1. Dopamine modulations of reward‐driven music memory consolidation
- Author
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Robert J. Zatorre, Laura Ferreri, Jordi Riba, Gemma Cardona, Pablo Ripollés, Antoni Rodríguez-Fornells, Ernest Mas-Herrero, Marta Valle, Rosa M. Antonijoan, RS: FPN NPPP II, and Section Psychopharmacology
- Subjects
Adult ,ENHANCES EXPLICIT ,media_common.quotation_subject ,EPISODIC MEMORY ,pleasure ,INDIVIDUAL-DIFFERENCES ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,CAPACITY ,Pleasure ,ACTIVATION ,memory ,Young Adult ,History and Philosophy of Science ,CONNECTIVITY ,Humans ,music ,Active listening ,Episodic memory ,reward ,Memory Consolidation ,media_common ,Analysis of Variance ,Recall ,General Neuroscience ,PERSISTENCE ,Dopaminergic ,Brain ,Flexibility (personality) ,PERFORMANCE ,humanities ,Mental Recall ,Auditory Perception ,Memory consolidation ,SENSITIVITY ,dopamine ,Psychology ,psychological phenomena and processes ,Period (music) ,RESPONSES ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Music listening provides one of the most significant abstract rewards for humans because hearing music activates the dopaminergic mesolimbic system. Given the strong link between reward, dopamine, and memory, we aimed here to investigate the hypothesis that dopamine-dependent musical reward can drive memory improvements. Twenty-nine healthy participants of both sexes provided reward ratings of unfamiliar musical excerpts that had to be remembered following a consolidation period under three separate conditions: after the ingestion of a dopaminergic antagonist, a dopaminergic precursor, or a placebo. Linear mixed modeling of the intervention data showed that the effect of reward on memory-i.e., the greater the reward experienced while listening to the musical excerpts, the better the memory recollection performance-was modulated by both dopaminergic signaling and individual differences in reward processing. Greater pleasure was consistently associated with better memory outcomes in participants with high sensitivity to musical reward, but this effect was lost when dopaminergic signaling was disrupted in participants with average or low musical hedonia. Our work highlights the flexibility of the human dopaminergic system, which can enhance memory formation not only through explicit and/or primary reinforcers but also via abstract and aesthetic rewards such as music.
- Published
- 2021