Neurocircuitry | Motivation | Addiction
Exploring how brain circuits shape motivation, decision-making, and addiction — uncovering the
neural and behavioral markers that drive vulnerability, resilience, and recovery
Ongoing Research
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Project Lead: Karla Galvan
“Behavioral and neural markers that predict vulnerability to cocaine use“
This project investigates how behaviors like impulsivity, distress tolerance, anxiety, and sensation-seeking predict vulnerability to cocaine use and relapse. Using calcium imaging of the prelimbic cortex in rats, we examined how neuronal activity during these behaviors relates to later drug-seeking. We found that certain traits and prelimbic activity patterns strongly predicted cocaine self-administration and reward-seeking, with notable sex differences and a decrease in distress tolerance after cocaine exposure. These findings highlight how individual behavioral and neural markers interact to shape addiction risk.
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Project Lead: Peter Fogel
“Behavioral and neural predictors of drug-seeking and the influence of social rewards”
This research investigates how prelimbic cortex neurons projecting to the dorsomedial striatum (PrL-DMS) support cost- and effort-based decision-making in cocaine self-administration. Using projection-specific calcium imaging in rats, the study examines neuronal responses when rewards are paired with punishment or require increasing effort. Preliminary findings show that PrL-DMS neurons are preferentially active during high-conflict decisions, highlighting their role in tracking motivational conflict. Ongoing work explores whether these neural signatures also predict behavior in social choice contexts, providing insight into the neural mechanisms underlying vulnerability and resilience in addiction.
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Project Lead: Marina Smoak