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- Dopamine: What It Is, Function, Deficiency how to boost it
What Is Dopamine? Dopamine is a hormone and a type of neurotransmitter, or chemical messenger, made in your brain Your nervous system uses it to send messages between nerve cells
- 10 Best Ways to Increase Dopamine Levels Naturally - Healthline
Dopamine is an important chemical messenger involved in reward, motivation, memory, attention, and even regulation of body movements Here are the top 10 ways to increase your dopamine levels
- What Is Dopamine In The Brain - Simply Psychology
Dopamine is a neurotransmitter in the brain associated with pleasure, reward, motivation, and motor control In psychology, it's linked to feelings of gratification and is implicated in mood disorders, addiction, and certain behaviors when its levels are imbalanced
- How Dopamine Influences Your Mental Health - Verywell Mind
Dopamine is linked to feelings of motivation and reward in the brain Low dopamine levels can cause anxiety, sleeping problems, and mood swings Too much dopamine can make you feel energetic or impulsive It seems like dopamine is on everyone's mind these days, literally and figuratively
- What we get wrong about dopamine - BBC
Sometimes dubbed the 'pleasure chemical', dopamine is often wildly misunderstood Nikolay Kukushkin delves into what the much-discussed neurotransmitter really does to our brains
- Dopamine: The Brain Chemical Behind Motivation, Pleasure, and Addiction
Often called the “feel-good” neurotransmitter, dopamine plays a critical role in shaping how we think, move, and experience the world It is involved in a vast range of mental and physical processes—from generating motivation and pleasure to regulating movement and learning
- Dopamine | Description, Function, Deficiency, Facts | Britannica
dopamine, a nitrogen-containing organic compound that acts as a neurotransmitter in the brain, influencing various neural pathways, including those involved in reward, motivation, and movement Dopamine is a member of both the catecholamine and the phenethylamine families
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