57
DRUGS
there’s also opposition within the future-oriented dopamine
system
itself.
Why would the brain develop circuits that work against each other?
Wouldn’t it make more sense to have everyone pulling together, so to
speak? In fact, no. Systems that contain opposing forces are easier to
control. That’s why cars have both an accelerator and a brake, and why
the brain uses circuits that counter each other.
Not surprisingly, the dopamine control circuit involves the fron-
tal lobes, the part of the brain that is sometimes called the neocortex
because it evolved most recently. It’s what makes human beings unique.
It gives us the imagination to project ourselves
further into the future
than the desire circuit can take us, so we can make long-term plans.
It’s also the part that allows us to maximize resources in that future by
creating new tools and using abstract concepts; concepts that rise above
the here-and-now experience of the senses, like language, mathematics,
and science. It’s intensely rational. It doesn’t feel, because emotion is an
H&N phenomenon. As we will see in
the next chapter, it’s cold, calcu-
lating, and ruthless, doing whatever it takes to reach its goal.
58
THE MOLECULE OF MORE
FURTHER READING
Pfaus, J. G., Kippin, T. E., & Coria-Avila, G. (2003).
What can animal models tell
us about human sexual response?
Annual Review of Sex Research, 14(1), 1–63.
Fleming, A. (2015, May–June). The science of craving.
The Economist 1843.
Retrieved from https://www.1843magazine.com/content/features/wanting
-versus-liking
Study with “never-smokers” sheds light on the earliest stages of nicotine depen-
dence. (2015, September 9).
Johns Hopkins Medicine. Retrieved from https://
www.hopkinsmedicine.org/news/media/releases/study_with_never_
smokers_sheds_light_on_the_earliest_stages_of_nicotine_dependence
Rutledge, R. B., Skandali, N., Dayan, P., & Dolan, R. J. (2015). Dopaminergic
modulation of decision making and subjective well-being.
Journal of Neurosci-
ence, 35(27), 9811–9822.
Weintraub, D., Siderowf, A. D., Potenza, M. N., Goveas, J., Morales, K. H., Duda,
J. E., . . . Stern, M. B. (2006). Association of dopamine agonist use with
impulse control disorders in Parkinson disease.
Archives of Neurology, 63(7),
969–973.
Moore, T. J., Glenmullen, J., & Mattison, D. R. (2014). Reports of pathological
gambling, hypersexuality, and compulsive shopping associated with dopa-
mine receptor agonist drugs.
JAMA Internal Medicine, 174(12), 1930–1933.
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