Rationale: Motivational dysfunctions related to effort exertion are common in psychiatric disorders. Dopamine systems regulate exertion of effort and effort-based choice in humans and rodents.
Objectives: Previous rodent studies mainly employed male rats, and it is imperative to conduct studies in male and female rats.
People with depression and other neuropsychiatric disorders can experience motivational dysfunctions such as fatigue and anergia, which involve reduced exertion of effort in goal-directed activity. To model effort-related motivational dysfunction, effort-based choice tasks can be used, in which rats can select between obtaining a preferred reinforcer by high exertion of effort vs. a low effort/less preferred option.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInstrumental behavior is a very complex and multifaceted process. Behavioral output during instrumental performance is influenced by a variety of factors, including associative conditioning, directional and activational aspects of motivation, affect, action selection and execution, and decision-making functions. Detailed assessments of instrumental behavior can focus on the temporal characteristics of instrumental behavior such as local frequency and response duration, and biophysical measures of response topography such as force output over time.
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