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The Handbook of Dopamine

  • 1st Edition, Volume 32 - August 5, 2025
  • Latest edition
  • Editors: Stephanie J. Cragg, Mark Walton
  • Language: English

The Handbook of Dopamine captures current understanding of dopamine biology in the brain, including anatomical organization of dopamine neurons, their molecular and genetic divers… Read more

Description

The Handbook of Dopamine captures current understanding of dopamine biology in the brain, including anatomical organization of dopamine neurons, their molecular and genetic diversity, synaptic and circuit connectivity, receptor function and signalling, through to diverse roles in behaviors and finally, dysfunction in disease. This volume compiles a comprehensive set of perspectives from a large number of leading scientists working in dopamine research. The volume describes the current state-of-the-field, summarizing knowledge that has been transformed in the last decade through the advent and application of sophisticated new technologies.

Key features

  • Offers up-to-date review of dopamine biology across fields
  • Explores the function and regulation of dopamine neurons in healthy behavior and also dysfunction in disease
  • Includes historical and future perspectives in the field of dopamine research

Readership

Researchers in neuroscience

Table of contents

Section 1: Development, diversity, and connectivity

1. The dopamine system from an evolutionary perspective
Sten Grillner and Brita Robertson

2. Molecular heterogeneity of midbrain dopamine neurons
Rajeshwar Awatramani and Jean-Francois Poulin

3. Building an action circuit with nigrostriatal dopaminergic neurons and striatonigral neurons
Huaibin Cai and Charles Gerfen

4. Anatomy of dopamine neuron projections: Axonal arbors, varicosities, and synapses
Louis-Eric Trudeau and Raphaelle Denis

5. Dopamine neuron connectomes: Inputs and outputs
Mitsuko Watabe-Uchida and Ryunosuke Amo
Section 2: Dopamine neuron physiology and dopamine release regulation

6. Electrical patterns of activity in dopamine midbrain neurons in vivo
Jochen Roeper, Birgit Liss, Zayd Khaliq, and Carmen C. Canavier

7. Computational modeling of midbrain dopamine neurons
Carmen C. Canavier, Christopher Knowlton, Birgit Liss, Zayd Khaliq, and Jochen Roeper

8. Axonal dopamine release: Molecular mechanisms
Pascal S. Kaeser

9. Somatodendritic dopamine release
Margaret E. Rice, Takuya Hikima, Paul Witkovsky, and Jyoti C. Patel

10. Axonal regulation of dopamine transmission by striatal neuromodulators
Stephanie J. Cragg, David Sulzer, and Kathryn Todd

11. Dopamine transporters and the nanoscale organization of the dopamine axon
Aske Lykke Ejdrup, Matthew Lycas, Freja Herborg, and Ulrik Gether

12. Beyond dopamine: Cotransmission by dopamine neurons
Riccardo Melani and Nicolas X. Tritsch
Section 3: Dopamine signalling: Receptors, postsynaptic integration and plasticity

13. Unveiling activation mechanisms and intrinsic divergence of dopamine receptors based on experimentally determined structures
Sung Joon Won, Kuo Hao Lee, and Lei Shi

14. Dopamine receptor drugs and their applications
J. Robert Lane and Alessandro Bonifazi

15. Postsynaptic integration and plasticity in the striatum
Sho Yagishita

16. Dopamine signaling roles in the extrastriatal basal ganglia
Jerome Baufreton

17. Postsynaptic integration and plasticity in the prefrontal cortex
Paul G. Anastasiades, Guillermo Gonzalez-Burgos, and Wen-Jun Gao
Section 4: Dopamine mechanisms of learning and reinforcement

18. The dopamine reward prediction error signal
Wolfram Schultz

19. Diversity of encoding: Reward to aversion
Naoshige Uchida, Mitsuko Watabe-Uchida, and Isobel Green

20. Dopamine beyond temporal-difference reinforcement learning
Kaue Machado Costa and Geoffrey Schoenbaum

21. Habits and dopamine
Jay Bertran-Gonzalez and Bernard W. Balleine

22. Dopamine for performance evaluation—Insights from songbirds
Vikram Gadagkar

23. Striking parallels between the dopaminergic systems of flies and mammals
Kristijan D. Jovanoski and Scott Waddell

24. Reinforcement learning with dopamine: A convergence of natural and artificial intelligence
Paul Masset and Samuel J. Gershman
Section 5: Dopamine function in motivated behavior

25. Dopamine and the temporal control of behavior
Joseph Paton

26. Volition and vigor
Joshua T. Dudman and Luke T. Coddington

27. Why the new definition of “anhedonia” misses the mark on dopamine function: Studies of effort-based aspects of motivation and selection of voluntary physical activity
John D. Salamone and Merce Correa

28. Exploration and behavioral variability
Philippe Faure

29. Role of dopamine in adaptively tuning motivational bias to the current environment
Roshan Cools, Hanneke E.M. Den Ouden, and Egbert Hartstra

30. Sex differences in dopamine systems involved in motivation and reward
Christopher A. Turner, Noah Bass, Ivette L. Gonzalez, and Jill B. Becker

31. Dopamine and appetite
Camila Saenz and Stephanie L. Borgland
Section 6: Dopamine dysregulation: From neurology to psychiatry

32. Neuronal design and determinants of selective neuronal vulnerability of dopaminergic neurons in Parkinson’s disease
Enrico Zampese, James Moran, and D. James Surmeier

33. Understanding human dopamine neuron biology in Parkinson’s patient cells
Gizem Onal, Maria Claudia Caiazza, Parnaz Sharifi, Iona Thomas-Wright, Johanna L. Hoffmann, Rachel Heon-Roberts, and Richard Wade-Martins

34. Dopamine replacement for Parkinson’s disease: Clinical approaches and experimental
underpinnings
M. Angela Cenci, Kristina Rosqvist, and Per Odin

35. Dopamine modulation of synaptic transmission in drug addiction
Maria Reva and Christian L €Uscher

36. Molecular reprogramming of D1 and D2 dopaminoceptive medium spiny neurons in substance use disorder
Caleb J. Browne and Eric J. Nestler

37. Human dopamine systems in addiction disorders
Nora D. Volkow and Peter Manza

38. Apathy and impulsivity in neurological and psychiatric disorders
Youssuf Saleh and Masud Husain

39. Dopamine dysfunction in psychosis
Robert A. Mccutcheon and Chambrez-Zita Zauchenberger

40. Dopamine systems in impulsive–compulsive behavior
Trevor W. Robbins and Jeffrey W. Dalley

Product details

  • Edition: 1
  • Latest edition
  • Volume: 32
  • Published: August 28, 2025
  • Language: English

About the editors

SC

Stephanie J. Cragg

Dr. Stephanie Cragg is a professor of neuroscience at Oxford University. She runs a laboratory on understanding dopamine neurotransmission.

Affiliations and expertise
Professor of Neuroscience, Oxford University, UK

MW

Mark Walton

Dr. Mark Walton is currently a professor of behavioral neuroscience at Oxford University. His laboratory, the Walton Lab, researches how value is learned and influences decision making within defined brain systems.
Affiliations and expertise
Professor of Behavioral Neuroscience, Oxford University, UK

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