events
Duke Nicotine Research Series: Interacting Brain Systems--Nicotine amplification of incentive value during operant and Pavlovian conditioning
event sponsored by
Duke Institute for Brain Sciences (DIBS) &
Center on Addiction and Behavior Change, and Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences
series
CABC Seminar Series
speaker
Dr. Paul Meyer
This is one of 4 talks in conjunction with the Duke Nicotine Research Series.
The overall research goal of my laboratory is to determine the precise role of the brain's reward circuitry in appetitive learning and drug addiction, and how motivated behavior is controlled by reward‐associated stimuli ("cues"). To this end, my laboratory specializes in behavioral and in vivo neurophysiological techniques to study neural connections within reward‐related brain areas. Further, I am interested in how individual differences in the ability of cues to control motivated behavior are reflected by neural activity within this circuitry (specifically the ventral basal ganglia), and how genetic and environmental factors interact to influence the magnitude of these differences.
Please contact Tyler Lee for Zoom link access.
Categories
Medicine, and Research