Controlling Your Dopamine For Motivation, Focus & Satisfaction

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- Welcome to the Huberman Lab Podcast,

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where we discuss science and science-based tools

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for everyday life.

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[energetic music]

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I'm Andrew Huberman,

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and I'm a professor of neurobiology and ophthalmology

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at Stanford School of Medicine.

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Today, we are going to talk all about dopamine

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and what drives you to do the things that you do.

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We're going to talk about motivation and desire and craving,

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but also how dopamine relates to satisfaction

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and our feelings of wellbeing.

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And of course, any discussion about dopamine

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has to include a discussion about the potential

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for dopamine induced addiction.

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Indeed, dopamine lies at the heart of addiction

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to all things.

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But today we are mainly going to focus on,

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how what we do and how we do it,

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and how we conceptualize those things

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leads to changes in this amazing molecule

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in our brain and bodies that we call dopamine.

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I'm going to teach you what dopamine is and what it is not.

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There are a lot of myths about the molecule dopamine.

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We often hear about so-called dopamine hits.

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Today, we are going to dispel many common myths

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about dopamine,

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and we are going to talk about how dopamine actually works.

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We're going to discuss the biology of dopamine,

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the psychology.

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We will discuss some neural circuits

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and a really exciting aspect of dopamine biology

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or so-called dopamine schedules.

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In other words, we are going to discuss

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how things like food, drugs, caffeine, pornography,

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even some plant-based compounds can change

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our baseline levels of dopamine and in doing so,

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they change how much dopamine we are capable of experiencing

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from what could be very satisfying events,

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or events that make us feel not so good

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because of things that we did or took prior.

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So I promise you it's going to be a vast discussion,

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but I will structure it for you,

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and you'll come away with a deep understanding

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of really what drives you.

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You will also come away with a lot of tools,

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how to leverage dopamine so that you can sustain energy,

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drive and motivation for the things

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that are important to you over long periods of time.

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Before we dive into the meat of today's discussion,

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I'd like to share with you a fascinating result

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that really underscores what dopamine

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is capable of in our brains and bodies,

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and underscores the fact that just through behaviors,

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no drugs, nothing of that sort,

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just through behaviors,

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we can achieve terrifically high increases in dopamine

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that are very long and sustained in ways that serve us.

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This is a result that was published

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in the European Journal of Physiology.

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I'll go into it in more detail later,

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but essentially what it involved is having human subjects

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get into water of different temperatures.

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So it was warm water,

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moderately cool water and cold, cold water.

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Had them stay in that water for up to an hour,

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and they measured by way of blood draw

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things like cortisol, norepinephrine and dopamine.

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What was fascinating is that cold water exposure

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led to very rapid increases in norepinephrine

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and epinephrine,

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which is also just called adrenaline.

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It also led to increases in dopamine.

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And these increases in dopamine were very significant.

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They kicked in around 10 or 15 minutes after submersion

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into the cold water.

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And I should mention the head wasn't below water

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is just up to the neck.

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And the dopamine release continued to rise

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and rise and rise,

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and eventually reached 250% above baseline.

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Now, what was interesting is after subjects got out

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of this cold water,

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that dopamine increase was sustained.

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And I know nowadays many people are interested

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in using cold water therapy as a way to increase metabolism

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and fat loss,

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but also to improve sense of well-being,

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improve cognition, improve clarity of mind.

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There's something really special about this very alert,

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but calm state of mind

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that seems to be the one that's optimal

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for pretty much everything except sleep,

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but for all aspects of work and for social engagement

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and for sport that highly alert,

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but calm state of mind really is the sweet spot

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that I believe most of us would like to achieve.

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And this cold water exposure done correctly

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really can help people achieve that state of mind

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through these increases in dopamine

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that lasts a very long time.

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So I will later detail the specifics of that study,

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what it entailed in terms of how long,

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the variations, the different subjects experienced,

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as well as how to limit the amount of stress hormone,

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cortisol, that's released as a consequence

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of the cold water.

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And we will also talk about compounds, supplements

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that people can take in order to increase

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their levels of dopamine should they choose.

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Before we begin, I'd like to emphasize

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that this podcast is separate from my teaching

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and research roles at Stanford.

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It is however, part of my desire and effort

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to bring zero cost to consumer information about science

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and science related tools to the general public.

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In keeping with that theme,

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I'd like to thank the sponsors of today's podcast.

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The event is September 30th, 2021 at 3:00 p.m Eastern.

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You can find the registration link in the caption

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for this episode.

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So let's talk about dopamine.

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Most people have heard of dopamine,

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and we hear all the time now about dopamine hits.

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But actually there's no such thing as a dopamine hit.

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And actually the way that your body uses dopamine

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is to have a baseline level of dopamine.

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Meaning an amount of dopamine that's circulating

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in your brain and body all the time.

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And that turns out to be important for how you feel

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generally, whether or not you're in a good mood,

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motivated, et cetera.

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And you also can experience peaks in dopamine

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above baseline.

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Now, this has a very specific name

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in the neurobiology literature,

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so-called tonic and phasic release of dopamine.

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And I'll explain what that means in a couple of minutes.

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But if you remember nothing else from this episode,

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please remember this,

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that when you experience something or you crave something

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really desirable, really exciting to you, very pleasurable.

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What happens afterwards is your baseline level

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of dopamine drops.

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Okay?

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So these peaks in dopamine,

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they influence how much dopamine

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will generally be circulating afterward.

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And you might think, oh, a big peak in dopamine after that,

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I'm going to feel even better

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because I just had this great event.

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Not the case.

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What actually happens is that your baseline level

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of dopamine drops.

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And I will explain the precise mechanism for that.

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Okay?

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In the neuroscience literature,

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we refer to this as tonic and phasic release of dopamine.

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Tonic being the low level baseline

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that's always there circulating,

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released into your brain all the time.

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And then phasic these peaks that ride above that baseline.

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And those two things interact.

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And this is really important.

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I'm going to teach you the underlying neurobiology,

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but even if you have no background in biology,

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I promise to make it all clear.

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I'll explain the terms and what they mean.

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And I'm excited to teach you about dopamine,

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because dopamine has everything to do with how you feel

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right now as you're listening to this,

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it has everything to do with how you will feel

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an hour from now,

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has everything to do with your level of motivation

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and your level of desire,

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and your willingness to push through effort.

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If ever you've interacted with somebody

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who just doesn't seem to have any drive they've given up,

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or if you've interacted with somebody

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who seems to have endless drive and energy,

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what you are looking at there in those two circumstances

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is without question a difference

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in the level of dopamine circulating in their system.

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There will be other factors too,

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but the level of dopamine is the primary determinant

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of how motivated we are, how excited we are,

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how outward facing we are and how willing we are,

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to lean into life and pursue things.

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Dopamine is what we call a neuromodulator.

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Neuromodulators are different than neurotransmitters.

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Neurotransmitters are involved in the dialogue

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between neurons nerve cells.

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And neurotransmitters tend to mediate local communication.

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Just imagine two people talking to one another at a concert,

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that communication between them is analogous

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to the communication carried out by neurotransmitters,

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whereas neuromodulators influence the communication

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of many neurons.

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Imagine a bunch of people dancing

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where it's a coordinated dance involving 10 or 20

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or hundreds of people.

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Neuromodulators are coordinating that dance.

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In the nervous system what this means is that,

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dopamine release changes the probability

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that certain neural circuits will be active

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and that other neural circuits will be inactive.

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Okay?

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So it modulates a bunch of things all at once,

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and that's why it's so powerful at shifting

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not just our levels of energy,

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but also our mindset,

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also our feelings of whether or not we can,

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or cannot accomplish something.

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So how does dopamine work and what does it do?

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Well, first of all, it is not just responsible for pleasure,

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it is responsible for motivation and drive.

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Primarily, at the psychological level,

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also for craving.

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Those three things are sort of the same.

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Motivation, drive and craving.

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It also controls time perception,

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and we will get deep into how dopamine

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can modulate time perception,

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and how important it is that everybody be able

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to access increases in dopamine at different timescales.

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This turns out to be important to not end up addicted

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to substances,

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but it also turns out to be very important to sustain effort

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and be a happy person over long periods of time.

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Which I think most everybody wants.

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It certainly is adaptive in life to be able to do that.

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Dopamine is also vitally important for movement.

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I'll explain the neural circuits for dopamine and mindset,

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and dopamine in movement in a moment,

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but in diseases like Parkinson's or Lewy bodies dementia,

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which is similar to Parkinson's in many ways.

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There's a depletion or death of dopamine neurons

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at a particular location in the brain

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which leads to shaky movements,

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challenges and speaking,

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challenges in particular in initiating movement.

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And because dopamine is depleted elsewhere

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to people with Parkinson's and Lew's bod,

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excuse me, Lewy body dementia also experience drops

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in motivation and affect, meaning mood.

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They tend to get depressed and so on.

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When those people are properly treated,

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they can, not always,

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but they can recover some fluidity of movement,

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some ability to initiate movement.

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And almost without question,

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those people feel better psychologically,

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not just because they can move,

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but also because dopamine impacts mood and motivation.

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So what are the underlying neural circuits?

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For those of you that are not interested in biology

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and specific nomenclature,

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you can tune out now if you want,

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but it's actually pretty straightforward.

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You have two main neural circuits in the brain

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that dopamine uses in order to exert all its effects.

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The first one is a pathway that goes from this area

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in the what's called the ventral tegmentum.

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That's a fancy, but ventral just means bottom,

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and tegmentum actually means floor.

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So it's at the bottom of the brain,

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and it's the ventral part of the floor.

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So it's really low in the back of the brain,

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the ventral tegmentum.

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And it goes from the ventral tegmentum

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to what's called the ventral striatum

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and the prefrontal cortex.

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Now, that's a lot of language,

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but basically what we call this is the,

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mesocorticolimbic pathway.

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This is the pathway by which dopamine influences motivation,

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drive and craving.

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It involves structures that some of you may have heard

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of before.

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Things like nucleus accumbens and the prefrontal cortex.

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This is the pathway that really gets disrupted

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in addictions where in particular drugs that influence

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the release of dopamine like cocaine and methamphetamine.

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We'll talk about those drugs today.

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They tap into this pathway.

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But if you are pursuing a partner,

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a boyfriend or girlfriend,

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if you're pursuing a degree in school,

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if you're pursuing a finish line in a race,

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you are tapping into this so-called

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mesecorticolimbic pathway.

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This is the classic reward pathway in all mammals.

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The other pathway emerges from an area in the brain

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called the substantia nigra.

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So-called because the cells in that area are dark,

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and the substantia nigra connects to an area of the brain

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called the dorsal striatum.

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This is not surprisingly called the nigrostriatal pathway.

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For those of you who have never done any neuroanatomy,

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I'm going to teach you a little trick right now.

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Everything in neuroanatomy,

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the first part of a word tells you where the neurons are.

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And then the second part tells you

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where they are connecting to.

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So when I say nigropstriatal pathway,

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it means that the neurons are in substantial nigra

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and they connect to the striatum, nigrostriatal pathway.

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So while it's a lot of language there, some logic there.

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Okay?

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So we've got these two pathways.

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One, mainly for movement, right?

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This is the substantia nigra to dorsal striatum.

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And we've got this other pathway,

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the so-called mesocorticolimbic pathway,

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that's for reward, reinforcement and motivation.

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I want you to remember that there are two pathways.

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If you don't remember the two pathways in detail,

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that's fine.

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But please remember that there are two pathways,

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because that turns out to be important later.

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Now, the other thing to understand about dopamine is that,

Time: 1093.72

the way that dopamine is released in the brain and body

Time: 1097.92

can differ.

Time: 1099.51

Meaning it can be very local,

Time: 1102.33

or it can be more broad.

Time: 1104.7

Now, most of you have probably heard of synapses.

Time: 1107.51

Synapses are the little spaces between neurons,

Time: 1110.65

and basically neurons nerve cells communicate

Time: 1112.76

with one another by making each other electrically active,

Time: 1116.35

or by making each other less electrically active.

Time: 1119.84

So here's how this works.

Time: 1120.673

You can imagine one nerve cell and another nerve cell

Time: 1123.14

with a little gap between them,

Time: 1124.24

a little synapse.

Time: 1125.68

And the way that one nerve cell causes

Time: 1128.16

the next nerve cell to fire.

Time: 1129.9

What we call fire really means to become electrically active

Time: 1132.64

is that it vomits out these little packets,

Time: 1135.52

what we call vesicles.

Time: 1136.47

They're little bubbles filled with a chemical,

Time: 1138.93

when that chemical enters the synapse,

Time: 1141.51

it some of it docks or parks on the other side,

Time: 1144.99

in the other neuron.

Time: 1146.35

And by virtue of electrical changes in the,

Time: 1150.17

what we call the postsynaptic neuron,

Time: 1152.42

that chemical will make that neuron more electrically active

Time: 1155.61

or less electrically active.

Time: 1157.58

Dopamine can do that like any other neurotransmitter

Time: 1160.99

or neuromodulator.

Time: 1162.49

So it can have one neuron influence another neuron.

Time: 1165.99

But dopamine can also engage

Time: 1168.28

in what's called a volume metric release.

Time: 1170.49

Volumetric release is like a giant vomit that gets out to 50

Time: 1175.16

or a hundred or even thousands of cells.

Time: 1177.85

So there's local release what we call synaptic release,

Time: 1180.51

and then there's volumetric release.

Time: 1182.01

So volumetric release is like dumping all this dopamine out

Time: 1184.99

into the system.

Time: 1186.31

So dopamine is incredible because it can change the way

Time: 1190.22

that our neural circuits work at a local scale

Time: 1192.9

and at a very broad scale.

Time: 1194.82

And for those of you that are only interested in tools,

Time: 1197.33

like how do I get more dopamine?

Time: 1199.15

Let me tell you this part is really important

Time: 1201.78

because if you were to take a drug or supplement

Time: 1205.65

that increases your level of dopamine,

Time: 1207.63

you are influencing both the local release of dopamine

Time: 1211.73

and volumetric release.

Time: 1213.89

This relates back to the baseline of dopamine

Time: 1216.19

and the big peak above baseline.

Time: 1218.95

And that turns out to be important.

Time: 1220.52

And I'll just allude to why it's important.

Time: 1223.24

Many drugs and indeed many supplements

Time: 1226.74

that increase dopamine will actually make it harder

Time: 1231.11

for you to sustain dopamine release

Time: 1233.11

over long periods of time.

Time: 1234.83

And to achieve those peaks that most of us are craving

Time: 1238

when we are in pursuit of things.

Time: 1239.71

Why?

Time: 1240.67

Because if you get both volume metric release,

Time: 1243.56

the dumping out of dopamine everywhere,

Time: 1245.39

and you're getting local release,

Time: 1247.26

what it means is that the difference between the peak

Time: 1249.367

and baseline is likely to be smaller.

Time: 1252.87

And this is very important,

Time: 1255.12

how satisfying or exciting or pleasureful

Time: 1258.75

a given experience is,

Time: 1260.75

doesn't just depend on the height of that peak,

Time: 1263.92

it depends on the height of that peak relative

Time: 1266.92

to the baseline.

Time: 1268.11

So if you increase the baseline and you increase the peak,

Time: 1272.41

you're not going to achieve more and more pleasure

Time: 1274.83

from things.

Time: 1275.8

I'll talk about how to leverage this information

Time: 1278.89

in a little bit,

Time: 1280.17

but just increasing your dopamine.

Time: 1282.84

Yes, it will make you excited for all things.

Time: 1285.26

It will make you feel very motivated,

Time: 1287

but it will also make that motivation very short-lived.

Time: 1291.27

So there's a better way to increase your dopamine.

Time: 1294.75

There's a better way to optimize

Time: 1296.3

this peak to baseline ratio.

Time: 1298.3

For now what we've talked about is two main neural circuits,

Time: 1301.18

one for movement,

Time: 1302.05

and one for motivation and craving with dopamine.

Time: 1305.08

And we've talked about two main modes of communication

Time: 1307.91

between neurons with dopamine.

Time: 1310.5

One is this local synaptic release.

Time: 1313.84

One is more volume metric release.

Time: 1316.54

And in the back of your mind,

Time: 1317.63

you can relate this back to,

Time: 1318.88

again, this baseline versus peaks above baseline.

Time: 1322.27

So that's a description of what we would call

Time: 1324.02

the spatial effects or the spatial aspects of dopamine.

Time: 1328.96

I said this connects to that,

Time: 1330.28

that connects to this.

Time: 1331.15

You can get local or more broad volumetric release.

Time: 1333.96

What about the duration of release

Time: 1336.17

or the duration of action for dopamine?

Time: 1339.07

Well, dopamine is unique among chemicals in the brain,

Time: 1343.33

because dopamine unlike a lot of chemicals in the brain

Time: 1346.66

works through what are called G protein-coupled receptors.

Time: 1349.52

And for those of you that are about to pass out

Time: 1351.15

from the amount of detail,

Time: 1352.04

just hang in there with me.

Time: 1353.01

It's really not complicated.

Time: 1355.02

There are two ways that neurons can communicate

Time: 1358.28

or mainly two ways.

Time: 1359.53

There are third and fourth,

Time: 1360.7

but mostly neurons communicate by two modes.

Time: 1365.65

One, are what we call fast electrical synapses

Time: 1369.02

ionotropic conduction.

Time: 1370.95

All right?

Time: 1371.783

You don't need to know what that means,

Time: 1372.616

but basically one neuron activates another neuron

Time: 1376.35

and little holes open up in that neuron,

Time: 1378.92

and ions rush in.

Time: 1380.74

Sodium is the main ion salt

Time: 1383.85

by which one neuron influences the electrical activity

Time: 1386.74

of another neuron because sodium ions contain a charge.

Time: 1390.02

Okay?

Time: 1391.041

There are other things like chloride and potassium.

Time: 1392.49

If you're interested in looking this up,

Time: 1393.72

just look up ionic conductances in the action potential,

Time: 1397.22

or I could do a post on it some time

Time: 1398.73

and we could go into detail.

Time: 1400.57

But just understand that when neurons

Time: 1402.03

want to influence each other,

Time: 1403.44

they can do it by way of this fast ionotropic conduction.

Time: 1406.56

This is a really quick way for one neuron

Time: 1409.63

to influence the next.

Time: 1411.95

Dopamine doesn't communicate that way.

Time: 1414.27

Dopamine is slower.

Time: 1415.81

It works through what are called G protein-coupled

Time: 1417.63

receptors.

Time: 1418.56

So what happens is dopamine is released

Time: 1420.62

in these little vesicles that I've mentioned before,

Time: 1422.6

get vomited out into the synapse.

Time: 1425.08

Some of that dopamine will bind

Time: 1427.34

to the so-called postsynaptic neuron,

Time: 1429.45

it'll bind to the next neuron,

Time: 1430.83

and then it sets off a cascade.

Time: 1433.34

It's kind of like a bucket brigade of one thing,

Time: 1435.3

getting handed off to the next,

Time: 1436.59

to the next, to the next.

Time: 1438.07

It's G protein-coupled receptors.

Time: 1440.46

And anytime you hear about these GPCRs

Time: 1442.17

or G protein-coupled receptors,

Time: 1444.41

pay attention because they're really interesting.

Time: 1446.66

They're slow,

Time: 1447.92

but they also can have multiple cascades of effects.

Time: 1451.16

They can impact even gene expression at some level.

Time: 1454.37

They can change what a cell actually becomes.

Time: 1457.27

They can change how well or how poorly that cell

Time: 1460.61

will respond to the same signal in the future.

Time: 1464

So dopamine works through the slower process.

Time: 1466.79

These G protein-coupled receptors.

Time: 1468.46

And so its effects tend to take a while in order to occur.

Time: 1474.3

This aspect of dopamine transmission is important

Time: 1477.83

because it now underscores two things.

Time: 1479.48

One, there's two pathways for dopamine to communicate.

Time: 1482.56

One for movement,

Time: 1483.393

one for motivation and craving.

Time: 1484.69

There's two spatial scales at which dopamine can operate

Time: 1489.06

synaptically or volumetrically.

Time: 1491.25

And dopamine can have slow effects,

Time: 1495.04

really slow effects,

Time: 1496.27

or even very long lasting effects.

Time: 1498.32

And it even can control gene expression.

Time: 1500.89

It can actually change the way that cells behave.

Time: 1503.51

One thing that's not often discussed about dopamine,

Time: 1505.56

but is extremely important to know

Time: 1507.94

is that dopamine doesn't work on its own.

Time: 1511.07

Neurons that release dopamine co-release glutamate.

Time: 1515.91

Glutamate is a neurotransmitter

Time: 1518.6

and it's a neurotransmitter that is excitatory,

Time: 1521.23

meaning it stimulates neurons to be electrically active.

Time: 1524.81

So now even if you don't know any cell biology,

Time: 1528.387

you should start to gain a picture

Time: 1529.96

that dopamine is responsible for movement,

Time: 1532.6

motivation and drive.

Time: 1534.074

It does that through two pathways,

Time: 1535.77

but also the dopamine stimulates action in general,

Time: 1539.72

because it releases this excitatory neurotransmitter.

Time: 1542.02

It tends to make certain neurons that are nearby

Time: 1545.93

or even that are far away,

Time: 1547.08

because of volumetric release,

Time: 1548.3

it tends to make those more active.

Time: 1550.12

So dopamine is really stimulating.

Time: 1552.29

And indeed we say that dopaminergic transmission

Time: 1556.37

or dopamine tends to stimulate sympathetic arousal.

Time: 1560.65

Sympathetic doesn't have anything to do with sympathy.

Time: 1562.73

It's just simply means that it tends

Time: 1565.33

to increase our levels of alertness.

Time: 1567.33

It tends to bring an animal or a human

Time: 1569.73

into a state of more alertness, readiness

Time: 1573.06

and desire to pursue things outside the confines

Time: 1576.34

of its skin.

Time: 1577.43

So if I were to just put a really simple message

Time: 1581.08

around dopamine it would be,

Time: 1582.85

there's a molecule in your brain and body

Time: 1584.93

that when released tends to make you look outside yourself,

Time: 1590.16

pursue things outside yourself,

Time: 1592.54

and to crave things outside yourself.

Time: 1596.65

The pleasure that arrives from achieving things

Time: 1599.1

also involves dopamine,

Time: 1600.5

but is mainly the consequences of other molecules.

Time: 1603.86

But if ever you felt lethargic and like just lazy

Time: 1606.66

and you had no motivation or drive,

Time: 1608.31

that's a low dopamine state.

Time: 1610.53

If ever you felt really excited, motivated,

Time: 1612.98

even if you're a little scared to do something.

Time: 1615.71

Maybe you did your first skydive,

Time: 1617.09

or you're about to do your first skydive,

Time: 1619.04

or you're about to do some public speaking

Time: 1620.013

and you really don't want to screw it up,

Time: 1622.86

you are in a high dopamine state.

Time: 1625.65

Dopamine is a universal currency in all mammals,

Time: 1628.93

but especially in humans for moving us toward goals

Time: 1633.7

and how much dopamine is in our system at any one time

Time: 1637.67

compared to how much dopamine was in our system

Time: 1640.57

a few minutes ago,

Time: 1642.3

and how much we remember enjoying a particular experience

Time: 1645.9

of the past.

Time: 1647.79

That dictates your so-called quality of life

Time: 1650.78

and your desire to pursue things.

Time: 1653.29

This is really important.

Time: 1654.123

Dopamine is a currency,

Time: 1656.31

and it's the way that you track pleasure.

Time: 1658.66

It's the way that you track success.

Time: 1660.39

It's the way that you track

Time: 1662.03

whether or not you are doing well or doing poorly.

Time: 1664.95

And that is subjective,

Time: 1667.04

but if your dopamine is too low,

Time: 1670.37

you will not feel motivated.

Time: 1672.04

If your dopamine is really high,

Time: 1674.21

you will feel motivated.

Time: 1675.41

And if your dopamine is somewhere in the middle,

Time: 1677.81

how you feel depends on whether or not

Time: 1679.72

you had higher dopamine a few minutes ago or lower dopamine.

Time: 1684.29

This is important,

Time: 1685.8

your experience of life and your level of motivation

Time: 1688.83

and drive depends on how much dopamine you have relative

Time: 1694.57

to your recent experience.

Time: 1697.13

This is again, something that's just not accounted

Time: 1700.33

for in the simple language of dopamine hits.

Time: 1703.41

Okay?

Time: 1704.243

A simple way to envision dopamine hits

Time: 1706.91

is every time you do something you like,

Time: 1708.38

you to piece of chocolate,

Time: 1709.25

dopamine hit.

Time: 1710.083

You look at your Instagram,

Time: 1710.99

dopamine hit.

Time: 1711.823

You see someone you like,

Time: 1712.656

dopamine hit.

Time: 1714.34

All these things described as dopamine hits

Time: 1717.57

neglect the fact that if you scroll social media

Time: 1720.68

and you see something you really like,

Time: 1722.93

dopamine hit.

Time: 1723.77

Sure there's an increase in dopamine,

Time: 1725.84

but then you get to something else and you go,

Time: 1728.43

hmm, not that interesting.

Time: 1729.72

However, had you arrived at that second thing first,

Time: 1733.56

you might think that it was really interesting.

Time: 1736.82

If you had arrived to that second Instagram post

Time: 1739.58

three days later or four days later,

Time: 1741.6

you might find it extremely interesting.

Time: 1743.99

Again, how much dopamine you experience from something

Time: 1747.29

depends on your baseline level of dopamine

Time: 1749.35

when you arrive there,

Time: 1750.84

and your previous dopamine peaks.

Time: 1754.18

Okay?

Time: 1755.013

That's super important to understand,

Time: 1756.65

and it's completely neglected by the general language

Time: 1759.23

of dopamine hits.

Time: 1760.23

This is why when you repeatedly engage in something

Time: 1763.73

that you enjoy,

Time: 1765.34

your threshold for enjoyment goes up and up and up.

Time: 1769.09

So I want to talk about that process.

Time: 1770.99

And I want to explain how that process works,

Time: 1772.563

because if you understand that process,

Time: 1774.88

and you understand some of these schedules and kinetics

Time: 1777.79

as we call them around dopamine,

Time: 1778.623

you will be in a terrific position

Time: 1780.86

to use any dopamine enhancing tools that you decide to use.

Time: 1784.58

You'll be in an excellent position to modulate

Time: 1786.98

and control your own dopamine release

Time: 1788.8

for optimal motivation and drive.

Time: 1791

I realized that was a lot of information

Time: 1793.39

about the biology of dopamine,

Time: 1795.03

sort of like trying to make you drink

Time: 1796.51

from the fire hose of dopamine biology.

Time: 1799.32

However, I realized that some people

Time: 1800.6

probably want even more information

Time: 1802.66

about the biology of dopamine transmission.

Time: 1805.75

If you're interested in that,

Time: 1807.29

I'll post a link to a absolutely stellar review

Time: 1809.89

that was published in Nature Reviews Neuroscience

Time: 1812.4

called spatial and temporal scales of dopamine transmission.

Time: 1815.51

It is quite detailed,

Time: 1816.65

but they have beautiful diagrams

Time: 1818.27

and can walk you through all the things

Time: 1820.31

that I just described and get into even more detail.

Time: 1822.73

We'll put a link to that in the caption on YouTube.

Time: 1826.28

Right now, I want to share with you two anecdotes,

Time: 1829.4

one from my own life,

Time: 1830.67

and one from some fairly recent history

Time: 1834.26

that illustrate some of the core biology of dopamine

Time: 1838.17

and how profoundly it can shape our experience.

Time: 1841.6

The first one is a really tragic situation that occurred.

Time: 1847.2

This was in the 80s,

Time: 1849.34

there was a outbreak of what looked like Parkinsonian

Time: 1854.24

symptoms in a young population.

Time: 1856.33

So many of you heard of Parkinson's disease.

Time: 1858.24

Parkinson's disease is a disease in which people initially

Time: 1862.01

start to quake, can't generate smooth movements,

Time: 1865.12

they'll have issues with speech,

Time: 1866.35

sometimes cognition as well.

Time: 1868.59

There are examples like Michael J. Fox,

Time: 1870.98

which are kind of early onset.

Time: 1872.97

Parkinson's typically it hits people

Time: 1875.3

a little bit later in life.

Time: 1876.71

There's a genetic component.

Time: 1879.66

But there is this question,

Time: 1882.1

and there's always been this question

Time: 1883.2

whether or not certain lifestyle factors

Time: 1885.28

can also create Parkinson's?

Time: 1887.62

And some years ago there was a situation

Time: 1891.786

where street laboratories,

Time: 1895.32

illicit laboratories were trying to make a drug

Time: 1898.39

called MPPP, which is an opioid light compound.

Time: 1901.8

It's a bit like heroin,

Time: 1904.17

and heroin addicts seeking heroin went out and bought

Time: 1908.104

what they thought was MPPP.

Time: 1911.68

Unfortunately, it was not MPPP.

Time: 1916.16

I mean, it would have been tragic if it was anyway

Time: 1918.04

because they were drug addicts,

Time: 1919.23

but what they ended up taking turned out to be a lot worse.

Time: 1922.32

What they ended up taking was MPTP,

Time: 1925.75

and MPTP can arise in the synthesis of MPPP.

Time: 1930.79

So someone in a lab someplace,

Time: 1932.73

this was mainly in the Central Valley in California,

Time: 1934.7

but elsewhere as well.

Time: 1936.88

Somebody created MPTP,

Time: 1940.19

and what ended up happening was a large number

Time: 1943.86

of young people who were opioid addicts

Time: 1946.83

became completely boxed in paralyzed.

Time: 1950.27

Couldn't speak, couldn't blink,

Time: 1952.78

couldn't do anything.

Time: 1954.27

Couldn't function, couldn't move.

Time: 1955.83

So both aspects of dopamine transmission were disrupted.

Time: 1960.97

They had no motivation and drive.

Time: 1963.33

They couldn't generate any movement of any kind.

Time: 1965.76

They were literally locked in frozen.

Time: 1968.76

And sadly, this is irreversible.

Time: 1971.57

It's irreversible,

Time: 1972.77

because what MPTP does is it kills the dopaminergic neurons

Time: 1978.21

of the substantia nigra that nigrostriatal pathway

Time: 1980.94

that's involved in generating movement.

Time: 1982.83

And it kills the dopaminergic neurons

Time: 1985.23

of the so-called mesocorticolimbic pathway.

Time: 1988.01

I was in college when this whole MPTP thing happened.

Time: 1991.02

And I remember hearing this story.

Time: 1993.14

At the time, I had no understanding

Time: 1995.41

of what it is to have very high levels of dopamine

Time: 1998.44

or extremely depleted levels of dopamine.

Time: 2000.71

There was no reason why I should have that understanding.

Time: 2002.59

I mean, of course I had experienced different pleasures

Time: 2004.74

of different kinds and I've had lows in my life,

Time: 2007.69

but nothing to the extreme that I'm about to discuss.

Time: 2013.81

I got Giardia.

Time: 2015.6

And Giardia is a stomach bug that if any of you ever had it,

Time: 2019.79

it is terrible.

Time: 2020.79

It's terrible diarrhea.

Time: 2022.01

You end up very dehydrated very quickly.

Time: 2023.97

You drop a ton of weight and it is extremely unpleasant.

Time: 2028.99

I ended up going to the emergency room,

Time: 2031.7

and in the emergency room,

Time: 2033.83

I begged them for something to stop up my guts.

Time: 2036.13

And they gave it to me.

Time: 2037.38

They put a saline line into rehydrate me

Time: 2039.53

and they injected something into the saline bag.

Time: 2042.7

And within minutes I felt more sadness,

Time: 2048.74

more overwhelming sense of depression,

Time: 2053.36

basically, lower than I'd ever felt in my entire life.

Time: 2056.63

It was absolutely profound.

Time: 2059.2

I was crying endlessly without knowing why I was crying.

Time: 2063.72

I was miserable.

Time: 2064.8

And I asked them, what did you inject?

Time: 2066.78

And they said, "We injected Thorazine."

Time: 2069.06

Thorazine is an antipsychotic drug.

Time: 2071.57

It's actually used to block dopamine receptors.

Time: 2074.16

It's what's given to people who have schizophrenia.

Time: 2077.42

Often is given to people who have schizophrenia,

Time: 2079.48

because schizophrenia involves among other things

Time: 2082.89

elevated levels of dopamine.

Time: 2085.51

It was horrible.

Time: 2087.9

The experience of it was miserable,

Time: 2090.66

unlike anything I'd ever experienced.

Time: 2093.19

And so I actually said to them,

Time: 2095.827

"What did you give me?"

Time: 2096.66

They said, "Thorazine."

Time: 2097.84

And I said, "You have to give me l-DOPA.

Time: 2100.657

"You have to give me something to get my dopamine levels

Time: 2103.357

"back up again."

Time: 2104.19

And they did.

Time: 2105.023

They gave me an injection of l-DOPA into the bag,

Time: 2107.36

went straight to my bloodstream.

Time: 2108.55

And within minutes I felt fine again.

Time: 2112.26

It was incredible.

Time: 2113.093

And it really opened up my mind and my experience

Time: 2116.3

to what it is to have absolutely plummeted levels

Time: 2119.89

of dopamine.

Time: 2120.723

And there's nothing more miserable than that I'll tell you.

Time: 2123.16

And these poor souls who had this MPTP experience,

Time: 2127.87

unfortunately, they couldn't recover those cells.

Time: 2129.85

People who have severe Parkinson's

Time: 2132.03

are struggling with this as well,

Time: 2133.4

because in Parkinson's and in Lewy body dementia,

Time: 2135.54

the dopaminergic neurons often die.

Time: 2137.83

It's not just a problem with those neurons

Time: 2139.44

releasing enough dopamine.

Time: 2140.98

Later, we're going to talk about some approaches

Time: 2143.25

to maintaining dopaminergic neuron health

Time: 2146.08

and things that we can all do for that.

Time: 2147.83

But I will tell you these dopamine neurons

Time: 2150.01

that we all have are very precious for movement

Time: 2152.56

and mood and motivation.

Time: 2154.28

Having experienced what it is to have very, very low levels

Time: 2158.2

of dopamine or in this case to have my dopamine receptors

Time: 2160.79

blocked from Thorazine was eye-opening to say the least,

Time: 2166.82

and has given me tremendous sensitivity to the fact

Time: 2169.67

that dopamine is perhaps one of the most powerful molecules

Time: 2173.94

that any of us has inside of us.

Time: 2176.48

And the one that we ought to all think very carefully about

Time: 2179.32

how we leverage,

Time: 2180.153

because while most experiences and most things

Time: 2184.41

that we do, and take and eat and cetera,

Time: 2187.29

won't create enormous highs and enormous lows in dopamine.

Time: 2191.75

Even subtle fluctuations in dopamine really shape

Time: 2194.41

our perception of life and what we're capable of,

Time: 2196.88

and how we feel.

Time: 2198.12

And so we want to guard those and we want to understand them.

Time: 2200.62

So let's lean into that understanding about dopamine.

Time: 2202.7

And then let's talk about some tools

Time: 2204.05

that we can all use to leverage dopamine

Time: 2206.51

in order to keep that baseline in the appropriate,

Time: 2209.61

healthy place,

Time: 2210.56

and still be able to access those peaks in dopamine.

Time: 2213.84

Because those, after all are some of what makes life rich

Time: 2217.21

and worth living.

Time: 2218.42

So let's talk about the baseline of dopamine

Time: 2220.66

that we all have and the peaks in dopamine

Time: 2223.67

that we all can achieve through different activities

Time: 2227.08

and things that we ingest.

Time: 2230.77

All of us have different baseline levels of dopamine.

Time: 2233.78

Some of this is sure to be genetic.

Time: 2237.04

Some people just simply ride at a level a little bit higher.

Time: 2241.27

They're a little bit more excited,

Time: 2242.54

they're a little bit more motivated,

Time: 2244.66

or maybe they're a lot more excited or a lot more motivated.

Time: 2248.9

Some people are a little mellower,

Time: 2250.4

some people are a little less excitable.

Time: 2252.5

And some of that has to do with the fact

Time: 2254.53

that dopamine doesn't act alone.

Time: 2256.89

Dopamine has close cousins or friends in the nervous system.

Time: 2261.33

And I'll just name off a few of those close cousins

Time: 2263.34

and friends.

Time: 2265.86

Epinephrin also called adrenaline

Time: 2268.66

is the main chemical driver of energy.

Time: 2272.04

We can't do anything, anything at all,

Time: 2275.13

unless we have some level of epinephrin

Time: 2277.02

in our brain and body.

Time: 2278.65

It's released from the adrenal glands

Time: 2280.07

which right on top our kidneys.

Time: 2281.22

It's released from an area of the brainstem

Time: 2283.47

called locus coeruleus.

Time: 2285.46

And its release tends to wake up neural circuits

Time: 2288.293

in the brain and wake up various aspects

Time: 2291.91

of our body's physiology and give us a readiness.

Time: 2295.81

So it should come as no surprise

Time: 2296.97

that dopamine and epinephrin aka adrenaline

Time: 2300.88

hang out together.

Time: 2302.33

In fact, epinephrin and adrenaline are actually manufactured

Time: 2306.29

from dopamine.

Time: 2308.36

There's a biochemical pathway involving dopamine

Time: 2310.57

which is a beautiful pathway.

Time: 2312.23

If ever you want to look it up,

Time: 2313.74

you can just look up biochemistry of dopamine.

Time: 2316.16

But what you'll find is that,

Time: 2318.27

l-DOPA is converted into dopamine.

Time: 2323.22

Dopamine is converted to two noradrenaline.

Time: 2327.397

Norepinephrin, it's also called.

Time: 2329.53

And noredrenaline, norepinephrin is converted

Time: 2332.87

into adrenaline.

Time: 2334.5

So not only are dopamine and epinephrin aka adrenaline

Time: 2338.85

close cousins,

Time: 2340.06

they are actually family members.

Time: 2342.29

Okay?

Time: 2343.123

They're closely related.

Time: 2344.11

I'm not going to get too deep into epinephrin today.

Time: 2346.3

I'm not going to talk too much about those pathways,

Time: 2348.42

but anytime I'm talking about dopaminergic transmission

Time: 2351.06

or that you have a peak in dopamine,

Time: 2353.08

inevitably, that means that you have a peak

Time: 2355.14

and release of epinephrin as well.

Time: 2357.7

What dopamine does is dopamine really colors

Time: 2361.6

the subjective experience of an activity

Time: 2364.38

to make it more pleasureful,

Time: 2366.37

to make it something that you want more of.

Time: 2368.73

Epinephrin is more about energy.

Time: 2370.85

Epinephrin alone can be fear, paralysis, trauma.

Time: 2375.81

Not physical paralysis, but mental paralysis,

Time: 2378.28

you know, frozen in fear or being traumatized or scared.

Time: 2383.06

But the addition of dopamine to that chemical cocktail,

Time: 2386.03

if dopamine is released in the brain,

Time: 2388.41

well, then that epinephrin becomes one of excitement.

Time: 2393.1

Okay?

Time: 2393.933

I'm using a broad brush here,

Time: 2394.9

but essentially what you need to know is that,

Time: 2396.93

dopamine and epinephrin aka adrenaline are family members.

Time: 2400.86

And they tend to work together like a little gang

Time: 2403.2

to make you seek out certain things.

Time: 2406.07

So what sorts of activities?

Time: 2408.15

What sorts of things increase dopamine?

Time: 2411.24

And how much do they increase dopamine?

Time: 2414.02

Well, let's take a look at some typical things

Time: 2417.74

that people do out there or ingest out there

Time: 2421.37

that are known to increase dopamine.

Time: 2423.89

So let's recall that you have a baseline level of dopamine

Time: 2426.61

and that everybody does.

Time: 2428.22

And even within a family,

Time: 2429.4

you might have family members who are very excitable,

Time: 2431.95

happy and motivated,

Time: 2433.18

and others who are less excitable, happy and motivated.

Time: 2436.14

But your level of dopamine has everything

Time: 2440.39

to do with those genetics,

Time: 2441.84

but also with what you've experienced in the previous days

Time: 2444.68

and the previous months and so on.

Time: 2448.22

When you do or ingest certain things,

Time: 2450.47

your levels of dopamine will rise above baseline

Time: 2453.53

transiently.

Time: 2455.73

And depending on what you do or ingest,

Time: 2458.04

it will rise either more or less,

Time: 2460.82

and it will be very brief or a last a long time.

Time: 2463.73

So let's take a look at some of the typical things

Time: 2465.57

that people take and do and eat.

Time: 2468.87

Some are good for us,

Time: 2469.73

some are not good for us.

Time: 2472.36

And let's ask how much dopamine is increased above baseline?

Time: 2475.76

Now, of course, these are averages,

Time: 2476.97

but these are averages that have been measured

Time: 2479.15

in so-called micro dialysis studies in animals.

Time: 2481.9

So actually extracting from particular brain areas

Time: 2484.05

how much dopamine is released?

Time: 2485.46

Or from measuring the serum,

Time: 2487.38

the circulating levels of dopamine in humans.

Time: 2492.1

Chocolate.

Time: 2494.01

They didn't look at milk versus dark chocolate.

Time: 2495.86

But chocolate will increase your baseline level of dopamine

Time: 2499.233

1.5 times.

Time: 2501.73

Okay?

Time: 2502.563

So it's a pretty substantial increase in dopamine.

Time: 2504.45

It's transient.

Time: 2505.73

It goes away after a few minutes or even a few seconds.

Time: 2510.35

I'll explain what determines the duration in a minute.

Time: 2513.32

But 1.5 times for chocolate.

Time: 2516.65

Sex.

Time: 2517.99

Both the pursuit of sex and the act of sex

Time: 2522.35

increases dopamine two times.

Time: 2526.35

So it's a doubling above baseline.

Time: 2529.02

Now, of course, there's going to be variation there,

Time: 2531.33

but that's the average increase in baseline dopamine

Time: 2536.26

caused by sex.

Time: 2538.61

Later, I will talk about how the different aspects

Time: 2542.33

of the so-called arousal art,

Time: 2543.98

the different aspects of sex,

Time: 2545.31

believe it or not have a differential impact on dopamine.

Time: 2548.94

But for now as a general theme or activity,

Time: 2553.1

sex doubles the amount of dopamine circulating

Time: 2556.52

in your blood.

Time: 2559.11

Nicotine.

Time: 2560.52

In particular, nicotine that is smoked

Time: 2563.39

like cigarettes and so forth,

Time: 2565.98

increases dopamine two and a half times above baseline.

Time: 2569.95

So there's a peak that goes up above baseline

Time: 2573.29

two and a half times higher.

Time: 2577.23

It is very short-lived.

Time: 2579.2

Anyone who's ever been a chain smoker

Time: 2581.52

or observed a chain smoker understands

Time: 2583.49

that the increase in dopamine from nicotine

Time: 2586.63

is very short-lived.

Time: 2589.89

Cocaine will increase the level of dopamine

Time: 2592.32

in the bloodstream two and a half times above baseline.

Time: 2596.67

And amphetamine another drug that increases dopamine

Time: 2601.36

will increase the amount of dopamine in the bloodstream

Time: 2605.03

10 times above baseline.

Time: 2607.46

A tremendous increase in dopamine.

Time: 2610.25

Exercise.

Time: 2611.81

Now, exercise will have a different impact

Time: 2614.49

on the levels of dopamine,

Time: 2615.7

depending on how much somebody subjectively enjoys

Time: 2618.89

that exercise.

Time: 2620.62

So if you're somebody who loves running,

Time: 2623.35

chances are it's going to increase your levels of dopamine

Time: 2627.77

two times above your baseline,

Time: 2629.99

not unlike sex.

Time: 2633.18

People who dislike exercise will achieve

Time: 2635.88

less dopamine increase or no increase in dopamine

Time: 2639.8

from exercise.

Time: 2641.04

And if you like other forms of exercise like yoga

Time: 2643.16

or weightlifting or swimming or what have you.

Time: 2645.96

Again, it's going to vary by your subjective experience

Time: 2648.35

of whether or not you enjoy that activity.

Time: 2651.41

This is important.

Time: 2652.75

And it brings us back to something

Time: 2654.15

that we talked about earlier.

Time: 2655.32

Remember that mesocorticolimbic pathway?

Time: 2659.34

Well, the cortical part is important.

Time: 2661.61

The cortical part actually has a very specific part,

Time: 2665.26

which is your prefrontal cortex.

Time: 2667.01

The area of your forebrain that's involved in thinking

Time: 2670.11

and planning and involved in assigning

Time: 2674.07

a rational explanation to something,

Time: 2676.61

and involved in assigning a subjective experience

Time: 2679.83

to something, right?

Time: 2681.15

So for instance, the pen that I'm holding right now,

Time: 2683.29

it's one of these Pilot V5s.

Time: 2684.62

I love these Pilot V5s.

Time: 2685.73

They don't sponsor the podcast.

Time: 2686.66

I just happen to like them.

Time: 2687.53

I liked the way that they write,

Time: 2688.87

how they feel.

Time: 2690.96

If I spent enough time thinking about it,

Time: 2692.51

or talking about it,

Time: 2693.343

I could probably get a dopamine increase

Time: 2694.73

just talking about this Pilot V5.

Time: 2696.27

And that's not because I have the propensity

Time: 2698.88

to release dopamine easily,

Time: 2700.3

it's that as we start to engage with something

Time: 2702.83

more and more and what we say about it,

Time: 2705.07

and what we encourage ourselves to think about it,

Time: 2708.03

has a profound impact on its rewarding

Time: 2711.12

or non rewarding properties.

Time: 2713.33

Now, it's not simply the case that you can lie to yourself,

Time: 2715.81

and you can tell yourself I love something

Time: 2717.3

and when you don't really love it,

Time: 2718.63

and it will increase dopamine.

Time: 2720.92

But what's been found over and over again,

Time: 2722.79

is that if people journal about something

Time: 2724.61

or they practice some form of appreciation for something,

Time: 2727.81

or they think of some aspect of something that they enjoy,

Time: 2731.58

the amount of dopamine that that behavior will evoke

Time: 2735.61

tends to go up.

Time: 2737.19

So for people that hate exercise,

Time: 2738.71

you can think about some aspect of exercise

Time: 2741.61

that you really enjoy.

Time: 2742.69

However, I will caution you against saying to yourself,

Time: 2748.01

I hate exercise or I hate studying or I hate this person,

Time: 2752.73

but I love the reward I give myself afterward.

Time: 2755.96

Later, we're going to talk about how rewards given afterward

Time: 2759.32

actually make the situation worse.

Time: 2761.69

They won't make you like exercise more or study more,

Time: 2764.64

they actually will undermine the dopamine release

Time: 2767.12

that would otherwise occur for that activity.

Time: 2769.49

So certain things chemicals have a universal effect.

Time: 2773.61

They make everybody's dopamine go up.

Time: 2776.09

So some people like chocolate,

Time: 2777.57

some people don't of course,

Time: 2779.42

but in general, it make has causes

Time: 2781.41

this increase in dopamine.

Time: 2782.91

But sex, nicotine, cocaine, amphetamine,

Time: 2785.406

those things cause increases in dopamine

Time: 2788.07

and everybody that takes them.

Time: 2790.98

Things like exercise, studying, hard work,

Time: 2793.43

working through a challenge in a relationship

Time: 2795.35

or working through something hard of any kind

Time: 2798.16

that is going to be subjective

Time: 2800.32

as to how much dopamine will be released.

Time: 2802.78

And we will return to that subjective component

Time: 2805.37

in a little bit.

Time: 2806.84

But now you have a sense of how much dopamine

Time: 2810.94

can be evoked by different activities

Time: 2813.11

and by different substances.

Time: 2815.02

One that you might be wondering about is caffeine.

Time: 2817.46

I'm certainly drinking my caffeine today,

Time: 2819.36

and I do enjoy caffeine in limited quantities.

Time: 2823.54

I drink yerba mate and I drink coffee and I love it.

Time: 2828.46

Does it increase dopamine?

Time: 2830.14

Well, a little bit.

Time: 2831.86

Caffeine will increase dopamine to some extent,

Time: 2834.42

but it is pretty modest compared to the other things

Time: 2837.63

that I described.

Time: 2838.84

Chocolate, sex, nicotine, cocaine, amphetamine and so on.

Time: 2842.58

However, there's a really interesting paper

Time: 2845.43

published in 2015.

Time: 2846.91

This is Volkow et al.

Time: 2847.87

You can look up it's very easy to find.

Time: 2850.61

That showed that regular ingestion of caffeine,

Time: 2853.64

whether or not it's from coffee or otherwise,

Time: 2856.15

increases up regulation of certain dopamine receptors.

Time: 2860.98

So caffeine actually makes you able to experience

Time: 2866.19

more of dopamines effects.

Time: 2867.96

Because as I mentioned before,

Time: 2869.1

dopamine is vomited out into the synapse

Time: 2871.31

or it's released volumetrically,

Time: 2872.6

but then it has to bind someplace

Time: 2874

and trigger those G protein-coupled receptors.

Time: 2876.88

And caffeine increases the number,

Time: 2879.75

the density of those G protein-coupled receptors.

Time: 2883.44

Now, sitting back and thinking about that,

Time: 2886.06

you might think, oh yeah, you know,

Time: 2887.44

sometimes I'll notice people,

Time: 2889.35

at least in the old days that used to be a cigarette

Time: 2891.94

and a cup of coffee.

Time: 2893.15

Or when people drink alcohol,

Time: 2894.7

oftentimes they'll smoke.

Time: 2896.31

And it's well-known that different compounds

Time: 2899.02

like alcohol and nicotine or caffeine and nicotine

Time: 2903.07

or certain behaviors and certain drugs can synergize

Time: 2906.7

to give bigger dopamine increases.

Time: 2908.8

And this is not terribly uncommon.

Time: 2910.63

There are a lot of people nowadays

Time: 2912.19

who for instance take pre-workout energy drinks.

Time: 2914.79

They'll drink,

Time: 2915.76

I won't name names,

Time: 2916.593

but they'll drink a canned energy drink

Time: 2918.69

or they'll drink a pre-workout

Time: 2920.53

and they'll try and get that big stimulation

Time: 2922.94

that stimulant effect for the dopamine,

Time: 2924.71

the norepinephrin, that family of molecules

Time: 2927.06

that works together to make you motivated.

Time: 2928.81

And then they'll also exercise to try and get even more

Time: 2931.76

of a dopaminergic experience out of that workout.

Time: 2934.98

Sometimes it's also to perform better as well, of course,

Time: 2939.13

but as we'll talk about in a few minutes,

Time: 2941.88

that aspect or that approach rather

Time: 2944.18

of trying to just get your dopamine

Time: 2945.6

as high as you possibly can,

Time: 2947.08

in order to get the most out of experience,

Time: 2949.58

turns out to not be the best approach.

Time: 2951.87

And what you'll find as we talk about dopamine schedules

Time: 2956.03

is that layering together multiple things,

Time: 2959.69

substances and activities

Time: 2961.75

that lead to big increases in dopamine,

Time: 2964.07

actually can create pretty severe issues

Time: 2967.02

with motivation and energy right after those experiences

Time: 2970.5

and even a couple of days later.

Time: 2972.21

So I'm not saying that people shouldn't take

Time: 2974

the occasional pre-workout if that's your thing,

Time: 2975.83

or drink a cup of coffee or two before working out

Time: 2978.63

now and again.

Time: 2979.463

Some people really enjoy that.

Time: 2980.72

I certainly do that every once in a while,

Time: 2982.77

but if you do it too often,

Time: 2984.29

what you'll find is that your capacity to release dopamine

Time: 2988.4

and your level of motivation and drive and energy overall

Time: 2991.52

will take a serious hit.

Time: 2993.41

Now, I've been alluding to this dopamine peaks

Time: 2995.8

versus dopamine baseline things

Time: 2997.58

since the beginning of the episode.

Time: 2998.89

I talked about tonic and phasic release and so forth.

Time: 3002

But now let's really drill into what this means,

Time: 3004.34

and how to leverage it for our own purposes.

Time: 3008.01

In order to do that, let's take a step back and ask,

Time: 3010.24

why would we have a dopamine system like this?

Time: 3012.827

Why would we have a dopamine system at all?

Time: 3015.15

Well, we have to remember what our species primary

Time: 3019.66

interest is?

Time: 3020.94

Our species like all species has a main interest,

Time: 3025.03

and that's to make more of itself.

Time: 3026.78

And it's just about sex and reproduction.

Time: 3028.62

It's about forging for resources.

Time: 3031.35

Resources can be food,

Time: 3032.6

it can be water can be salt,

Time: 3034.21

it can be shelter,

Time: 3036.14

it can be social connection.

Time: 3039.09

Dopamine is the universal currency of forging and seeking,

Time: 3044.26

right?

Time: 3045.216

We call sometimes talk about motivation and craving,

Time: 3046.82

but what we mean in the evolutionary adaptive context,

Time: 3049.63

what we mean is forging and seeking.

Time: 3051.2

Seeking water, seeking food, seeking mates.

Time: 3054.82

Seeking things that make us feel good

Time: 3056.35

and avoiding things that don't make us feel good.

Time: 3058.31

But in particular seeking things

Time: 3059.76

that will provide sustenance and pleasure in the short-term

Time: 3063.8

and will extend the species in the long-term.

Time: 3067.39

Once we understand that dopamine is a driver for us

Time: 3070.46

to seek things,

Time: 3072.28

it makes perfect sense as to why

Time: 3074.29

it would have a baseline level and it would have peaks.

Time: 3077.44

And that the baseline and peaks would be related

Time: 3079.92

in some sort of direct way.

Time: 3081.96

Here's what I mean by that.

Time: 3083.85

Let's say that you were not alive now,

Time: 3086.13

but you were alive 10,000 years ago.

Time: 3088.95

And you woke up and you looked and you realized

Time: 3091.68

you had minimal water and you had minimal food left.

Time: 3096.17

Maybe you have a child,

Time: 3097.18

maybe you have a partner,

Time: 3098.59

maybe you're in an entire village,

Time: 3099.98

but you realize that you need things.

Time: 3102.66

Okay?

Time: 3105.1

You need to be able to generate the energy

Time: 3107.29

to go seek those things.

Time: 3109.07

And chances are there were dangers in seeking those things.

Time: 3112.14

Yes, it could be saber-tooth tigers

Time: 3113.91

and things of that sort,

Time: 3115.19

but there are other dangers too.

Time: 3116.88

There's the danger of a cut to your skin

Time: 3118.49

that could lead to infection.

Time: 3119.53

There's the danger of storms,

Time: 3120.81

there's the danger of cold,

Time: 3121.94

there's the danger of leaving your loved ones behind.

Time: 3124.72

So you go out and forage, right?

Time: 3127.51

You could be hunting, you could be gathering,

Time: 3128.97

or you could be doing both.

Time: 3130.95

The going out and foraging process

Time: 3133.517

was we are certain driven by dopamine.

Time: 3137.05

I mean, there's no fossil record of the brain,

Time: 3138.77

but the circuits have existed.

Time: 3140.04

We know for tens of thousands,

Time: 3141.79

if not hundreds of thousands of years.

Time: 3143.86

And they are present in every animal, not just mammals,

Time: 3147.04

but even in little worms like C. elegans,

Time: 3148.88

it's the same process.

Time: 3149.97

It's mediated by dopamine.

Time: 3152.31

So dopamine drives you to go out and look for things.

Time: 3155.13

And then let's say you find a couple berries,

Time: 3157.54

and these ones are rotten,

Time: 3158.42

these ones are good.

Time: 3159.54

Maybe you hunt an animal and kill it,

Time: 3161.7

or you find an animal that was recently killed

Time: 3163.71

and you decide to take the meat.

Time: 3166.32

You are going to achieve,

Time: 3168.01

or I should say, experience some sort of dopamine release.

Time: 3171.6

You found the reward.

Time: 3172.86

That's great.

Time: 3174.02

But then it needs to return to some lower level.

Time: 3177.52

Why?

Time: 3178.353

Well, because if you just stayed there,

Time: 3180.43

you would never continue to forage for more.

Time: 3183.6

It doesn't just increase your baseline and then stay there.

Time: 3186.77

It goes back down.

Time: 3188.27

And what's very important to understand

Time: 3189.9

is that it doesn't just go back down

Time: 3191.5

to the level it was before,

Time: 3193.56

it goes down to a level below

Time: 3196.13

what it was before you went out seeking that thing.

Time: 3199.06

Now, this is counter-intuitive.

Time: 3200.99

We often think,

Time: 3201.823

Oh, okay, I'm going to pursue the win, right?

Time: 3204.37

Let's move this to modern day.

Time: 3207.33

I'm going to run this marathon,

Time: 3208.54

I'm going to train for this marathon.

Time: 3209.73

Then you run the marathon and you finish,

Time: 3212.24

you cross the finish line,

Time: 3213.3

you feel great.

Time: 3214.48

And you would think, okay, now I'm set for the entire year,

Time: 3217.23

I'm going to feel so much better,

Time: 3218.24

I'm going to feel this accomplishment in my body,

Time: 3220.17

it's going to be so great.

Time: 3221.5

That's not what happens.

Time: 3222.93

You might feel some of those things,

Time: 3224.36

but your level of dopamine has actually dropped

Time: 3226.83

below baseline.

Time: 3228.48

Now, eventually it will ratchet back up.

Time: 3231.36

But two things are really important.

Time: 3232.74

First of all, the extent to which it drops below baseline

Time: 3235.84

is proportional to how high the peak was.

Time: 3239.05

So if you cross the finish line pretty happy,

Time: 3242.75

it won't drop that much below baseline afterward.

Time: 3246.03

If you cross the finish line ecstatic,

Time: 3248.98

well, a day or two later,

Time: 3250.16

you're going to feel quite a bit lower

Time: 3252.4

than you would otherwise.

Time: 3253.41

You might not be depressed,

Time: 3254.51

because it depends on where that baseline was to begin with.

Time: 3257.22

But the so-called postpartum depression

Time: 3259.1

that people experience after giving birth

Time: 3262.73

or after some big win a graduation

Time: 3265.67

or any kind of celebration that postpartum drop

Time: 3269.81

in mood and affect and motivation is the drop

Time: 3273.21

in baseline dopamine.

Time: 3275.09

This is very important to understand,

Time: 3276.44

because this happens on very rapid timescales

Time: 3278.78

and it can last quite a long time.

Time: 3281.53

It also explains the behavior that most of us

Time: 3285.36

are familiar with,

Time: 3286.193

of engaging in something that we really enjoy.

Time: 3288.27

Going to a restaurant that we absolutely love,

Time: 3291.1

or engaging in some way with some person

Time: 3293.18

that we really, really enjoy.

Time: 3295.26

But if we continue to engage in that behavior

Time: 3297.34

over and over again,

Time: 3299.37

it kind of loses its edge.

Time: 3301.23

It starts to kind of feel less exciting to us.

Time: 3306.28

Some of us experienced that drop in excitement more quickly

Time: 3310.94

and more severely than others,

Time: 3312.9

but everyone experiences that to some extent.

Time: 3316.39

And this has direct roots in these evolutionarily

Time: 3320.32

conserved circuits.

Time: 3322.22

Some of you may be hearing this and think,

Time: 3323.417

no, no, no, no that's not how it works for me.

Time: 3325.53

I'm just riding higher and higher all the time.

Time: 3327.58

I love my kids,

Time: 3328.55

I love my job,

Time: 3329.46

I love school,

Time: 3330.293

I love wins,

Time: 3331.14

I don't want losses.

Time: 3333.06

I agree.

Time: 3335.35

We all feel good when we are achieving things,

Time: 3337.51

but oftentimes we are feeling good

Time: 3340.15

because we are layering in different aspects of life,

Time: 3343.9

consuming things and doing things

Time: 3344.983

that increase our dopamine.

Time: 3346.5

We're getting those peaks,

Time: 3348.3

but afterward the drop in baseline occurs,

Time: 3352.74

and it always takes a little while to get back

Time: 3355.86

to our stable baseline.

Time: 3358.19

We really all have a sort of dopamine set point.

Time: 3361.54

And if we continue to indulge in the same behaviors

Time: 3364.82

or even different behaviors that increase our dopamine

Time: 3367.46

in these big peaks over and over and over again,

Time: 3370.04

we won't experience the same level of joy

Time: 3372.6

from those behaviors or from anything at all.

Time: 3376.38

Now, that has a name.

Time: 3377.3

It's called addiction.

Time: 3378.62

But even for people who aren't addicted,

Time: 3382.02

even for people don't an attachment

Time: 3384.02

to any specific substance or behavior,

Time: 3386.4

this drop in bay below baseline after any peak in dopamine

Time: 3390.21

is substantial.

Time: 3391.8

And it governs whether or not we are going to feel motivated

Time: 3394.36

to continue to pursue other things.

Time: 3397.01

Fortunately, there's a way to work with this,

Time: 3399.93

such that we can constantly stay motivated,

Time: 3402.15

but also keep that baseline of dopamine

Time: 3404.25

at an appropriate, healthy level.

Time: 3406.43

A previous guest on the Huberman Lab Podcast

Time: 3408.74

was Dr. Anna Lembke.

Time: 3409.92

She's head of the Addiction Dual Diagnosis Clinic

Time: 3412.7

at Stanford.

Time: 3413.65

Has this amazing book,

Time: 3414.597

"Dopamine Nation: Finding Balance in the Age of Indulgence".

Time: 3418.05

If you haven't read the book,

Time: 3419.1

I highly encourage you to check it out.

Time: 3421.22

It's fantastic.

Time: 3422.053

The other terrific book about dopamine

Time: 3424.01

is the "Molecule of More",

Time: 3425.55

which is a similar in some regard,

Time: 3428.04

but isn't so much about addiction,

Time: 3429.48

it's more about other types of behaviors.

Time: 3431.88

Both books really focus on these dopamine schedules

Time: 3435.55

and the relationship between these peaks

Time: 3436.937

and baselines of dopamine.

Time: 3440.41

In Dr. Lembke's book,

Time: 3441.52

and when she was on the Huberman Lab Podcast

Time: 3443.37

and other podcasts,

Time: 3444.203

she's talked about this pleasure pain balance

Time: 3446.07

that when we seek something that we really like,

Time: 3448.82

or we indulge in it,

Time: 3449.653

like eating a little piece of chocolate,

Time: 3451.21

if we really liked chocolate,

Time: 3452.16

there's some pleasure.

Time: 3453.57

But then there's a little bit of pain

Time: 3457.12

that exceeds the amount of pleasure,

Time: 3458.74

and it's subtle,

Time: 3460.27

and we experience it as wanting more of that thing.

Time: 3463.74

Okay?

Time: 3464.759

So there's a pleasure pain balance,

Time: 3465.81

and I'm telling you that the pleasure and the pain

Time: 3468.67

are governed by dopamine to some extent.

Time: 3470.7

Well, how could that be?

Time: 3471.88

Right?

Time: 3472.713

I said before, when you engage in an activity

Time: 3474.93

or when you ingest something that increases dopamine,

Time: 3476.957

the dopamine levels go up,

Time: 3478.88

you know, to substantial degree

Time: 3480.35

with all the things I listed off.

Time: 3484.17

Where's the pain coming from?

Time: 3486.1

Well, the pain is coming from the lack of dopamine

Time: 3489.12

that follows.

Time: 3490.97

And you now know what that lack of dopamine reflects.

Time: 3496.01

How do you know?

Time: 3497.11

Well, earlier we were talking about how dopamine

Time: 3499.71

is released between neurons.

Time: 3502.05

And I mentioned two ways.

Time: 3503.14

One, is into the synapse where it can activate

Time: 3505.67

the postsynaptic neuron.

Time: 3506.76

And the other was what I called volumetric release

Time: 3508.81

where it is distributed more broadly.

Time: 3511.04

It's released out over a bunch of neurons.

Time: 3515.27

In both cases it's released from these things

Time: 3517.99

we call synaptic vesicles,

Time: 3519.21

literally little bubbles, tiny, tiny little bubbles

Time: 3522.21

that contain dopamine.

Time: 3523.3

Prrr! They get vomited out into the area

Time: 3525.82

or into the synapse.

Time: 3527.6

Well, those vesicles get depleted.

Time: 3532.12

For the synaptic physiologists out there,

Time: 3534.44

we call this the readily releasable pool of dopamine.

Time: 3538.93

We can only deploy dopamine that is ready to be deployed.

Time: 3543.13

That's packaged in those little vesicles and ready to go.

Time: 3545.47

It's like when you order a product and they say out of stock

Time: 3548.55

until two months from now.

Time: 3550.57

Well, it's not ready to be released.

Time: 3552.35

Same thing with dopamine.

Time: 3553.25

There's a pool of dopamine that synthesized,

Time: 3556.48

and you can only release the dopamine

Time: 3560.05

that's been synthesized.

Time: 3560.97

It's the readily releasable pool.

Time: 3563.75

The pleasure pain balance doesn't only hinge

Time: 3567.03

on the readily releasable pool of dopamine,

Time: 3569.43

but a big part of the pleasure pain balance

Time: 3573.2

hinges on how much dopamine is there?

Time: 3576.68

And how much is ready and capable of being released

Time: 3579.42

into the system?

Time: 3581.22

So now we've given some meat to this thing

Time: 3585.01

that we call the pleasure pain balance,

Time: 3587.27

and now it should make perfect sense

Time: 3589.72

why if you take something or do something

Time: 3592.66

that leads to huge increases in dopamine,

Time: 3595.81

afterward your baseline should drop

Time: 3598.26

because there isn't a lot of dopamine around

Time: 3601.01

to keep your baseline going.

Time: 3604.32

Fortunately, most people do not experience

Time: 3607.29

or pursue enormous increases in dopamine

Time: 3610.16

leading to the severe drops in baseline.

Time: 3614.07

Many people do, however,

Time: 3615.56

and that's what we call addiction.

Time: 3617.93

When somebody pursues a drug or an activity

Time: 3620.44

that leads to huge increases in dopamine.

Time: 3622.84

And now you understand that afterward

Time: 3624.35

the baseline of dopamine drops

Time: 3626.476

because of depletion of dopamine,

Time: 3628.393

that readily releasable pool.

Time: 3630.56

The dopamine is literally not around to be released,

Time: 3633.097

and so people feel pretty lousy

Time: 3635.67

and many people make the mistake of then going and pursuing

Time: 3639.39

the dopamine evoking the dopamine releasing activity

Time: 3642.74

or substance again thinking mistakenly

Time: 3646.35

that it's going to bring up their baseline.

Time: 3648.13

It's going to give them that peak again.

Time: 3650.37

Not only does it not give them a peak,

Time: 3652.06

their baseline gets lower and lower

Time: 3654.23

because they're depleting dopamine more and more and more.

Time: 3657.31

And we've seen this over and over again

Time: 3659.52

when people get addicted to something

Time: 3661.69

then they're not achieving much pleasure at all.

Time: 3665.778

You can even see this with video games.

Time: 3668.28

People will play a video game,

Time: 3669.86

they love it,

Time: 3670.97

it's super exciting to them,

Time: 3672.64

and then they'll keep playing and playing and playing,

Time: 3675.24

and either one of two things happens typically both.

Time: 3679.58

First of all,

Time: 3680.79

I always say addiction is a progressive narrowing

Time: 3683.75

of the things that bring you pleasure.

Time: 3685.16

So oftentimes what will happen is the person

Time: 3687.15

only has excitement and can achieve dopamine release

Time: 3691.65

to the same extent doing that behavior

Time: 3693.73

and not other behaviors.

Time: 3695.19

And so they start losing interest in school,

Time: 3697.6

they start losing interest in relationships.

Time: 3699.94

they start losing interest in fitness and wellbeing

Time: 3702.35

and depletes their life.

Time: 3704.614

And eventually what typically happens is,

Time: 3707.99

they will stop getting dopamine release

Time: 3710.26

from that activity as well,

Time: 3712.26

and then they drop into a pretty serious depression

Time: 3715.16

and this can get very severe and people

Time: 3717.03

have committed suicide from these sorts of patterns

Time: 3720.26

of activity.

Time: 3721.73

But what about the more typical scenario?

Time: 3724.25

What about the scenario of somebody

Time: 3726.69

who is really good at working during the week,

Time: 3730.13

they exercise during the week,

Time: 3731.84

they drink on the weekends?

Time: 3733.7

Well, that person is only consuming alcohol

Time: 3736.25

maybe one or two nights a week,

Time: 3738.03

but oftentimes that same person will be spiking

Time: 3742.54

their dopamine with food during the middle of the week.

Time: 3745.4

Now, we all have to eat and it's nice to eat foods

Time: 3747.55

that we enjoy.

Time: 3748.383

I certainly do that.

Time: 3749.49

I love food in fact.

Time: 3751.41

But let's say they're eating foods

Time: 3754.34

that really evoke a lot of dopamine release

Time: 3756.21

in the middle of the week,

Time: 3757.18

they're drinking one or two days on the weekend,

Time: 3759.8

they are one of these work, hard play hard type.

Time: 3762.57

So they're swimming a couple miles in the ocean

Time: 3765.37

in the middle of the week as well.

Time: 3767.759

They're going out dancing once on the weekend.

Time: 3769.96

Sounds like a pretty balanced life as I describe it.

Time: 3773.39

Well, here's the problem.

Time: 3776.11

The problem is that dopamine is not just evoked

Time: 3780.35

by one of these activities,

Time: 3781.56

dopamine is evoked by all of these activities.

Time: 3784.33

And dopamine is one currency of craving motivation

Time: 3788.93

and desire and pleasure.

Time: 3791.28

There's only one currency.

Time: 3793.5

So even though if you look at the activities,

Time: 3796.78

you'd say, well, it's just on the weekends

Time: 3798.52

so this thing is only a couple of times a week.

Time: 3800.883

If you looked at dopamine simply as a function,

Time: 3803.9

as a chemical function of peaks and baseline,

Time: 3806.97

it might make sense why this person

Time: 3808.52

after several years of work hard, play hard

Time: 3811.5

would say, yeah, you know I'm feeling kind of burnt out.

Time: 3814.07

I'm just not feeling like I have the same energy

Time: 3815.89

that I did a few years ago.

Time: 3817.38

And of course there are age-related reasons

Time: 3819.31

why people can experience drops in energy,

Time: 3822.45

but oftentimes what's happening

Time: 3825.25

is not some sort of depletion and cellar metabolism

Time: 3828.14

that's related to aging.

Time: 3829.12

What's happening is they're spiking their dopamine

Time: 3831.46

through so many different activities throughout the week,

Time: 3834.81

that their baseline is progressively dropping.

Time: 3837.26

And in this case it can be very subtle.

Time: 3839.57

It can be very, very subtle.

Time: 3840.93

And that's actually a very sinister function of dopamine

Time: 3846.36

we could say.

Time: 3847.193

Which is that it can often drop in imperceptible ways,

Time: 3850.78

but then at once it reaches a threshold of low dopamine,

Time: 3855.37

we just feel like,

Time: 3856.31

hmm, we can't really get pleasure from anything anymore.

Time: 3858.64

What used to work doesn't work anymore.

Time: 3860.49

So it starts to look a lot like the more severe addictions

Time: 3863.12

or the more acute addictions to things like cocaine

Time: 3866.03

and amphetamine which lead to these big increases,

Time: 3868.42

these big spikes in dopamine,

Time: 3869.65

and then these very severe drops in the baseline.

Time: 3873.41

Now, of course, we all should engage in activities

Time: 3877.03

that we enjoy.

Time: 3878.29

I certainly do,

Time: 3879.13

everybody should.

Time: 3879.963

A huge part of life is pursuing activities and things

Time: 3882.763

that we enjoy.

Time: 3884.72

The key thing is to understand this relationship

Time: 3887.26

between the peaks and the baseline,

Time: 3888.67

and to understand how they influence one another.

Time: 3890.97

Because once you do that,

Time: 3892.34

you can start to make really good choices in the short run

Time: 3895.36

and in the long run to maintain your level of dopamine

Time: 3898.66

baseline.

Time: 3899.89

Maybe even raise that level of dopamine baseline

Time: 3902.9

and still get those peaks and still achieve those feelings

Time: 3906.29

of elevated motivation, elevated desire and craving.

Time: 3910.04

Because again, those peaks and having a sufficiently

Time: 3915.03

healthy high level of dopamine baseline

Time: 3917.74

are what drove the evolution of our species,

Time: 3919.468

and they're really what drive the evolution of anyone's life

Time: 3921.9

progression too.

Time: 3922.8

So they're a good thing.

Time: 3923.633

Dopamine is a good thing.

Time: 3925.43

Just very briefly, because it was also covered

Time: 3927.55

in the interview episode I did with Anna Lembke

Time: 3931.01

about addiction.

Time: 3932.5

Some of you might be asking,

Time: 3934.19

what should I do if I experience a drop

Time: 3936.66

in my baseline level of dopamine

Time: 3938.85

because of engagement with some activity or some substance

Time: 3942.88

that led to big peaks?

Time: 3945.24

Just to put some color and example on this,

Time: 3948.13

a few episodes ago I talked about a friend

Time: 3950.98

who I've known a long time.

Time: 3952.4

So it actually the child of a friend

Time: 3953.94

who has basically become addicted to video games,

Time: 3957.56

he decided actually after seeing that episode with Anna

Time: 3960.24

to do a 30-day complete fast from phone,

Time: 3964.43

from video games and from social media of all kinds.

Time: 3967.5

He's now at day 29 has really accomplished this,

Time: 3971.06

not incidentally, his levels of concentration,

Time: 3973.43

his overall mood are up.

Time: 3974.57

He's doing far far better.

Time: 3976.92

What he did is hard.

Time: 3978.13

In particular first 14 days is really hard,

Time: 3980.64

but the way that you replenish the releasable pool

Time: 3983.96

of dopamine is to not engage in these dopaminergic

Time: 3987.64

seeking behaviors.

Time: 3989.12

Because remember typically people arrive at a place

Time: 3991.88

where they want to stop engaging in these behaviors

Time: 3994.12

or ingesting substances when that dopamine is depleted,

Time: 3997.17

when they're not getting the same lift.

Time: 3998.7

In his case, he was feeling depressed.

Time: 4000.27

He thought he had ADHD.

Time: 4001.58

They were starting to treat it as ADHD.

Time: 4004.46

And certainly there are people out there who have ADHD,

Time: 4007.2

but what he found was that his levels of concentration

Time: 4009.36

are back.

Time: 4010.193

He does not need to be treated for ADHD.

Time: 4012.377

And actually the psychiatrist wondered if he did prior

Time: 4015.14

to this video game, social media fast.

Time: 4018.07

He's feeling good.

Time: 4018.92

He's exercising again.

Time: 4020.53

I'm not making this up.

Time: 4021.61

This is really a very specific,

Time: 4024.9

but very relevant example of how the dopamine system

Time: 4028.47

can replenish itself.

Time: 4030.69

Of course, if there's a clinical need for ADHD treatment,

Time: 4033.22

by all means pursue that.

Time: 4034.74

But I think a lot of ADHD does go misdiagnosed

Time: 4039.34

because of this depletion in dopamine

Time: 4041.41

that occurs because of overindulgence in other activities

Time: 4044.02

in the drop in baseline.

Time: 4045.7

So for anyone that's experienced a real drop in baseline

Time: 4048.74

who has addictive tendencies,

Time: 4051.21

whether or not their behaviors or substances,

Time: 4052.87

that is always going to be the path forward.

Time: 4057.03

Is going to be either cold turkey

Time: 4058.92

or through some sort of tapering to limit interactions

Time: 4062.81

with the, what would otherwise be the dopamine evoking

Time: 4065.83

behavior or substance.

Time: 4067.44

So let's talk about the optimal way to engage in activities

Time: 4071.96

or to consume things that evoke dopamine.

Time: 4075.72

And by no means am I encouraging people to take drugs

Time: 4077.94

of abuse.

Time: 4078.773

I would not do that,

Time: 4079.606

I am not doing that.

Time: 4080.57

But some of the things on these lists

Time: 4083.23

of dopamine evoking activities are things like chocolate,

Time: 4087.2

coffee, even if it's indirect.

Time: 4090.94

Sex and reproduction,

Time: 4091.98

provided it's healthy consensual context appropriate,

Time: 4095.13

age appropriate, species appropriate of course,

Time: 4097.51

is central to our evolution and progression as a species.

Time: 4101.86

So certain things like cocaine, amphetamine,

Time: 4104.8

I will put in the classification of bad.

Time: 4106.9

I'm willing to do that.

Time: 4107.76

And other things are part of life,

Time: 4109.73

food, exercise if that evokes your dopamine.

Time: 4112.61

How are we supposed to engage with these dopamine evoking

Time: 4115.65

activities in ways that are healthy and beneficial for us?

Time: 4118.56

How do we achieve these peaks,

Time: 4120.28

which are so central to our wellbeing and experience of life

Time: 4123.06

without dropping our baseline?

Time: 4125.07

And the key lies in intermittent release of dopamine.

Time: 4130.29

The real key is to not expect or chase high levels

Time: 4136.03

of dopamine release every time we engage

Time: 4138.8

in these activities.

Time: 4141.87

Intermittent reward schedules are the central schedule

Time: 4145.21

by which casinos keep you gambling.

Time: 4148.83

The central schedule by which elusive partners

Time: 4152.38

or potential partners keep you texting and pursuing

Time: 4156.25

on either side of the relationship.

Time: 4158.83

Intermittent schedules are the way that the internet

Time: 4162.08

and social media and all highly engaging activities

Time: 4167.08

keep you motivated and pursuing.

Time: 4171.42

And we can take this back to our evolutionary adaptive

Time: 4175.38

scenario where you are out there looking for water,

Time: 4178.41

looking for food,

Time: 4180.04

not every trail, not every pursuit, not every hunch

Time: 4184.33

about where the animals will be?

Time: 4186.7

Where the food will be?

Time: 4187.84

Where the berries will be?

Time: 4189.82

Not every single one of those played out.

Time: 4194.17

There's something called dopamine reward prediction error.

Time: 4196.6

When we expect something to happen,

Time: 4198.92

we are highly motivated to pursue it.

Time: 4201.93

If it happens great, we get the reward.

Time: 4204.75

The reward comes in various chemical forms

Time: 4206.68

including dopamine,

Time: 4207.897

and we are more likely to engage in that behavior again.

Time: 4211.06

This is the basis of casino gambling.

Time: 4213.61

This is how they keep you going back

Time: 4214.87

again and again and again,

Time: 4215.98

even though on average the house really does win.

Time: 4220.74

You can transplant that example to any number

Time: 4223.27

of different pleasureful activities.

Time: 4224.7

If you're not a gambler and that doesn't appeal to you,

Time: 4227.17

I have to imagine there's something that appeals to you,

Time: 4229.38

something that you do repeatedly because you enjoy it.

Time: 4231.97

And almost inevitably it's because there's an intermittent

Time: 4235.45

schedule.

Time: 4237.18

There's a intermittent schedule by which dopamine

Time: 4240.04

sometimes arrives,

Time: 4241.25

sometimes a little bit, sometimes a lot,

Time: 4243.37

sometimes a medium amount.

Time: 4244.96

Okay?

Time: 4245.92

That intermittent reinforcement schedule

Time: 4248.25

is actually the best schedule to export to other activities.

Time: 4253.64

How do you do that?

Time: 4254.97

Well, first of all, if you are engaged in activities

Time: 4259.51

school, sport, relationship, et cetera,

Time: 4261.8

where you experience a win,

Time: 4264.15

you should be very careful about allowing yourself

Time: 4266.87

to experience huge peaks in dopamine,

Time: 4269.14

unless you're willing to suffer the crash that follows

Time: 4273.41

and waiting a period of time for it to come back up.

Time: 4277.09

What would this look like in the practical sense?

Time: 4279.01

Well, let's say you are somebody

Time: 4280.24

who really does enjoy exercise,

Time: 4282.4

or let's say you're somebody who kind of likes exercise,

Time: 4284.68

but forces yourself to do it,

Time: 4286.31

but you make it pleasureful by giving yourself

Time: 4288.56

your favorite cup of coffee first,

Time: 4290.5

or maybe taking a pre-workout drink

Time: 4292.55

or taking an energy drink

Time: 4294.16

or listening to your favorite music.

Time: 4295.69

And then you're in the gym

Time: 4296.61

and you're listening to your music.

Time: 4297.48

That all sounds great, right?

Time: 4299.12

Well, it is great except that by layering together

Time: 4302.3

all these things to try and achieve that dopamine release,

Time: 4304.84

and by getting a big peak in dopamine,

Time: 4306.82

you're actually increasing the number of conditions required

Time: 4310.95

to achieve pleasure from that activity again.

Time: 4313.59

And so there is a form of this where sometimes

Time: 4316.73

you do all the things that you love

Time: 4318.24

to get the optimal workout.

Time: 4319.38

You listen to your favorite music,

Time: 4320.9

you got your favorite time of day,

Time: 4322.64

you have your pre-workout drink,

Time: 4323.86

if that's your thing.

Time: 4324.693

You do all the things that give you that best experience

Time: 4328.31

of the workout for you.

Time: 4330.955

But there's also a version of this where sometimes

Time: 4333.73

you don't do the dopamine enhancing activities.

Time: 4337.22

You don't ingest anything to increase your dopamine.

Time: 4339.89

You just do the exercise.

Time: 4342.83

You don't do the exercise and expect dopamine to arrive

Time: 4347.42

through some what we call exogenous source as well.

Time: 4350.277

You might think, well, that sounds lame.

Time: 4351.9

I want to continue to enjoy exercising.

Time: 4355.03

Ah, well, that's exactly the point.

Time: 4357.87

If you want to maintain motivation for school, exercise,

Time: 4360.63

relationships or pursuits of any duration in kind,

Time: 4364.16

the key thing is to make sure that the peak in dopamine,

Time: 4367.77

if it's very high, doesn't occur too often.

Time: 4371.3

And if something does occur very often

Time: 4374.42

that you vary how much dopamine you experience

Time: 4377.91

with each engagement in that activity.

Time: 4380.3

Now, some activities naturally have this intermittent

Time: 4383.37

property woven into them, right?

Time: 4385.29

We sometimes have classes that we like

Time: 4387.717

and other classes we don't like.

Time: 4389.41

We don't always get straight A's,

Time: 4391.41

sometimes we don't get rewarded with the outcome

Time: 4393.86

that we would like.

Time: 4394.76

We don't always have the perfect relationship outcome,

Time: 4398.03

but understand that your ability to experience motivation

Time: 4401.47

and pleasure for what comes next

Time: 4403.55

is dictated by how much motivation and pleasure

Time: 4406

and dopamine you experienced prior.

Time: 4409.69

The reason I can't give a very specific protocol

Time: 4412.45

like delete dopamine or lower dopamine every third time,

Time: 4416.07

is that that wouldn't be intermittent.

Time: 4418.24

The whole basis of intermittent reinforcement

Time: 4420.74

is that you don't really have a specific schedule

Time: 4424.5

of when dopamine is going to be high,

Time: 4426.64

and when dopamine is going to be low

Time: 4428.05

and when dopamine is going to be medium.

Time: 4429.88

That's a predictable schedule,

Time: 4431.36

not a random intermittent schedule.

Time: 4433.95

So do like the casinos do certainly works for them

Time: 4437.2

and for activities that you would like to continue to engage

Time: 4440.64

in over time,

Time: 4441.84

whatever those happen to be.

Time: 4444.01

Start paying attention to the amount of dopamine

Time: 4447.15

and excitement and pleasure that you achieve with those,

Time: 4449.37

and start modulating that somewhat at random.

Time: 4452.01

That might be removing some of the dopamine

Time: 4455.09

releasing chemicals that you might take prior.

Time: 4458.13

Maybe you remove them every time,

Time: 4461.06

but then every once in a while you introduce them,.

Time: 4463.59

Maybe it involves sometimes doing things socially

Time: 4467.49

that you enjoy doing socially,

Time: 4468.62

sometimes doing the same thing, but alone.

Time: 4471.92

There are a lot of different ways to do this.

Time: 4474.23

There are a lot of different ways to approach this,

Time: 4476.27

but now knowing what you know about peaks and baselines

Time: 4479.61

in dopamine and understanding how important

Time: 4482.38

it is not just to achieve peaks,

Time: 4483.98

but to maintain that baseline at a healthy level,

Time: 4486.41

it should be straightforward for you to implement

Time: 4488.52

these intermittent schedules.

Time: 4490.94

For those of you that are begging for more specificity,

Time: 4494.36

we can give you a tool.

Time: 4495.76

One would be, you can flip a coin before engaging

Time: 4499.3

in any of these types of activities

Time: 4500.78

and decide whether or not you are going to allow

Time: 4503.797

other dopamine supportive elements

Time: 4507.6

to go for instance, into the gym with you.

Time: 4509.56

Are you going to listen to music or not?

Time: 4511.03

If you enjoy listening to music,

Time: 4512.63

well then flip a coin,

Time: 4513.65

and if it comes up heads,

Time: 4514.72

bring the music in,

Time: 4515.553

if it comes up tails, don't.

Time: 4517.12

Okay?

Time: 4517.953

It sounds like you're undercutting your own progress,

Time: 4519.98

but actually you are serving your own progress

Time: 4523.08

both short-term and long-term by doing that.

Time: 4525.78

Now, the smartphone is a very interesting tool

Time: 4528.622

for dopamine in light of all this.

Time: 4532.02

It's extremely common nowadays to see people texting

Time: 4535.2

and doing selfies and communicating in various ways,

Time: 4539.24

listening to podcasts, listening to music,

Time: 4541.7

doing all sorts of things while they engage

Time: 4543.65

in other activities or going to dinner

Time: 4545.3

and texting other people or making plans,

Time: 4547.87

sharing information.

Time: 4548.83

That's all wonderful,

Time: 4549.69

it gives depth and richness and color to life,

Time: 4552.6

but it isn't just about our distracted nature

Time: 4556.94

when we're engaging with the phone,

Time: 4559.48

it's also a way of layering in dopamine.

Time: 4562.35

And it's no surprise that levels of depression

Time: 4566.7

and lack of motivation are really on the increase.

Time: 4571.21

Everything that we've talked about until now

Time: 4574.42

sets up an explanation or interpretation

Time: 4577.59

of why interacting with digital technology

Time: 4581.25

can potentially lead to disruptions

Time: 4583.46

or lowering in baseline levels of dopamine.

Time: 4588.89

I can use a personal example for this.

Time: 4590.65

I happen to really enjoy working out,

Time: 4592.25

I've always really enjoyed it.

Time: 4593.95

But in recent years I noticed that,

Time: 4597.44

if I was bringing my phone to my workouts,

Time: 4599.82

then not only was I a little bit more distracted

Time: 4602.02

and not focusing on what I was doing

Time: 4603.62

as much as I could have or should have,

Time: 4605.84

but also I started to lose interest in what I was doing.

Time: 4609.43

It wasn't as pleasureful,

Time: 4610.87

I would feel like it just didn't have the same

Time: 4613.1

kind of oomph.

Time: 4613.933

And I was beginning to question my motivation.

Time: 4616.89

As I started learning more about this relationship

Time: 4619.68

between the peaks and the bass lines in dopamine.

Time: 4622.05

What I realized was that some time ago

Time: 4624.42

I probably experienced a incredible increase

Time: 4627.6

in the amount of dopamine during one of my workouts,

Time: 4629.94

because I enjoy working out and I enjoy listening to music.

Time: 4633.81

I also enjoy listening to podcasts,

Time: 4635.32

I also enjoy communicating with people.

Time: 4637.4

Those are all wonderful pursuits,

Time: 4638.73

but I had layered in too many of them too many times.

Time: 4642.41

And then it essentially wasn't working for me anymore.

Time: 4645.96

Much in the same way a drug wouldn't work for somebody

Time: 4648.17

who takes it repeatedly because their baseline of dopamine

Time: 4650.49

is dropping.

Time: 4651.56

So at least for this calendar year,

Time: 4653.89

I've made a rule for myself,

Time: 4655.43

which is I don't allow my phone into my workouts at all.

Time: 4660.44

No music, at least not from the phone.

Time: 4662.61

It can be in the room.

Time: 4664.64

I might listen to a podcast in the room,

Time: 4666.96

but I don't listen to anything

Time: 4669.1

or engage in anything on my phone.

Time: 4670.56

No texting whatsoever.

Time: 4671.49

And most of the time I just don't even bring it with me

Time: 4673.49

for that period of time.

Time: 4674.52

It's only a short period of time.

Time: 4676.38

I'm not training that often.

Time: 4679.87

This is something that I think has been misinterpreted

Time: 4683.98

as people can't be alone now.

Time: 4686.43

People talk about, oh, you know,

Time: 4687.92

they can't walk across the street or they can't go anywhere,

Time: 4692

ride the bus,

Time: 4693.36

can't be on the plane without being in contact.

Time: 4695.76

They can't handle just their thoughts.

Time: 4697.41

I don't think that's really what's going on.

Time: 4699.16

I think what's happened is that we achieved

Time: 4702.4

the great dopamine increase

Time: 4703.82

that comes from this incredible thing

Time: 4705.56

which I personally enjoy being able to communicate by phone,

Time: 4709.16

by text and exchange pictures and send links

Time: 4711.41

and these kinds of things, social media.

Time: 4713.54

But then what happens is it doesn't have that same

Time: 4716.72

fulfilling aspect to it.

Time: 4718.66

And it tends to remove the excitement

Time: 4721.29

and the pleasure of the very activities

Time: 4723

that we are engaged in.

Time: 4724.69

So I know this is a hard one for many people,

Time: 4726.9

but I do invite you to try removing multiple

Time: 4731.13

sources of dopamine release

Time: 4732.87

or what used to be multiple sources of dopamine release

Time: 4736.14

from activities that you want to continue to enjoy,

Time: 4738.98

or that you want to enjoy more.

Time: 4740.85

And now you understand the biological mechanisms

Time: 4743.04

that would underlie a statement like that.

Time: 4745.437

It takes a little bit of working with,

Time: 4747.85

I know it can be challenging in the first week

Time: 4750.37

or so of not engaging with the phone

Time: 4752.76

during any kind of workout.

Time: 4754.2

That actually was really tough,

Time: 4756.06

but now I'm back to a place where I enjoy it that much more.

Time: 4759

I also feel as if I conquered something

Time: 4760.59

in terms of the circuitry related to dopamine.

Time: 4763.33

I now understand why something

Time: 4765.79

that I enjoyed so much had become less pleasureful for me.

Time: 4769.45

And there's a deep, deep satisfaction

Time: 4771.61

that comes from understanding,

Time: 4772.59

okay, there wasn't anything wrong with me

Time: 4774.67

or what I was doing or anything at all.

Time: 4778.47

It was just there was something wrong with the approach

Time: 4780.76

I was taking,

Time: 4781.593

which was layering in all these sources of dopamine

Time: 4783.68

and dropping my baseline.

Time: 4785.27

For this very same reason,

Time: 4786.64

I caution people against using stimulants every time

Time: 4790.98

they study or every time they work out

Time: 4794.95

or every time that they do anything

Time: 4797.41

that they would like to continue to enjoy

Time: 4799.09

and be motivated at.

Time: 4800.94

There's one exception which is caffeine,

Time: 4802.7

because as I mentioned before,

Time: 4804.8

if you like caffeine,

Time: 4806.71

that actually could be a good thing

Time: 4807.76

for your dopamine system,

Time: 4808.69

because it does upregulate these D2, D3 receptors.

Time: 4811.79

So it actually makes whatever dopamine

Time: 4813.88

is released by that activity,

Time: 4816.2

more accessible or more functional within the biochemistry

Time: 4819.9

and the pathways of your brain and body.

Time: 4823.52

However, a number of energy drinks

Time: 4825.94

and particular pre-workouts contain things

Time: 4828.45

that are precursors to dopamine,

Time: 4830.45

and on their own, even if you didn't engage in the activity

Time: 4833.83

would cause the release of dopamine to a substantial degree.

Time: 4836.75

They do cause the release of dopamine

Time: 4838.49

to a substantial degree.

Time: 4840.11

And over time that will deplete your dopamine.

Time: 4844.12

So energy drinks, pre-workout drinks,

Time: 4848.34

drugs of various kinds that people take to study

Time: 4851.32

and pay attention.

Time: 4852.153

We talked about some of these for the ADHD episode,

Time: 4854.09

things like Adderall, Ritalin, armodafinil or modafinil

Time: 4858.33

taken repeatedly over time will reduce

Time: 4861.646

the level of satisfaction and joy

Time: 4863.67

that you get from the activities

Time: 4865.19

you engage in while under the influence of those compounds.

Time: 4870.07

I'm not trying to demonize those compounds

Time: 4871.87

for their clinical use.

Time: 4873.05

What I'm saying is taking stimulants

Time: 4874.93

and then engaging in activities

Time: 4876.66

that you would like to continue to feel pleasureful

Time: 4879.25

is undercutting the process.

Time: 4880.96

And inevitably might not happen tomorrow,

Time: 4883.71

might not happen in a month,

Time: 4884.94

but inevitably you will have challenges with motivation

Time: 4887.97

and drive related to those activities.

Time: 4890.51

Now, some people can keep it right in check.

Time: 4892.26

They can just do the one can have the energy drink

Time: 4894.76

or they only do their pre-workout before really hard days,

Time: 4898.41

for instance.

Time: 4899.96

More power to you.

Time: 4902.41

I actually do that sometimes, frankly.

Time: 4904.77

But people who are trying to get into that peak

Time: 4907.45

super motivated, driven, driven state,

Time: 4909.68

really focused every time they engage in an activity,

Time: 4912.91

you are absolutely undercutting the process

Time: 4915.32

and you are undermining your ability to stay motivated

Time: 4917.8

and focused.

Time: 4918.93

So just as we talked about intermittent reward schedules

Time: 4923

a moment ago,

Time: 4925.21

intermittent spiking of dopamine if you do it at all

Time: 4929

is definitely the way to go,

Time: 4930.31

and chronically trying to spike your dopamine

Time: 4933.03

in order to enhance your motivation, focus and drive

Time: 4935.95

will absolutely undermine your motivation focus and drive

Time: 4939.43

in the long run.

Time: 4940.5

Ingestion of caffeine is somewhat of an exception

Time: 4944.8

among the other examples of things

Time: 4946.54

I've mentioned to avoid before

Time: 4949.01

what would otherwise be dopamine increasing activities.

Time: 4952.29

Because again, caffeine can increase the density

Time: 4957.58

and the efficacy of these dopamine receptors.

Time: 4961.715

It turns out that the source of caffeine could also matter

Time: 4965.18

while coffee or tea or other forms of caffeine

Time: 4968.91

will have this effect of increasing dopamine receptors.

Time: 4972.7

Yerba mate something I've talked about before

Time: 4975.4

on this podcast has some interesting properties.

Time: 4978.21

First of all, it contains caffeine.

Time: 4979.94

It's also high in antioxidants.

Time: 4982.04

It also contains something called GLP-1

Time: 4984.69

which is favorable for management of blood sugar levels.

Time: 4990.23

Yerba mate turns out has also been shown

Time: 4993.03

to be neuroprotective specifically for dopaminergic neurons.

Time: 4997.98

Now, I should mention this is just a couple of studies,

Time: 5000.15

so we don't want to conclude too much from these studies

Time: 5003.06

more needs to be done.

Time: 5004.5

But they showed that in a model of damage

Time: 5007.83

to dopamine neurons, ingestion of yerba mate,

Time: 5011.331

and some of the compounds within yerba mate

Time: 5013.33

can actually serve to preserve the survival

Time: 5015.82

of dopamine neurons in both the movement related pathway

Time: 5018.927

and the motivation pathway.

Time: 5021.29

So perhaps you need that incentive

Time: 5024.15

in order to ingest your yerba mate,

Time: 5026.2

perhaps you don't need any incentive.

Time: 5028.26

In my case, I don't need any incentive.

Time: 5029.77

I already enjoy yerba mate as my principle

Time: 5032.17

source of caffeine,

Time: 5033.26

although I do drink coffee as well.

Time: 5035.14

But if one were going to consume caffeine,

Time: 5037.9

you might consider consuming that caffeine

Time: 5040.17

in the form of yerba mate both for sake of upregulating

Time: 5042.87

dopamine receptors and getting more of a dopamine increase.

Time: 5047.84

And of course, for the similar properties of caffeine

Time: 5050.43

if that's what you're seeking.

Time: 5052.55

And in addition to that,

Time: 5054.02

because your yerba mate does appear

Time: 5056.19

to have some sort of neuroprotective

Time: 5058.56

and a particular dopamine neuron protective properties.

Time: 5062.13

Now, that doesn't mean that caffeine is always beneficial.

Time: 5064.58

And actually there's one instance related to dopamine

Time: 5067.58

where caffeine can be particularly dangerous.

Time: 5070.76

And this relates to MDMA so-called ecstasy.

Time: 5073.37

MDMA is under investigation in various clinical trials

Time: 5077.49

for its potential to treat trauma and depression.

Time: 5081.94

It's also of course, a drug that's used recreationally.

Time: 5084.79

It's still illegal at least in the United States.

Time: 5090.03

Whether or not MDMA is neurotoxic

Time: 5092.64

has been very controversial.

Time: 5093.86

Early on it was thought that it is neurotoxic

Time: 5096.28

that it can destroy serotonergic neurons.

Time: 5099.98

There were other papers that came out

Time: 5101.72

which argued that's not the case.

Time: 5104.57

And that's in particular because one of the early papers

Time: 5107.7

published in science magazine claiming

Time: 5110.49

that MDMA was neurotoxic.

Time: 5113.42

That paper was retracted.

Time: 5114.74

It turns out that that study had mistakenly

Time: 5117.45

used methamphetamine instead,

Time: 5119.53

and methamphetamine is known to be neurotoxic.

Time: 5123.46

I think most of the data point to the idea

Time: 5125.47

that MDMA might not be neurotoxic,

Time: 5128.03

but in any case, caffeine has been shown to increase

Time: 5132.31

the toxicity of MDMA receptors.

Time: 5134.63

And you might say, "Well, how could that be?"

Time: 5136.47

Well, now you understand why that could be.

Time: 5139.09

Caffeine increases the density and efficacy

Time: 5142.5

of these dopamine receptors, D2 and D3 receptors.

Time: 5145.32

MDMA is a potent drug for increasing concentrations

Time: 5150.46

of dopamine as well as serotonin and other neuromodulators.

Time: 5153.85

And it appears that caffeine ingestion by upregulating

Time: 5157.2

these receptors,

Time: 5158.27

can lead to more toxicity of MDMA.

Time: 5162.45

So caffeine can be a beneficial substance in one context,

Time: 5166.77

and actually can be a detrimental

Time: 5168.85

if not dangerous substance in another context.

Time: 5171.97

Two substances that greatly increase dopamine,

Time: 5174.71

namely amphetamine and cocaine can cause long-term problems

Time: 5180.01

with the dopaminergic pathways.

Time: 5182.58

And this is largely based on a study

Time: 5184.85

that was published some years ago, 2003,

Time: 5187.88

but still holds a lot of merit.

Time: 5189.85

This is a paper published in proceeds

Time: 5191.85

in the National Academy of Sciences,

Time: 5193.28

a very high tier stringent journal.

Time: 5196.97

First author is Kolb, K-O-L-B.

Time: 5198.94

And the title of the paper pretty much tells the story.

Time: 5202.43

Amphetamine or cocaine limits the ability

Time: 5205.16

of later experience to promote structural plasticity

Time: 5207.89

in the neocortex and nucleus accumbens.

Time: 5209.43

Neocortex is the outer shell of the brain more or less.

Time: 5214.12

And the nucleus accumbens is part of that,

Time: 5216.22

mesolimbic dopamine pathway for motivation drive

Time: 5219.95

and reinforcement.

Time: 5221.44

Neuroplasticity of course, is the brain's ability to change

Time: 5224.22

in response to experience.

Time: 5225.25

And neuroplasticity is the basis of learning and memory

Time: 5229.64

and essentially remodeling of our neural circuitry

Time: 5233.43

in positive ways of all kinds.

Time: 5235.45

And this study was really one of the first to show

Time: 5238.83

that ingesting amphetamine and cocaine

Time: 5241.77

because of the high peak in dopamine

Time: 5245.42

that it creates and the low dopamine state,

Time: 5248.03

the baseline drop that it creates afterwards,

Time: 5251.77

limits plasticity and learning subsequent

Time: 5254.25

to taking amphetamine and cocaine.

Time: 5256.37

It was at least in this study shown

Time: 5258.88

to be a long lasting effect.

Time: 5260.41

I doubt it's a permanent effect,

Time: 5261.89

but this should serve as a serious cautionary note

Time: 5265.3

that amphetamine and cocaine not only can cause a drop

Time: 5268.63

in baseline dopamine,

Time: 5269.68

but can actually put the brain into a state

Time: 5271.98

in which it cannot learn and modify itself to get better

Time: 5275.33

at least for some period of time.

Time: 5277.33

In a previous episode on ADHD,

Time: 5280.26

I talked about the widespread use of drugs

Time: 5282.79

like Adderall, Ritalin, modafinil and armodafinil,

Time: 5285.41

all of which lead to very large increases in dopamine,

Time: 5287.89

and for people with ADHD can really improve their symptoms.

Time: 5292.72

But of course there's a lot of non-prescription,

Time: 5295.34

non-clinical use of those compounds as well.

Time: 5298.02

And it stands to reason that the use of those substances

Time: 5301.26

to increase dopamine could very well provide

Time: 5305.02

the same sort of blockade of neuroplasticity

Time: 5307.17

that cocaine and amphetamine do.

Time: 5308.66

Because when you look at the amount of dopamine increase

Time: 5312

that's triggered by those compounds,

Time: 5313.7

it's really comparable.

Time: 5315.36

So again, a cautionary note against spiking one's dopamine

Time: 5319.62

too much on a regular basis,

Time: 5321.56

unless there's a valid clinical need for doing that.

Time: 5325.55

So we've been focusing a lot for the last few minutes

Time: 5328.19

on the kind of darker side of dopamine

Time: 5330.9

and how getting big peaks in dopamine can be detrimental,

Time: 5334.57

but I want to acknowledge the truth,

Time: 5336.5

which is that dopamine feels great.

Time: 5339.1

Being in pursuit and motivated and craving things

Time: 5341.87

feels wonderful.

Time: 5343.35

And I don't want to demonize dopamine.

Time: 5345.44

What I'm trying to do today is to illustrate

Time: 5347.47

how dopamine works in your brain

Time: 5349.31

so that you can continue to engage

Time: 5352.15

in dopamine evoking activities.

Time: 5355.79

And certainly there is a place for ingesting things

Time: 5358.172

that can increase dopamine provided that they are safe

Time: 5361.09

for us in the short and long-term.

Time: 5365.32

There are activities that we can do that will give us

Time: 5368.93

healthy, sustained increases in dopamine,

Time: 5371.64

both the peaks when they happen and to maintain

Time: 5375.47

or even increase our baseline levels of dopamine.

Time: 5377.75

So how do we do that?

Time: 5379.14

What are some of these activities?

Time: 5381.03

Well, in recent years,

Time: 5383.24

there's been a trend toward more people

Time: 5385.66

doing so-called cold exposure.

Time: 5387.67

In part, this was popularized by Wim Hof,

Time: 5391.16

the so-called 'Iceman' getting into cold showers,

Time: 5394.01

taking ice baths, exposing oneself to cold water

Time: 5397.4

of various kinds can in fact increase our levels of dopamine

Time: 5401.64

as well as the neuromodulator norepinephrine.

Time: 5405.55

This is not a new phenomenon.

Time: 5408.5

In the 1920s, a guy by the name of Vincent Priessnitz

Time: 5412.09

was one of the first people to popularize and formalize

Time: 5415.66

cold water therapies.

Time: 5417.36

He was an advocate of cold water exposure

Time: 5420.245

in order to boost the immune system

Time: 5422.91

and increase feelings of wellbeing.

Time: 5424.6

And actually this practice dates back long

Time: 5426.54

before Vincent's popularized it.

Time: 5430.12

And Wim Hof is the more recent iteration of this.

Time: 5433.37

First of all, some of the safety parameters.

Time: 5435.26

Let's establish those first.

Time: 5436.64

Getting to very, very cold water.

Time: 5438.22

You know, 30 degree Fahrenheit

Time: 5439.86

or even low 40 degree Fahrenheit

Time: 5442.15

can put somebody into a state of cold water shock.

Time: 5444.68

I mean, people can die doing that.

Time: 5446.5

So obviously you want to approach this with some caution,

Time: 5449.6

but for most people getting into 60 degree water

Time: 5452.97

or 50 degree water,

Time: 5454.14

or if you're acclimated and comfortable with it,

Time: 5457.122

you know, 40 degree water or 45 degree water

Time: 5459.734

can have tremendously beneficial results

Time: 5463.34

on your neuromodulator systems, including dopamine.

Time: 5467.65

What temperature of water you can tolerate

Time: 5469.74

will depend on how cold water adapted you are,

Time: 5472.91

and how familiar you are with the experience

Time: 5475.55

of getting into cold water.

Time: 5477.04

And when I say comfortable with,

Time: 5478.7

I should mention, there is never a case

Time: 5481.13

in which getting into cold water does not evoke

Time: 5485.542

a release of epinephrin.

Time: 5487.65

So the quickening of the breath, the widening of the eyes,

Time: 5490.304

the feeling as if you can't catch your breath

Time: 5492.92

and even some physical pain at the level of the skin

Time: 5495.46

that happens almost every time,

Time: 5497.29

or every time that you get into cold water,

Time: 5499.39

even if your cold water adapted.

Time: 5501.18

What almost everybody knows and understands is that,

Time: 5504.5

that wall, as I like to refer to it is coming.

Time: 5507.04

That's always the first experience

Time: 5508.81

of getting into cold water.

Time: 5510.12

There's no real way around that.

Time: 5512.47

Now, this study that I mentioned earlier,

Time: 5515.38

human physiological responses to immersion into water

Time: 5518.33

of different temperatures,

Time: 5519.24

really interesting study that was done and published

Time: 5522.26

in the university of, excuse me,

Time: 5524.01

the European Journal of Applied Physiology.

Time: 5526.24

I can provide a link to that study in the show caption.

Time: 5529.73

It's a really interesting study.

Time: 5531.02

They looked at people getting exposed to water

Time: 5534.5

that was warm, moderately cold or very cold.

Time: 5536.82

It was 32 degrees Celsius, 20 degrees Celsius,

Time: 5539.06

or 14 degrees Celsius.

Time: 5541.15

You can just put those online and do the conversion,

Time: 5543.43

or you can do the conversion to Fahrenheit if you like.

Time: 5545.78

But in any case, what they looked at were the concentrations

Time: 5549.87

of things like epinephrin and dopamine and so on.

Time: 5554.17

And what they found was really interesting.

Time: 5556.41

First of all, upon getting into cold water,

Time: 5562.2

the changes in adrenaline and noradrenaline,

Time: 5566

epinephrin and norepinephrine were immediate and fast,

Time: 5569.77

and these were huge increases.

Time: 5572.06

So that's the getting into the cold water

Time: 5573.87

that everybody experiences

Time: 5575.21

these huge increases in adrenaline.

Time: 5577.32

But then what was interesting is they observed

Time: 5579.188

that dopamine levels started to rise somewhat slowly

Time: 5583.21

and then continued to rise and reach levels

Time: 5586.49

as high as 2.5 times above baseline.

Time: 5590.79

That's a remarkably high increase.

Time: 5592.79

Remember if we go back to our examples of chocolate, sex,

Time: 5597.78

a doubling above baseline,

Time: 5599.21

nicotine two and a half times above baseline, cocaine.

Time: 5603.04

The increase in dopamine from a cold water exposure

Time: 5607.09

of this kind was comparable to what one sees from cocaine,

Time: 5611.12

except, except in this case,

Time: 5613.95

it wasn't a rise and crash.

Time: 5616.64

It was actually a sustained rise in dopamine

Time: 5620.05

that took a very long time up to three hours

Time: 5622.54

to come back down to baseline.

Time: 5624.32

Which is really remarkable,

Time: 5626.12

and I think this explains some of the positive,

Time: 5629.72

mental and physical effects that people report subjectively

Time: 5632.969

after doing cold water exposure.

Time: 5635.37

One question that many of you are probably asking

Time: 5637.35

is just how cold should the water be?

Time: 5639.99

Well, you could mimic what was done in this study

Time: 5641.71

and do 14 degrees Celsius.

Time: 5643.25

But for some people that won't be cold enough,

Time: 5645.3

for some people that will be too cold.

Time: 5647.62

They did look at the release of stress hormones

Time: 5650.1

like cortisol in addition to the release of things

Time: 5652.2

like epinephrin and adrenaline.

Time: 5653.66

And it's interesting that they noted that in all cases,

Time: 5657.32

but especially at that coldest temperature,

Time: 5659.21

there was an increase in cortisol,

Time: 5660.67

but that it was transient,

Time: 5662.2

That eventually people's cortisol,

Time: 5663.947

the stress hormone subsided a bit.

Time: 5666.82

There are basically two different approaches

Time: 5668.78

to remaining in the cold when it's uncomfortable.

Time: 5671.72

One is to try and relax yourself.

Time: 5674.23

Two, try and practice slow breathing,

Time: 5676.83

to try and dilate your gaze.

Time: 5678.27

I've talked about this before in previous podcasts,

Time: 5680.14

you go into panoramic vision to essentially try

Time: 5681.81

and calm yourself so that it's not as stressful

Time: 5685.38

in the cold.

Time: 5686.69

Other people however, take the approach of trying to ramp up

Time: 5691.12

their level of internal autonomic arousal,

Time: 5693.81

meaning to get really energized

Time: 5695.75

and kind of lean into the friction of the cold.

Time: 5698.34

And they find that easier.

Time: 5699.77

Other people distract themselves,

Time: 5701.23

they recite the alphabet,

Time: 5702.33

or they do something, anything to try

Time: 5705.16

and distract themselves from the discomfort.

Time: 5708.1

To be totally honest,

Time: 5709.11

it does not matter for sake of dopamine release.

Time: 5712.07

Because the dopamine release is triggered

Time: 5714.11

and then continues even after you get out of the cold water.

Time: 5717.94

Now, in this study, it was long exposure to cold water.

Time: 5722.44

It was an hour.

Time: 5723.516

That's a long period of time.

Time: 5725.61

And I do warn you against getting into cold water

Time: 5728.897

that's so cold that it will make your temperature drop

Time: 5732.21

and make you hyperthermic for an hour.

Time: 5733.83

That actually could be dangerous for a lot of people.

Time: 5735.54

You might have a hard time reheating,

Time: 5737

and hypothermia is not a good thing.

Time: 5739.57

They had people monitoring subjects in these studies

Time: 5743.01

and paying attention to their core body temperature.

Time: 5745.28

They were able to reheat them afterwards.

Time: 5747.87

It's well-established now that getting into cold water,

Time: 5751.25

whether or not it's a shower,

Time: 5752.24

an ice bath circulating cold water, a stream, et cetera,

Time: 5756.5

that can evoke the norepinephrine release immediately,

Time: 5759.41

and the long arc of that dopamine release.

Time: 5761.62

Why would that be good?

Time: 5762.72

Up until now, I've basically said getting increases

Time: 5765.63

in dopamine are detrimental to your baseline.

Time: 5769.37

Well, this does appear to raise the baseline of dopamine

Time: 5772.44

for substantial periods of time.

Time: 5773.98

And most people report feeling a heightened level of calm

Time: 5778.92

and focus after getting out of cold water.

Time: 5782.1

So cold water exposure turns out

Time: 5783.53

to be a very potent stimulus for shifting

Time: 5786.25

the entire milieu,

Time: 5787.36

the entire environment of our brain and body

Time: 5790.56

and allowing many people to feel much, much better

Time: 5794.709

for a substantial period of time

Time: 5796.8

after getting out of the ice bath or cold water of any kind

Time: 5800.6

than they did before.

Time: 5802.18

Now, you might ask how often to do this?

Time: 5804.37

Some people do this every day.

Time: 5806.02

It can be very stimulating.

Time: 5807.3

So typically doing it early in the day,

Time: 5810.01

it's going to be better.

Time: 5810.843

I don't necessarily recommend doing it right before sleep,

Time: 5813.73

but some people do it in the afternoon.

Time: 5815.63

And some people will indeed do that seven days a week,

Time: 5818.53

other people three days a week,

Time: 5819.68

other people every once in a while.

Time: 5821.25

What I can say is once you become cold water adapted,

Time: 5825.33

once it no longer has the same impact of novelty

Time: 5829.15

and feeling a bit like a,

Time: 5830.95

I don't want to say a shock to your system,

Time: 5832.28

'cause you don't want to go into cold water shock,

Time: 5833.79

but once it is comfortable for you,

Time: 5837.99

then it will no longer evoke this release.

Time: 5840.28

There really does seem to be something in the pathway

Time: 5842.38

from cold water exposure through the norepinephrine pathway

Time: 5845.5

and into the mesolimbic brainstem

Time: 5847.29

that causes this release in dopamine.

Time: 5849.4

But nonetheless, it's a basically zero cost.

Time: 5852.6

I mean, you need access to water of some sort,

Time: 5854.42

cold water shower, et cetera,

Time: 5855.62

but basically zero cost way of triggering a long lasting

Time: 5859.01

increase in dopamine without ingesting anything,

Time: 5861.05

no pharmacology whatsoever.

Time: 5862.81

Please again, approach it with a safety and caution in mind,

Time: 5866.03

but it is a very potent stimulus.

Time: 5867.95

Again, 250% of a rise in baseline,

Time: 5871.383

two and a half times rise in baseline rivals

Time: 5873.93

that of cocaine which is really remarkable.

Time: 5876.8

Now, I'd like to talk about the positive aspects

Time: 5878.98

of rewards for our behavior,

Time: 5880.46

and the negative aspects of rewards for our behavior.

Time: 5883.05

And from that, I will suggest a protocol

Time: 5886.09

by which you can achieve a better relationship

Time: 5889.24

to your activities and to your dopamine system.

Time: 5892.09

In fact, it will help tune up your dopamine system

Time: 5894.53

for discipline, hard work and motivation.

Time: 5900.39

Hard work is hard.

Time: 5902.6

Generally, most people don't like working hard.

Time: 5906.05

Some people do,

Time: 5907.06

but most people work hard in order to achieve some end goal.

Time: 5912.76

End goals are terrific and rewards are terrific

Time: 5914.95

whether or not they are monetary social or any kind.

Time: 5919.91

However, because of the way that dopamine relates

Time: 5923.87

to our perception of time,

Time: 5926.468

working hard at something for sake of a reward

Time: 5930.55

that comes afterward,

Time: 5932.35

can make the hard work much more challenging

Time: 5935.74

and make us much less likely to lean into hard work

Time: 5938.88

in the future.

Time: 5939.87

Let me give you a couple examples by way of data

Time: 5942.49

and experiments.

Time: 5943.87

There's a classic experiment done actually at Stanford

Time: 5947.67

many years ago in which children in nursery school

Time: 5952.02

and kindergarten drew pictures,

Time: 5954.87

and they drew pictures cause they like to draw.

Time: 5957.73

The researchers took kids that liked to draw

Time: 5960.69

and they started giving them a reward for drawing.

Time: 5963.58

The reward generally was a gold star

Time: 5965.61

or some thing that a young child would find rewarding.

Time: 5970.23

Then they stopped giving them the gold star.

Time: 5973.52

And what they found is the children

Time: 5975.7

had a much lower tendency to draw on their own.

Time: 5981.15

No reward.

Time: 5982.15

Now, remember this was an activity

Time: 5984.33

that prior to receiving a reward,

Time: 5986.49

the children intrinsically enjoyed and selected to do.

Time: 5990.503

No one was telling them to draw.

Time: 5992.529

What this relates to is so-called intrinsic

Time: 5994.56

versus extrinsic reinforcement.

Time: 5997.29

When we receive rewards,

Time: 5998.84

even if we give ourselves rewards for something,

Time: 6002.01

we tend to associate less pleasure with the actual activity

Time: 6005.52

itself that evoked the reward.

Time: 6007.99

Now, that might seem counterintuitive,

Time: 6009.47

but that's just way that the way

Time: 6010.7

that these dopaminergic circuits work.

Time: 6013.29

And now understanding these peaks in baselines in dopamine

Time: 6016.67

which I won't review again,

Time: 6018.67

this should make sense.

Time: 6020.34

If you get a peak in dopamine from a reward,

Time: 6024.31

it's going to lower your baseline

Time: 6025.78

and the cognitive interpretation

Time: 6029.09

is that you didn't really do the activity

Time: 6031.57

because you enjoyed the activity.

Time: 6032.81

You did it for the reward.

Time: 6034.45

Now, this doesn't mean all rewards of all kinds are bad,

Time: 6037.36

but it's also important to understand

Time: 6039.79

that dopamine controls our perception of time.

Time: 6042.82

When and how much dopamine we experience

Time: 6046.24

is the way that we carve up

Time: 6048.2

what we call our experience of time.

Time: 6050.58

When we engage in an activity,

Time: 6052.17

let's say school or hard work of any kind

Time: 6055.03

or exercise because of the reward

Time: 6058.24

we are going to give ourselves a receive at the end,

Time: 6060.31

the trophy, the sundae, the meal, whatever it happens to be.

Time: 6066.9

We actually are extending the time bin

Time: 6070.54

over which we are analyzing or perceiving that experience.

Time: 6076.04

And because the reward comes at the end,

Time: 6079.4

we start to dissociate the neural circuits

Time: 6082.86

for dopamine reward that would have normally been active

Time: 6086.39

during the activity.

Time: 6088.62

And because it all arrives at the end over time,

Time: 6092.92

we have the experience of less and less pleasure

Time: 6095.84

from that particular activity while we're doing it.

Time: 6099.22

Now, this is the antithesis of growth mindset.

Time: 6103.16

My colleague at Stanford, Carol Dweck, as many of you know,

Time: 6105.83

has come up with this incredible theory and principle,

Time: 6109.08

and actually goes beyond theory and principle

Time: 6110.97

called "Growth Mindset",

Time: 6112.02

which is this striving to be better to be in this mindset

Time: 6115.17

of I'm not there yet,

Time: 6116.79

but striving itself is the end goal.

Time: 6120.93

And that of course delivers you to tremendous performance.

Time: 6123.36

It's been observed over and over and over again,

Time: 6125.19

that people that have growth mindset,

Time: 6126.61

kids that have growth mindset end up performing very well

Time: 6129.47

because they're focused on the effort itself.

Time: 6131.69

And all of us can cultivate growth mindset.

Time: 6135.57

The neural mechanism of cultivating growth mindset

Time: 6138.2

involves learning to access the rewards from effort

Time: 6142.65

and doing.

Time: 6143.81

And that's hard to do because you have to engage

Time: 6147.91

this prefrontal component of the mesolimbic circuit.

Time: 6150.39

You have to tell yourself, okay, this effort is great,

Time: 6153.7

this effort is pleasureful.

Time: 6155.22

Even though you might actually be in a state

Time: 6156.8

of physical pain from the exercise,

Time: 6158.46

or I can recall this from college,

Time: 6160.14

just feeling like I wanted to get up from my desk,

Time: 6162.28

but forcing myself to study,

Time: 6163.69

forcing myself and forcing myself.

Time: 6165.18

What you find over time is that you can start to associate

Time: 6168.45

a dopamine release.

Time: 6169.41

You can evoke dopamine release from the friction

Time: 6173.07

and the challenge that you happen to be in.

Time: 6175.85

You completely eliminate the ability to generate

Time: 6179.61

those circuits and the rewarding process of being able

Time: 6182.85

to reward friction while in effort,

Time: 6186.08

if you are focused only on the goal that comes at the end.

Time: 6189.58

Because of the way that dopamine marks time.

Time: 6192.54

So if you say, oh, I'm going to do this very hard thing,

Time: 6195.46

and I'm going to push and push and push and push

Time: 6197.38

for that end goal that comes later.

Time: 6200.31

Not only do you enjoy the process of what you're doing less,

Time: 6205.02

you actually make it more painful

Time: 6207.09

while you're engaging in it.

Time: 6208.56

You make yourself less efficient at it,

Time: 6210.32

because if you were able to access dopamine while in effort,

Time: 6213.54

dopamine has all these incredible properties

Time: 6215.39

of increasing the amount of energy in our body,

Time: 6217.98

and in our mind, our ability to focus

Time: 6219.91

by way of dopamines conversion into epinephrin.

Time: 6223.25

But also you're undermining your ability to lean back

Time: 6227.29

into that activity the next time.

Time: 6228.58

The next time you need twice as much coffee

Time: 6231.52

and three times as much loud music,

Time: 6233.72

and four times as much energy drink

Time: 6235.75

and the social connection just to get out the door

Time: 6238.4

in order to do the run or to study.

Time: 6240.77

So what's more beneficial in fact can serve

Time: 6244.83

as a tremendous amplifier on all endeavors

Time: 6247.68

that you engage in.

Time: 6249.4

Especially hard endeavors is to A,

Time: 6252.76

not start layering in other sources of dopamine

Time: 6255.69

in order to get to the starting line,

Time: 6257.53

not layering in other sources of dopamine

Time: 6259.99

in order to be able to continue,

Time: 6261.25

but rather to subjectively start to attach

Time: 6264.64

the feeling of friction and effort

Time: 6267.55

to an internally generated reward system.

Time: 6270.36

And this is not meant to be vague,

Time: 6272.41

this is a system that exists in your mind,

Time: 6275.16

that exists in the minds of humans

Time: 6277.04

for hundreds of thousands of years,

Time: 6278.94

by which you're not just pursuing the things

Time: 6281.78

that are innately pleasureful,

Time: 6283.77

food, sex, warmth, water when you're thirsty.

Time: 6287.9

But the beauty of this mesolimbic reward pathway

Time: 6291.22

that I talked about earlier is that,

Time: 6293.24

it includes the forebrain.

Time: 6294.42

So you can tell yourself the effort part is the good part.

Time: 6299.27

I know it's painful,

Time: 6300.11

I know this doesn't feel good,

Time: 6301.3

but I'm focused on this.

Time: 6302.43

I'm going to start to access the reward.

Time: 6304.99

You will find the rewards,

Time: 6307.041

meaning the dopamine release inside of effort

Time: 6310.09

if you repeat this over and over again.

Time: 6311.788

And what's beautiful about it is that,

Time: 6314.04

it starts to become reflexive for all types of effort.

Time: 6317.47

When we focus only on the trophy,

Time: 6319.32

only on the grade,

Time: 6320.32

only on the win as the reward,

Time: 6323

you undermine that entire process.

Time: 6325.55

So how do you do this?

Time: 6327.44

You do this in those moments of the most intense friction.

Time: 6331.47

You tell yourself this is very painful

Time: 6334.67

and because it's painful,

Time: 6336.95

it will evoke an increase in dopamine release later,

Time: 6340.63

meaning it will increase my baseline in dopamine,

Time: 6343.95

but you also have to tell yourself

Time: 6346.58

that in that moment you are doing it by choice

Time: 6350.49

and you're doing it because you love it.

Time: 6353.68

And I know that sounds like lying to yourself,

Time: 6356.12

and in some ways it is lying to yourself,

Time: 6358.43

but it's lying to yourself in the context of a truth

Time: 6361.31

which is that you want it to feel better.

Time: 6365.07

You want it to feel even pleasureful.

Time: 6367.82

Now, this is very far and away different

Time: 6370.85

from thinking about the reward that comes at the end,

Time: 6374.33

the hot fudge sundae for after you cross the finish line

Time: 6377.04

and you can replace hot fudge sundae

Time: 6378.37

with whatever reward happens to be appealing to you.

Time: 6382.03

We revere people who are capable of doing

Time: 6384.01

what I'm describing.

Time: 6385.84

David Goggins comes to mind is a really good example.

Time: 6388.09

Many of you are probably familiar with David Goggins,

Time: 6390.22

former Navy SEAL who essentially

Time: 6392.67

has made a post-military career out of explaining

Time: 6398.21

and sharing his process of turning the effort

Time: 6400.95

into the reward.

Time: 6402.67

There are many other examples of this too, of course.

Time: 6406.85

Throughout evolutionary history,

Time: 6408.77

there's no question that we revered people

Time: 6410.63

who were willing to go out and forage and hunt and gather

Time: 6413.97

and caretake in ways that other members

Time: 6417.94

of our species probably found exhausting

Time: 6420.29

and probably would have preferred to just put their feet up

Time: 6422.77

or soaked them in a cool stream

Time: 6424.06

rather than continue to forage.

Time: 6426.1

The ability to access this pleasure from effort

Time: 6430.89

aspect of our dopaminergic circuitry

Time: 6433.36

is without question the most powerful aspect of dopamine

Time: 6437.407

and our biology of dopamine.

Time: 6439.57

And the beautiful thing is it's accessible to all of us.

Time: 6443.07

But just to highlight the things that can interfere with,

Time: 6445.99

and prevent you from getting dopamine release

Time: 6449.94

from effort itself,

Time: 6452.17

don't spike dopamine prior to engaging in effort.

Time: 6455.559

And don't spike dopamine after engaging in effort,

Time: 6459.47

learn to spike your dopamine from effort itself.

Time: 6463.02

One straightforward example of learning to attach dopamine

Time: 6467.51

to effort and strain as opposed to a process

Time: 6471.87

or a reward that naturally evokes dopamine release

Time: 6475.29

is so-called intermittent fasting.

Time: 6477.15

I know this is very popular nowadays.

Time: 6479.54

Some people like to do intermittent fasting,

Time: 6481.19

some people don't.

Time: 6482.35

Some people have a 12 hour feeding window every 24 hours,

Time: 6485.2

some people do long fasts of two to three days even.

Time: 6488.3

I personally don't monitor a feeding window

Time: 6491.6

with a lot of precision.

Time: 6492.69

I tend to skip one meal a day,

Time: 6494.08

either breakfast or lunch,

Time: 6495.4

and then I eat the other two meals of the day

Time: 6496.89

depending on which meal I skipped.

Time: 6498.16

So it's either breakfast, lunch

Time: 6499.78

and maybe a little something in the evening,

Time: 6502.32

or I'll skip breakfast and do lunch and dinner and so on.

Time: 6505.73

Many people are now eating this way in part,

Time: 6508.8

because many people find it easier to not eat at all

Time: 6512.95

than to eat a smaller portion of some food.

Time: 6516.02

And that has everything to do with the dopamine reward

Time: 6519.38

evoking properties of food.

Time: 6522.05

When we ingest food or when we are about to ingest food,

Time: 6525.98

our dopamine levels go up.

Time: 6527.21

And typically when we ingest food,

Time: 6529.35

if it evokes some dopamine release,

Time: 6531.04

then we tend to want even more food.

Time: 6532.73

Remember dopamine's main role is one of motivation

Time: 6536.01

and seeking.

Time: 6536.843

And what dopamine always wants more of is more dopamine.

Time: 6541.08

More activity or thing that evokes more dopamine release.

Time: 6545.22

Well, let's just look at fasting

Time: 6547.98

from the perspective of dopamine schedules

Time: 6550.427

and dopamine release and peaks and baselines.

Time: 6554.8

Typically, when we eat we get dopamine release,

Time: 6558.85

especially when we eat after being very hungry.

Time: 6561.55

If you've ever gone camping,

Time: 6562.61

or you're very, very hungry,

Time: 6564.22

the food tastes that much better.

Time: 6566.11

And that's actually because of the way

Time: 6568.11

that deprivation states increase the way

Time: 6572.84

that dopaminergic circuits work.

Time: 6575.11

Our perception of dopamine is heightened

Time: 6578.58

when the receptors for dopamine

Time: 6580.36

have not seen much dopamine lately,

Time: 6582.47

they haven't bound much dopamine.

Time: 6583.89

So when you fast, fast, fast, fast, fast,

Time: 6585.8

and then you finally eat,

Time: 6587.91

it evokes more dopamine release.

Time: 6589.69

So this is the big reward that comes at the end.

Time: 6592.9

Even bigger because you deprived yourself.

Time: 6596.25

This is true for all rewarding behaviors and activities

Time: 6599.04

by the way.

Time: 6600.25

The longer you restrict yourself from that activity,

Time: 6603

the greater the dopamine experience when the dopamine

Time: 6606.02

is finally released,

Time: 6606.853

because of an upregulation of the receptors for dopamine.

Time: 6610.85

but I just spent five minutes or more telling you

Time: 6613.47

that you should avoid too much reward at the end,

Time: 6616.47

and you should actually focus on the dopamine

Time: 6619.83

that you can consciously evoke from the deprivation strain

Time: 6624.19

and effort.

Time: 6625.023

And in fact, this is what happens for many people

Time: 6628.11

that start doing fasting and take a liking to it.

Time: 6631.19

Many people say that their state of mind

Time: 6634.01

when they fast is clearer,

Time: 6635.95

that they actually start to enjoy the period of fasting.

Time: 6639.11

In fact, some people start pushing out their eating window

Time: 6641.87

or skipping entire days of eating more and more

Time: 6644.25

in order to get deeper into that state of mind

Time: 6647.605

where surely it's not just dopamine,

Time: 6650.53

but dopamine is released.

Time: 6651.95

They will track their clock.

Time: 6653.39

Oh, I've been fasting 12 hours, 16 hours, et cetera.

Time: 6656.04

They are starting to attach dopamine release

Time: 6658.47

or create dopamine release from the deprivation,

Time: 6661.48

not from the food reward itself.

Time: 6663.46

And this I think makes it an interesting practice.

Time: 6666.27

And one that certainly has been practiced by for centuries

Time: 6670.26

in different cultures and different religions

Time: 6672.25

of deliberately restricting food,

Time: 6674.29

not just to increase the rewarding properties

Time: 6676.56

of food itself,

Time: 6678.02

but also to increase the rewarding properties

Time: 6680.55

of deprivation.

Time: 6682.09

And I should emphasize that a lot of the subjective aspects

Time: 6685.08

of the knowledge of the benefits of fasting

Time: 6687.51

serve as reinforcing dopamine amplifying aspects to fasting,

Time: 6693.16

meaning if somebody does intermittent fasting

Time: 6696.61

and they are deep into their fast

Time: 6698.38

and they're telling themselves,

Time: 6699.28

oh, my blood lipid profiles are probably improving.

Time: 6701.92

And my glucose management is probably improving.

Time: 6704.5

My insulin sensitivity is going up,

Time: 6706.31

and I'm going to live longer.

Time: 6707.21

All these things that have some basis from animal studies

Time: 6711.01

and some basis or not from human studies,

Time: 6713.77

it's all kind of still an emerging literature,

Time: 6715.81

but it does seem to be pointing in that direction

Time: 6717.65

that fasting can encourage things like autophagy,

Time: 6721.507

the engulfment of dead cells and things of that sort.

Time: 6724.56

Well, as people tell themselves these things,

Time: 6727.8

they are enhancing the rewarding properties

Time: 6730.98

of the behavior of fasting.

Time: 6732.88

And so this is a salient example

Time: 6735

of where knowledge of knowledge can actually help us

Time: 6738.86

change these deep primitive circuits related to dopamine.

Time: 6743.06

And this illustrates how the forebrain,

Time: 6745.49

which carries knowledge and carries interpretation

Time: 6748.29

and rational thought can be used to shape the very circuits

Time: 6752.72

that are involved in generating reward

Time: 6755.3

for what would otherwise just be kind of primitive

Time: 6757.44

behaviors, hardwired behaviors.

Time: 6759.11

And that's the beauty of these dopamine circuits.

Time: 6761.38

That's the beauty of dopamine.

Time: 6762.57

It's not just attached to the more primitive of food, sex,

Time: 6767.28

heat, et cetera.

Time: 6769.52

It's also attached to the things

Time: 6771.53

that we decide are good for us and are important for us.

Time: 6774.71

So telling yourself that exercise or fasting

Time: 6777.38

or studying or listening better

Time: 6780.21

or any kind of behavior is good for you

Time: 6781.82

will actually reinforce the extent

Time: 6784.68

to which it is good for you at a chemical level.

Time: 6788.05

And a somewhat eerie example of what I just mentioned

Time: 6791.69

was a study that was published last year

Time: 6793.79

in the journal Neuron, Cell Press journal,

Time: 6795.48

excellent journal.

Time: 6796.78

That showed that hearing something

Time: 6800.22

that reinforces one's prior beliefs

Time: 6802.96

actually can evoke dopamine release.

Time: 6805.43

So the dopamine pathway is so vulnerable

Time: 6808.49

to subjective interpretation

Time: 6810.69

that it actually makes it such that when we see something

Time: 6813.62

or hear something that validates a belief

Time: 6815.74

that we already have,

Time: 6816.88

that itself can increase dopamine release.

Time: 6820.6

Along the lines of how dopamine and dopamine schedules

Time: 6824.18

and our perception of things can shape the way

Time: 6826.66

that we experience things as pleasureful or not.

Time: 6829.701

There are beautiful studies mainly looking at sugar appetite

Time: 6833.37

and our sense of pleasure from sweet things,

Time: 6835.9

but also for savory foods, et cetera.

Time: 6838.69

And essentially the results that come out

Time: 6840.32

of this are the following.

Time: 6841.58

If you ingest something that you like,

Time: 6843.85

it tastes good to you,

Time: 6845.12

but then you ingest something that's even sweeter

Time: 6847.93

or even more savory.

Time: 6849.67

And then you go back to the food that you ate previously.

Time: 6853.57

Well, you don't like it as much,

Time: 6855.61

and that might seem like a duh, obviously.

Time: 6858.35

But that shift in perception can be blocked

Time: 6862.6

by blocking the shift in dopamine.

Time: 6865.18

And so this really speaks to these peaks and valleys

Time: 6868.19

in dopamine that I mentioned before

Time: 6869.53

and how your experience of anything is going to depend

Time: 6873.08

on your prior experience of other things

Time: 6875.92

that evoke dopamine.

Time: 6876.88

Big dopamine release makes it more challenging

Time: 6879.87

to experience more big dopamine release.

Time: 6883.02

So dopamine is one of those things

Time: 6884.313

that you don't want too high or too low for too long.

Time: 6887.86

It's all about staying in that dynamic range

Time: 6890.14

and that's going to be different for everybody.

Time: 6892.51

So for the very savory foods that are now everywhere,

Time: 6897.95

those highly savory foods

Time: 6899.583

or I think they call them highly palatable foods

Time: 6902.19

are making more bland foods, whole foods,

Time: 6906.04

meaning foods that aren't processed.

Time: 6907.44

It's making those tastes less good at least for a while.

Time: 6910.18

And all it takes is a short period of time, even just days,

Time: 6913.53

two days or so of not consuming any highly palatable foods

Time: 6917.95

and suddenly broccoli with just a little bit of seasoning

Time: 6922.45

tastes delicious to you.

Time: 6923.85

All right?

Time: 6924.683

So again, this just speaks to the fact that dopamine

Time: 6927.22

is this universal currency.

Time: 6929.17

It establishes value based on,

Time: 6931.6

not just what you're experiencing in the moment,

Time: 6933.23

but what you experienced in the days and minutes before.

Time: 6936.63

Now, that you understand how your previous level

Time: 6939.62

of dopamine relates to your current level of dopamine,

Time: 6942.71

and how your current level of dopamine will influence

Time: 6946.1

your future level of dopamine,

Time: 6948.51

it should become obvious why things like pornography,

Time: 6952.59

not just the accessibility of pornography,

Time: 6954.7

but the intensity of pornography can negatively shape

Time: 6959.67

real world romantic and sexual interactions.

Time: 6962.72

This is a serious concern.

Time: 6964.05

The discussion is happening now.

Time: 6966.21

The underlying neurobiological mechanisms

Time: 6968.3

you now understand.

Time: 6969.84

And this isn't to pass judgment on whether

Time: 6971.89

or not people like or don't like pornography,

Time: 6974.78

that's an ethical discussion,

Time: 6975.94

and it's a moral discussion that has to be decided

Time: 6978.05

for each individual by virtue of age, et cetera.

Time: 6982.53

But again, any activity that evokes

Time: 6986.17

a lot of dopamine release will make it harder

Time: 6989.86

to achieve the same level and certainly the greater level

Time: 6993.75

of dopamine through a subsequent interaction.

Time: 6996.89

So yes, indeed many people are addicted to pornography

Time: 7000.44

and yes, indeed many people who regularly indulge

Time: 7004.53

in pornography experienced challenges

Time: 7006.84

in real-world romantic interactions.

Time: 7009.14

You now understand the mechanisms behind

Time: 7010.91

what I'm telling you.

Time: 7012.3

Now, there are circumstances in which increasing levels

Time: 7015.08

of dopamine is desirable and advantageous

Time: 7017.87

and clinically helpful.

Time: 7019.41

Good example of this would be the drug Welbutrin

Time: 7021.77

also called bupropion which increases dopamine

Time: 7024.61

and norepinephrine.

Time: 7026.16

Wellbutrin bupropion was developed

Time: 7027.84

as an alternative treatment for depression

Time: 7030.22

because some people who take the so-called SSRI,

Time: 7032.88

selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors

Time: 7035.61

which as the name suggests increased serotonin

Time: 7037.86

suffer from serotonin related side effects.

Time: 7041.38

Things like decreased appetite, decreased libido,

Time: 7044.78

or sometimes increased appetite or other side effects

Time: 7048.85

that they don't want.

Time: 7050.4

And Wellbutrin seems to avoid the sexual side effects.

Time: 7054.24

It can blunt at appetite and these sorts of things

Time: 7058.5

because of the increase in norepinephrine and dopamine

Time: 7061.88

increases levels of motivation and craving,

Time: 7064.53

but also can create a state of elevated alertness

Time: 7069.16

that can sometimes get in the way of healthy eating

Time: 7072.16

and things of that sort.

Time: 7072.993

So one has to work with their clinician as psychiatrist.

Time: 7076.68

It is a prescription drug in order

Time: 7078.28

to find the dosage of Welbutrin that's correct for them.

Time: 7081.86

In addition, things like Welbutrin bupropion

Time: 7084.44

can increase anxiety because of the way that dopamine

Time: 7086.977

and norepinephrine are stimulating

Time: 7089.08

and tend to place people into heightened levels

Time: 7090.96

of alertness.

Time: 7091.793

Nonetheless, many people have gained terrific relief

Time: 7094.68

from depression from Wellbutrin bupropion,

Time: 7097.378

and many of those same people had serious trouble

Time: 7099.81

with some of the SSRI.

Time: 7101.09

So it does seem to be a very useful drug

Time: 7103.21

in certain contexts,

Time: 7104.043

both for depression and for the treatment of smoking

Time: 7106.85

for people desiring to quit smoking.

Time: 7109.18

And of course there are a lot of people out there

Time: 7111.25

who are seeking to increase their baseline levels

Time: 7113.55

of dopamine without taking any prescription

Time: 7116.81

pharmaceutical compounds.

Time: 7118.7

And nowadays there exist a lot of supplements to do that.

Time: 7122.44

The two most common ones that are directly

Time: 7124.79

within the dopamine pathway are Macuna Pruriens

Time: 7128.45

which is actually a velvety bean whose contents are l-DOPA.

Time: 7134.37

Believe it or not, the content of this being

Time: 7136.32

is the precursor to dopamine.

Time: 7138.63

So Macuna Pruriens is sold over the counter

Time: 7141.52

at least in the United States.

Time: 7143.21

And it literally is the precursor to dopamine.

Time: 7147.11

Meaning if you take it,

Time: 7148.21

you will experience very large increases in dopamine.

Time: 7151.19

Those increases are transient and very, very intense.

Time: 7154.11

And in fact, if you look at the constellation of effects

Time: 7157.81

of Macuna Pruriens,

Time: 7159.63

what you find is that they're pretty striking

Time: 7161.51

and they look a lot like if not identical to l-DOPA.

Time: 7165.68

The most obvious of those is in the context

Time: 7168.4

of Parkinson's disease.

Time: 7169.69

There are at least five studies that have shown

Time: 7171.78

that Macuna Pruriens can reduce the symptoms

Time: 7175.19

of Parkinson's disease,

Time: 7176.25

much in the same way that l-DOPA can reduce

Time: 7179.22

the symptoms of Parkinson's disease.

Time: 7181.32

And that shouldn't come as any surprise

Time: 7182.96

given what I just told you that is essentially l-DOPA.

Time: 7186.85

It also can reduce a particular hormone called prolactin.

Time: 7190.28

Dopamine and prolactin tend to be in somewhat

Time: 7192.86

push pull fashion.

Time: 7193.91

When dopamine is up,

Time: 7194.77

prolactin is down and vice versa.

Time: 7197.29

Prolactin is involved in milk letdown in women.

Time: 7199.63

It's involved in setting the refractory period

Time: 7202.33

for sex after ejaculation in males.

Time: 7206.04

The reason mating can occur and then not occur

Time: 7208.59

after a ejaculation is because of an increase in prolactin.

Time: 7211.12

Macuna Pruriens is often used a blunt prolactin,

Time: 7214.95

and they're actually a couple of studies showing

Time: 7217.06

that it can indeed do that.

Time: 7219.017

Macuna Pruriens has a number of other effects

Time: 7221.8

that lie in the sex and reproduction pathway

Time: 7224.93

that are worth noting.

Time: 7227.04

Sperm concentration, sperm quality

Time: 7229.69

is actually greatly increased by Macuna Pruriens.

Time: 7232.56

These are kind of curious effects until you understand

Time: 7234.672

a little bit more about the biology of dopamine

Time: 7236.45

which I'll mention in a moment,

Time: 7237.94

but there are several studies,

Time: 7240.34

four in fact that describe how Macuna Pruriens

Time: 7245.39

can increase sperm count, sperm quality,

Time: 7248.19

and sperm motility.

Time: 7249.68

So for those of you seeking to conceive children,

Time: 7251.97

Macuna Pruriens might be an interesting choice

Time: 7254.98

if you're interested in exploring

Time: 7256.51

non-prescription compounds.

Time: 7258.14

However, I should mention that any time

Time: 7261.93

you consume a substance that increases dopamine

Time: 7266.08

by mimicking dopamine or acting as a direct precursor

Time: 7269.52

to dopamine,

Time: 7270.65

there's almost inevitably a crash or a reduction

Time: 7275.08

in the baseline in dopamine that we referred to previously.

Time: 7278.69

So many people who take Macuna Pruriens

Time: 7280.81

feel really elevated, really motivated, really alert,

Time: 7284.89

all the sorts of things that one would expect

Time: 7286.66

from a dopaminergic drug which Macuna Pruriens is.

Time: 7290.44

And then they feel a low or a reduction in drive

Time: 7294.537

and excitement and enthusiasm after the drug wears off.

Time: 7298.19

Just like they would with other dopamine

Time: 7300.74

increasing compound.

Time: 7302

For that reason, many people have turned

Time: 7305.37

to the use of L-tyrosine.

Time: 7307.39

L-tyrosine is an amino acid precursor to l-DOPA.

Time: 7310.8

So it lies further up the dopamine synthesis pathway.

Time: 7314.2

And nowadays it's very common because all L-tyrosine

Time: 7317.57

is sold over the counter in the United States

Time: 7320.09

that people will take L-tyrosine as a way

Time: 7322.89

to get more energized alert and focused.

Time: 7326.31

Indeed, there are data that L-tyrosine will accomplish that.

Time: 7330.5

L-tyrosine is typically taken in capsule form

Time: 7333.2

or powder form anywhere from 500 to 750

Time: 7336.537

to a 1000 milligrams.

Time: 7338.54

It is a potent stimulus for increasing dopamine.

Time: 7341.88

And the timescale for increasing dopamine

Time: 7343.73

is about 30 to 45 minutes after ingestion.

Time: 7346.53

Dopamine levels start to peak.

Time: 7348.38

The classic study that really nailed down

Time: 7351.31

the fact that tyrosine has this effect

Time: 7354.04

was published way back in 1983,

Time: 7356.77

Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism

Time: 7359.56

that directly compared L-tyrosine supplementation

Time: 7362.95

with tryptophan ingestion on plasma dopamine and serotonin.

Time: 7368.44

Tryptophan being a precursor to serotonin.

Time: 7371.36

And indeed what they found is that ingestion of L-tyrosine

Time: 7375.03

can increase the amount of dopamine circulating in the blood

Time: 7378.83

and in the brain too, of course.

Time: 7382.117

The L-tyrosine ingestion induced dopamine

Time: 7384.19

increases within 45 minutes and they were short-lasting

Time: 7387.67

after about 30 minutes the effect had dissipated,

Time: 7390.99

meaning the levels of dopamine had dropped down to baseline.

Time: 7393.97

And even though they didn't look at levels

Time: 7396.1

of baseline dopamine past that time point,

Time: 7399.19

the expectation based on everything we know

Time: 7401.64

about dopamine biology is that it would then drop

Time: 7404.19

below baseline due to the depletion

Time: 7407.28

of the readily reservable pool of dopamine vesicles

Time: 7409.93

that we talked about way back at the beginning

Time: 7411.71

of this episode.

Time: 7413.36

The nice thing about this study is it does show specificity

Time: 7415.8

of effect because ingestion of tryptophan

Time: 7418.32

did not increase dopamine instead it increased serotonin.

Time: 7422.35

So there's really specificity of these pathways

Time: 7424.3

that rule out any placebo type effects.

Time: 7428.21

I'm not suggesting that anybody, everybody

Time: 7431.16

increase their dopamine levels by way of tyrosine

Time: 7433.617

or Macuna Pruriens.

Time: 7435.617

For those of you that are seeking to increase

Time: 7437.5

your dopamine levels without prescription drugs,

Time: 7439.82

those are the most direct route to that.

Time: 7441.95

Of course, if you have a pre-existing

Time: 7444.14

dopaminergic condition,

Time: 7445.48

so schizophrenia or psychosis of any kind,

Time: 7448.68

bipolar, anxiety,

Time: 7451.61

things like Macuna Pruriens and L-tyrosine

Time: 7454.12

will not be good for you.

Time: 7455.91

And if you don't, you should just understand and expect

Time: 7459.99

that it's going to lead to an increase in dopamine.

Time: 7463.38

You'll certainly feel an elevated state

Time: 7465.19

for some of you that might be agitating,

Time: 7467.86

for some of you that might be really pleasureful,

Time: 7469.63

and then you will feel a crash afterwards.

Time: 7471.92

How deep is that crash will really depend on your biology

Time: 7475.16

and where your dopamine baseline began.

Time: 7478.35

So I personally am not a fan of using things

Time: 7481.07

like Macuna Pruriens at all for myself

Time: 7483.66

for the reasons I mentioned earlier,

Time: 7485.72

just too intense and too much of a crash.

Time: 7488.33

I do use L-tyrosine from time to time

Time: 7490.73

for enhancing focus and motivation,

Time: 7492.5

but I want to emphasize from time to time.

Time: 7495.23

So I might use it once a week, occasionally twice a week,

Time: 7498.52

but I've never been one to take L-tyrosine regularly

Time: 7501.37

in order to focus or train or do any kind of mental work.

Time: 7504.93

I just don't want to rely on any exogenous substance

Time: 7508.97

in order to get my dopamine circuits activated.

Time: 7512.36

And I don't want to experience the drop in dopamine

Time: 7515.16

that inevitably occurs some period of time afterwards.

Time: 7518.47

I should also mention things that can reduce

Time: 7521.378

your levels of baseline dopamine.

Time: 7523.98

One that is rarely discussed is melatonin.

Time: 7527.64

I have talked before on this podcast about melatonin,

Time: 7530.51

why I am not a fan of using melatonin

Time: 7533.25

in order to enhance sleep.

Time: 7535.14

It can help one get to sleep,

Time: 7536.46

but not stay asleep.

Time: 7537.69

Dr. Matt Walker sleep expert

Time: 7539.33

from University of California, Berkeley.

Time: 7541.43

I think I don't want to put words in his mouth,

Time: 7543.89

but in our discussion about melatonin on this podcast

Time: 7548.65

when Matt was a guest in his book and on other podcasts,

Time: 7551.43

Matt has generally stated that the use of melatonin

Time: 7554.69

except for treatment of jet lag

Time: 7556.62

is generally not a good idea.

Time: 7558.29

And I agree.

Time: 7559.77

I think that melatonin is not often thought about

Time: 7563.21

as impacting the dopamine pathway,

Time: 7564.84

but there's at least one study published in 2001

Time: 7568.72

first author is Nishiyama just as it sounds.

Time: 7572.55

It's spelled just as it sounds.

Time: 7574.51

Acute effects of melatonin administration

Time: 7576.47

on cardiovascular autonomic regulation in healthy men.

Time: 7579.05

So the study wasn't specifically about dopamine,

Time: 7581.84

but they looked at norepinephrine and dopamine levels,

Time: 7584.2

and they found a statistically significant decrease

Time: 7588.75

in dopamine 60 minutes after melatonin administration.

Time: 7592.73

I've talked before about how viewing bright lights

Time: 7596.09

between the hours of 10:00 p.m and 4:00 a.m

Time: 7598.21

has been shown in studies by Dr. Samer Hattar,

Time: 7600.54

David Bersin, excellent circadian scientists

Time: 7604.31

to reduce levels of dopamine for several days

Time: 7607.03

after that light exposure.

Time: 7608.32

So dim the lights at night,

Time: 7610.46

if you can avoid exogenous melatonin,

Time: 7613.72

meaning if you don't have to take melatonin

Time: 7616.29

and you can find a better alternative

Time: 7618.12

that would be a good idea

Time: 7618.98

if you want to maintain healthy levels of dopamine.

Time: 7621.73

Now, there is one compound that you are all familiar with,

Time: 7624.51

and you've probably actually taken without realizing it,

Time: 7627.58

that increases dopamine.

Time: 7628.81

And that's something called PEA for phenethylamine,

Time: 7633.02

technically beta phenethylamine.

Time: 7636.11

And PEA is found in various foods.

Time: 7639.21

Chocolate just happens to be one in enriched in PEA

Time: 7643.05

and can increase synaptic levels of dopamine.

Time: 7646.75

I personally take PEA from time to time

Time: 7649.65

as a focus and work aid in order to do intense

Time: 7654.44

bouts of work.

Time: 7655.43

Again, I don't do that too often.

Time: 7656.89

This might be once a week or once every two weeks.

Time: 7659.33

I might use it for training,

Time: 7660.42

but typically I don't,

Time: 7661.72

it's usually for mental work.

Time: 7663.08

And I will take 500 milligrams of PEA

Time: 7666.21

and I'll take 300 milligrams of Alpha-GPC.

Time: 7669.26

That's something that I personally do.

Time: 7670.84

That's what's right for me,

Time: 7671.88

it's within my margins of safety for my health.

Time: 7674.37

Again, you have to check with your doctor and decide

Time: 7676.52

what's right for you.

Time: 7677.96

It leads to a sharp but very transient increase in dopamine

Time: 7682.54

that lasts about 30 to 45 minutes.

Time: 7685.53

And at least in my system I've found to be much more

Time: 7689.41

regulated and kind of even than something like L-tyrosine

Time: 7693.31

and certainly much more regulated and even

Time: 7695.64

and lower dopamine release than something

Time: 7698.01

like Macuna Pruriens.

Time: 7700.24

One of the lesser talked about compounds that's out there,

Time: 7702.87

but that's gaining popularity for increasing dopamine

Time: 7706.56

and as a so-called nootropic is something

Time: 7708.76

called huperzine A.

Time: 7710.26

Huperzine A is a compound sold over the counter

Time: 7713.82

at least in the United States

Time: 7715.21

that can increase acetylcholine transmission,

Time: 7718.13

a different neuromodulator entirely.

Time: 7720.41

But what's interesting is that huperzine A somehow

Time: 7723.7

by way of interactions between the cholinergic system

Time: 7726.68

and the dopaminergic system leads to increases in dopamine

Time: 7731.06

in the medial prefrontal cortex and hippocampus.

Time: 7733.69

Hippocampus, of course, being an area of the brain

Time: 7735.65

associated with learning and memory.

Time: 7737.2

And prefrontal cortex being associated

Time: 7739.01

with the mesolimbic pathway, decision-making focus,

Time: 7741.48

et cetera.

Time: 7742.313

And so I think the reason why we're seeing an increase

Time: 7744.63

in popularity of companies including huperzine A

Time: 7747.847

and nootropic compounds is both for the cholinergic

Time: 7751.22

stimulating properties,

Time: 7752.17

but also for stimulating dopamine release.

Time: 7755.56

I personally have never tried huperzine A.

Time: 7757.55

You can go to www.examine.com or put huperzine A

Time: 7760.65

into PubMed if you'd like to search around

Time: 7762.71

and see some of the science behind it.

Time: 7764.4

Again, I'm not recommending anyone take these things.

Time: 7766.34

In fact, I recommend against anyone just diving in,

Time: 7768.51

and starting to consume things without gaining knowledge

Time: 7771.21

about how they function,

Time: 7772.49

whether or not they're right for you.

Time: 7773.97

But nonetheless, I think in the years to come,

Time: 7776.11

we are going to see a lot more of L-tyrosine,

Time: 7779.35

PEA phenethylamine and huperzine as a way of tapping

Time: 7783.33

into the dopaminergic and cholinergic circuits

Time: 7786.01

certainly along with things like Alpha-GPC

Time: 7788.39

as non-prescription, short-lived

Time: 7790.9

somewhat milder alternatives to things

Time: 7794.25

that really spike dopamine,

Time: 7796.38

things like Adderall, Ritalin, modafinil, armodafinil

Time: 7799.51

and similar.

Time: 7800.65

And I can't help but share with you one more result.

Time: 7802.94

It's not related to pharmacology.

Time: 7804.95

It's related to behaviors and social interactions.

Time: 7808.58

And that's the very interesting

Time: 7810.27

and I would say important finding

Time: 7812.36

that was made a few years ago by my colleague, Rob Malenka,

Time: 7815.403

who's in our department of psychiatry at Stanford,

Time: 7817.56

showing that oxytocin and social connection

Time: 7820.85

is actually directly stimulating the dopamine pathway.

Time: 7824.8

I think for many years,

Time: 7826.41

all of us including me would hear and thought

Time: 7830.32

that oxytocin was in the serotonergic pathway

Time: 7833.81

that it was about pair bonding,

Time: 7835.34

and it was about some of these neuromodulators

Time: 7837.43

that were more associated with things related

Time: 7840.12

to feeling good with what we have in the present moment.

Time: 7843.53

That's typically what we think of when we think

Time: 7845.02

of the opioid system or the serotonergic system.

Time: 7848.11

The dopamine system is really about seeking and reward,

Time: 7850.96

but in a paper published in 2017 in the journal Science,

Time: 7853.84

excellent journal.

Time: 7856.27

The papers titled gaining of social reward by oxytocin,

Time: 7860.07

excuse me, in the ventral tegmental area.

Time: 7862.61

You now know what the ventral tegmental area,

Time: 7864.17

it's that area of the mesolimbic pathway.

Time: 7866.32

What this paper essentially showed is that,

Time: 7868.58

oxytocin social connection and pair bonding itself

Time: 7873.16

triggers dopamine release.

Time: 7875.03

And as everyone read this result, we all realized,

Time: 7878.44

ah, this makes total sense that for the evolution

Time: 7881.92

of our species,

Time: 7882.753

indeed for any species where social connections

Time: 7885.18

are important,

Time: 7886.68

it's also important to go seek social connections.

Time: 7889.27

And so, while it's fun to think about pharmacology

Time: 7891.61

and underlying neurocircuitry and cold water baths

Time: 7894.94

and all these different things related to dopamine schedules

Time: 7898.53

and reward mechanisms and attaching reward to effort

Time: 7901.35

and all the various things that we've talked about today

Time: 7903.39

in terms of science and tools and protocols,

Time: 7906.73

I'd be remiss if I didn't include description of this result

Time: 7909.75

and just emphasize that social connections,

Time: 7913.78

close social connections in particular

Time: 7915.9

that evoke oxytocin release.

Time: 7917.38

So those are romantic type,

Time: 7919.21

those are parent-child type,

Time: 7921.25

those are friendship related,

Time: 7922.77

and those can even be just friends at a distance related,

Time: 7926.41

right?

Time: 7927.362

It doesn't actually require skin contact

Time: 7928.77

to get oxytocin release,

Time: 7931.37

but oxytocin release is central to stimulating

Time: 7934.11

the dopamine pathways.

Time: 7935.95

So the take home message there is quite simple,

Time: 7939.61

engage in pursue quality, healthy social interactions.

Time: 7944.11

I know I've covered a lot of material today.

Time: 7946.33

I've really tried hard to focus on things

Time: 7948.15

that lie directly within the dopamine pathway

Time: 7951.3

and circuitries,

Time: 7952.72

as well as things that directly stimulate

Time: 7954.7

those pathways and circuitries.

Time: 7957

What I haven't talked about are all the things

Time: 7959.6

that indirectly serve the dopamine pathways.

Time: 7962.92

And out there on the internet

Time: 7964.37

and indeed in the scientific literature,

Time: 7966.4

you will find for instance,

Time: 7967.67

that things like Maca root can increase dopamine.

Time: 7970.25

Things like the gut microbiome can influence dopamine.

Time: 7973.55

And indeed they can,

Time: 7974.95

but they do that through indirect mechanisms.

Time: 7977.07

By creating a environment,

Time: 7979.04

a milieu in which dopamine and dopamine circuits

Time: 7982.2

can flourish.

Time: 7983.47

Maca is a good example of that.

Time: 7984.84

It will reduce cortisol and through some indirect pathways

Time: 7988.2

related to cortisol can increase dopamine.

Time: 7990.89

But it's not a direct increase in dopamine.

Time: 7993.1

And so as a consequence, it's rather subtle

Time: 7995.21

compared to the various compounds and behaviors

Time: 7997.43

that I talked about today.

Time: 7998.78

Indeed cold water exposure leads to huge increases

Time: 8003.27

in dopamine as we talked about before,

Time: 8005.6

and very sustained ones at that.

Time: 8008.52

I realize in giving you a lot of information about science

Time: 8011.75

and mechanism all the way from psychological biological

Time: 8014.7

to circuitry and synaptic transmission,

Time: 8016.54

volumetric transmission and so forth,

Time: 8018.827

that it might seem overwhelming.

Time: 8020.77

The most important thing is to understand,

Time: 8022.59

or that these dopamine pathways

Time: 8023.84

really are under your control.

Time: 8025.93

And the locus of control resides in the fact

Time: 8029.07

that your previous levels of dopamine

Time: 8031.33

are influencing your levels of dopamine right now.

Time: 8034.1

And your current levels of dopamine

Time: 8035.6

and where you take them next,

Time: 8037.01

will influence your dopamine levels in the next days

Time: 8039.32

and weeks to come.

Time: 8040.35

So I hope both with the mechanisms that you now have in hand

Time: 8044.03

plus some of the tools to tap into the dopaminergic system,

Time: 8046.76

both behavioral, pharmacologic prescription,

Time: 8049.17

and non-prescription, et cetera,

Time: 8050.8

that you'll feel that you have more control

Time: 8052.22

over your dopamine system.

Time: 8053.49

And certainly that you have a better understanding

Time: 8055.53

of your dopamine system so that you can modulate

Time: 8058.43

and adjust your levels of dopamine in the ways

Time: 8060.34

that serve you best.

Time: 8062.11

If you're learning from and or enjoying this podcast,

Time: 8065.89

please subscribe to our YouTube channel.

Time: 8067.63

That's a terrific way to support us.

Time: 8069.51

In addition, please leave us a comment or a suggestion

Time: 8072.54

for a guest you'd like us to interview

Time: 8074.93

or a topic you'd like us to cover.

Time: 8076.84

In addition, please subscribe to us on Apple and Spotify.

Time: 8080.99

And on Apple, you have the opportunity

Time: 8082.56

to leave us up to a five-star review

Time: 8084.55

and to leave us a comment there as well.

Time: 8087.13

Please also check out the sponsors mentioned

Time: 8089

at the beginning of today's podcast.

Time: 8090.91

That's a terrific way to support us.

Time: 8092.97

In addition, if you'd like to support the Huberman Lab

Time: 8095.12

and research at Stanford on stress, stress mitigation

Time: 8098.35

and human performance,

Time: 8099.51

you can do that by going to,

Time: 8100.81

www.hubermanlab.stanford.edu/giving.

Time: 8104.86

And there you can make a tax deductible donation

Time: 8107.46

to the research in my laboratory.

Time: 8109.71

In addition, we have a Patreon.

Time: 8111.53

It's www.patreon.com/andrewhuberman.

Time: 8114.55

And there you can support the podcast at any level

Time: 8117.1

that you like.

Time: 8118.35

Today and on previous podcast episodes

Time: 8120.5

we talked a bit about supplements.

Time: 8122.4

Supplements certainly aren't necessary,

Time: 8124.35

but many people find them beneficial

Time: 8125.98

for things like adjusting their levels of dopamine

Time: 8127.97

or for other purposes.

Time: 8129.95

If you're going to use supplements,

Time: 8131.13

it's very important that the supplements you use

Time: 8133.32

be of very high quality,

Time: 8134.69

and that the quantity of ingredients

Time: 8136.76

that are on the label match

Time: 8138.32

what's actually in those bottles.

Time: 8139.61

For that reason, we've partnered with Thorne.

Time: 8141.3

T-H-O-R-N-E because Thorne has the highest levels

Time: 8144.41

of stringency with respect to quality

Time: 8146.61

and how much of each supplement they put in the products

Time: 8150.45

that they sell.

Time: 8151.283

If you'd like to see the supplements that I take,

Time: 8152.87

you can go to Thorne,

Time: 8153.703

www.T-H-O-R-N-E.com/u/huberman.

Time: 8158.03

And there, you can see what I take.

Time: 8159.3

You can get 20% off any of those supplements.

Time: 8162.04

And if you navigate into the Thorne site

Time: 8164.08

through that portal,

Time: 8165.314

then you can get 20% off any of the supplements

Time: 8168.07

that Thorne makes.

Time: 8169.1

If you're not already following us on Instagram

Time: 8171.21

at Huberman Lab, please do so.

Time: 8172.77

There I teach neuroscience tools and information.

Time: 8176.01

Oftentimes, it's tools and information

Time: 8177.62

that I don't cover on the podcast.

Time: 8179.7

We're also on Twitter, also at Huberman Lab.

Time: 8182.31

And last but certainly not least,

Time: 8184.54

thank you for your interest in science.

Time: 8186.26

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