine intake and facilitating nicotine withdrawal. However, few studies have assessed MHb neuronal excitability in response to nicotine and, currently, a gap in knowledge is present for finding behavioral correlates to neuronal excitability in the region. Moreover, no study to date has evaluated sex or nicotine dosage as factors of excitability in the MHb. Here, we utilized an e-vape® self-administration (EVSA) model to determine differences between sexes with different nicotine dosages ± menthol...
January 17, 2024: ENeuro
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38232956/a-critique-of-motivation-constructs-to-explain-higher-order-behavior-we-should-unpack-the-black-box
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kou Murayama, Hayley Jach
The constructs of motivation (or needs, motives, etc.) to explain higher-order behavior have burgeoned in psychology. In this article, we critically evaluate such high-level motivation constructs that many researchers define as causal determinants of behavior. We identify a fundamental issue with this predominant view of motivation, which we called the black-box problem. Specifically, high-level motivation constructs have been considered as causally instigating a wide range of higher-order behavior, but this does not explain what they actually are or how behavioral tendencies are generated...
January 18, 2024: Behavioral and Brain Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38218320/is-providing-choices-always-a-good-thing-the-backfire-effect-of-providing-choices-on-competence-restoration
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Yue He, Zan Mo, Hui Fang, Mengyin Li
Grounded in self-determination theory (SDT), the purpose of this research is to investigate the influence of providing choices following competence frustration on one's intrinsic motivation in a follow-up task. Study 1 conducted a between-group EEG experiment with 50 participants and used a component of event-related potentials (ERPs) to represent intrinsic motivation. Study 2 was a behavioural experiment with 149 participants, adopting the self-report method to measure intrinsic motivation. The stimuli and procedure in Study 1 are identical to Study 2...
January 11, 2024: Neuroscience Letters
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38143917/flipped-classroom-in-neurophysiology-performance-analysis-of-a-system-focusing-on-intrinsic-students-motivation
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Maria D Ganfornina, Sergio Diez-Hermano, Diego Sanchez
Introduction: Teaching methodologies promoting active learning result in higher-order knowledge application, a desirable outcome in health disciplines like Physiology. Flipped-classroom (FC) promotes active learning and engagement in the classroom. Although specialized research keeps accumulating, the advantages of FC for improving academic outcome and ultimately patient care remain controversial and open to further analysis. Objective: This study evaluates the benefits of applying FC to the Neurophysiology module of a Human Physiology course...
2023: Frontiers in Physiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38117776/memoir-study-investigating-image-memorability-across-developmental-stages
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Gal Almog, Saeid Alavi Naeini, Yu Hu, Emma G Duerden, Yalda Mohsenzadeh
Images have been shown to consistently differ in terms of their memorability in healthy adults: some images stick in one's mind while others are forgotten quickly. Studies have suggested that memorability is an intrinsic, continuous property of a visual stimulus that can be both measured and manipulated. Memory literature suggests that important developmental changes occur throughout adolescence that have an impact on recognition memory, yet the effect that these changes have on image memorability has not yet been investigated...
2023: PloS One
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38106086/akap150-anchored-pka-regulation-of-synaptic-transmission-and-plasticity-neuronal-excitability-and-crf-neuromodulation-in-the-lateral-habenula
#38
S C Simmons, W J Flerlage, L D Langlois, R D Shepard, C Bouslog, E H Thomas, K M Gouty, J L Sanderson, S Gouty, B M Cox, M L Dell'Acqua, F S Nugent
Numerous studies of hippocampal synaptic function in learning and memory have established the functional significance of the scaffolding A-kinase anchoring protein 150 (AKAP150) in kinase and phosphatase regulation of synaptic receptor and ion channel trafficking/function and hence synaptic transmission/plasticity, and neuronal excitability. Emerging evidence also suggests that AKAP150 signaling may play a critical role in brain's processing of rewarding/aversive experiences. Here we focused on an unexplored role of AKAP150 in the lateral habenula (LHb), a diencephalic brain region that integrates and relays negative reward signals from forebrain striatal and limbic structures to midbrain monoaminergic centers...
December 7, 2023: bioRxiv
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38082417/sex-differences-in-mouse-infralimbic-cortex-projections-to-the-nucleus-accumbens-shell
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Caroline S Johnson, Andrew D Chapp, Erin B Lind, Mark J Thomas, Paul G Mermelstein
BACKGROUND: The nucleus accumbens (NAc) is an important region in motivation and reward. Glutamatergic inputs from the infralimbic cortex (ILC) to the shell region of the NAc (NAcSh) have been implicated in driving the motivation to seek reward through repeated action-based behavior. While this has primarily been studied in males, observed sex differences in motivational circuitry and behavior suggest that females may be more sensitive to rewarding stimuli. These differences have been implicated for the observed vulnerability in women to substance use disorders...
December 11, 2023: Biology of Sex Differences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38054167/the-influence-of-single-session-reward-based-attentional-bias-modification-on-attentional-biases-towards-threat-as-measured-by-the-n2pc-component
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Susan Kang, Roman Osinsky
Attentional biases toward threatening faces have repeatedly been studied in the context of social anxiety, with etiological theories suggesting exacerbated biases as a possible cause for the latter. To counteract these postulated effects, research has focused on the concept of attentional bias manipulation (ABM), in which spatial contingencies between succeeding stimuli are traditionally employed in training paradigms designed to deliberately shift automatic attention processes away from threat-related stimuli...
2023: Frontiers in Psychology
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