Unexpected rewards boost movement speed within 220 milliseconds, revealing how dopamine-linked reward prediction shapes human motion and offering a potential biomarker for brain disorders.
11monon MSN
Scrolling on social media for quick laughs? Expert explains the dark side of instant dopamine rush
Ever laughed so hard from a reel that you had to take a moment to catch your breath? Enthusiastically, you scroll to the next latest cat brain rot, only to laugh even more hysterically? That feel-good ...
To cite a few of many examples: A Washington Post podcast declared that “dopamine surges” explain why “you can’t stop scrolling, even though you know you should.” The Guardian reported that Silicon ...
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