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Contrast enhancement: a physiological effect of striatal dopamine?

Journal

CELL AND TISSUE RESEARCH
Volume 318, Issue 1, Pages 93-106

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00441-004-0929-z

Keywords

basal ganglia; electrophysiology; synaptic transmission; synaptic plasticity; drug abuse

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Funding

  1. NIDA NIH HHS [DA15676] Funding Source: Medline

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Dopamine functions as an important neuromodulator in the dorsal striatum and ventral striatum/nucleus accumbens. Evidence is accumulating for the idea that striatal neurons compete with each other for control over the animal's motor resources, and that dopamine plays an important modulatory role that allows a particular subset of neurons, encoding a specific behavior, to predominate in this competition. One means by which dopamine could facilitate selection among competing neurons is to enhance the contrast between stronger and weaker excitations (or to increase the signal to noise ratio among neurons, where the firing of the most excited neurons is assumed to transmit signal and the firing of the least excited to transmit noise). Here, we review the electrophysiological evidence for this hypothesis and discuss potential cellular mechanisms by which dopamine-mediated contrast enhancement could occur.

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