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Improved memory for reward cues following acute buprenorphine administration in humans

Authors :
Syal, Supriya
Ipser, Jonathan
Terburg, David
Solms, Mark
Panksepp, Jaak
Malcolm-Smith, Susan
Bos, Peter A.
Montoya, Estrella R.
Stein, Dan J.
van Honk, Jack
Leerstoel Honk
Leerstoel Kenemans
Helmholtz Institute
Experimental Psychology (onderzoeksprogramma PF)
Afd Psychologische functieleer
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

In rodents, there is abundant evidence for the involvement of the opioid system in the processing of reward cues, but this system has remained understudied in humans. In humans, the happy facial expression is a pivotal reward cue. Happy facial expressions activate the brain's reward system and are disregarded by subjects scoring high on depressive mood who are low in reward drive. We investigated whether a single 0.2. mg administration of the mixed mu-opioid agonist/kappa-antagonist, buprenorphine, would influence short-term memory for happy, angry or fearful expressions relative to neutral faces. Healthy human subjects (n38) participated in a randomized placebo-controlled within-subject design, and performed an emotional face relocation task after administration of buprenorphine and placebo. We show that, compared to placebo, buprenorphine administration results in a significant improvement of memory for happy faces. Our data demonstrate that acute manipulation of the opioid system by buprenorphine increases short-term memory for social reward cues.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.od.......101..fdf21546f6e0ae6fd94294f0816601cd