Dopamine facilitates the translation of physical exertion into assessments of effort

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Abstract

Our assessments of effort are critically shaped by experiences of exertion. However, it is unclear how the nervous system transforms physical exertion into assessments of effort. Availability of the neuromodulator dopamine influences features of motor performance and effort-based decision-making. To test dopamine’s role in the translation of effortful exertion into assessments of effort, we had participants with Parkinson’s disease, in dopamine depleted (OFF dopaminergic medication) and elevated (ON dopaminergic medication) states, exert levels of physical exertion and retrospectively assess how much effort they exerted. In a dopamine-depleted state, participants exhibited increased exertion variability and over-reported their levels of exertion, compared to the dopamine-supplemented state. Increased exertion variability was associated with less accurate effort assessment and dopamine had a protective influence on this effect, reducing the extent to which exertion variability corrupted assessments of effort. Our findings provide an account of dopamine’s role in the translation of features of motor performance into judgments of effort, and a potential therapeutic target for the increased sense of effort observed across a range of neurologic and psychiatric conditions.

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Padmanabhan, P., Casamento-Moran, A., Kim, A., Gonzalez, A. J., Pantelyat, A., Roemmich, R. T., & Chib, V. S. (2023). Dopamine facilitates the translation of physical exertion into assessments of effort. Npj Parkinson’s Disease, 9(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41531-023-00490-4

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