Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface to the Second English Edition
- Contributors
- 1 Motivation and Action: Introduction and Overview
- 2 Historical Trends in Motivation Research
- 3 Trait Theories of Motivation
- 4 Situational Determinants of Behavior
- 5 Motivation as a Function of Expectancy and Incentive
- 6 Achievement Motivation
- 7 Social Bonding: Affiliation Motivation and Intimacy Motivation
- 8 Power Motivation
- 9 Implicit and Explicit Motives
- 10 Biopsychological Aspects of Motivation
- 11 Motivation and Volition in the Course of Action
- 12 Individual Differences in Self-Regulation
- 13 Intrinsic Motivation and Flow
- 14 Causal Attribution of Behavior and Achievement
- 15 Motivation and Development
- References
- Index
10 - Biopsychological Aspects of Motivation
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 08 August 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface to the Second English Edition
- Contributors
- 1 Motivation and Action: Introduction and Overview
- 2 Historical Trends in Motivation Research
- 3 Trait Theories of Motivation
- 4 Situational Determinants of Behavior
- 5 Motivation as a Function of Expectancy and Incentive
- 6 Achievement Motivation
- 7 Social Bonding: Affiliation Motivation and Intimacy Motivation
- 8 Power Motivation
- 9 Implicit and Explicit Motives
- 10 Biopsychological Aspects of Motivation
- 11 Motivation and Volition in the Course of Action
- 12 Individual Differences in Self-Regulation
- 13 Intrinsic Motivation and Flow
- 14 Causal Attribution of Behavior and Achievement
- 15 Motivation and Development
- References
- Index
Summary
A Primer on Biopsychology and Its Methods
DEFINITION
As a discipline, biopsychology aims to explain experience and behavior based on how the brain and the rest of the central nervous system work. Biopsychological approaches to motivation, then, seek to explain motivational phenomena based on an understanding of specific functions of the brain. Most research in this area uses mammalian animal models, such as rats, mice, and sometimes primates, on the assumption that the way motivational processes and functions are carried out by the brain is highly similar across related species, and that findings obtained in other mammals will therefore also hold for humans.
When studying motivational processes, biopsychologists often use lesioning (i.e., selective damaging) techniques to explore the contributions of specific brain areas or endocrine glands to motivational behavior, reasoning that if destroying a specific brain area or gland alters a motivational function, then the lesioned substrate must be involved in that function. Other techniques often utilized in this type of research include direct recordings from neuron assemblies in the behaving animal to determine, for instance, which brain cells fire in response to a reward, and brain dialysis, which allows the researcher to examine how much of a neurotransmitter is released in a behaving animal in response to motivationally relevant stimuli. Finally, biopsychologists frequently use pharmacological techniques; for instance, to increase synaptic activity associated with a specific neurotransmitter by administering a transmitter agonist (which mimics the action of the neurotransmitter) or to decrease synaptic activity by administering a transmitter antagonist (which blocks neurotransmitter activity).
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- Motivation and Action , pp. 247 - 271Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2008
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