Sometimes the hardest part of doing an unpleasant task is simply getting started – typing the first word of a long report, lifting the dirty dish atop an overfilled sink, or removing the clothes from an unused exercise machine. The obstacle isn’t necessarily a lack of interest in completing the task, but the brain’s resistance to taking the first step.

Now, scientists may have identified the neural circuit behind this resistance, and a way to ease it. In a study published today in Current Biology, researchers describe a pathway in the brain that seems to act as a ‘motivation brake’, dampening the drive to begin a task. When the team selectively suppressed this circuit in macaque monkeys, goal-directed behaviour rebounded.

Previous work on task initiation has implicated a neural circuit connecting two parts of the brain known as the ventral striatum and ventral pallidum[…] But attempts to isolate the circuit’s role have fallen short[…] In the new study, Amemori and his team used a more precise approach. They first trained two male macaque monkeys to perform two decision-making tasks. In one, completion earned a water reward; in the other, the reward was paired with an unpleasant puff of air to the face. Each trial required the monkeys to initiate the task by fixing their gaze on a central spot on a screen until the reward-punishment offer appeared. This allowed the researchers to measure motivation by how often the monkeys failed to begin.

Not surprisingly, monkeys were more hesitant when the possibility of punishment loomed. But that changed when the team used a targeted genetic technique to suppress signalling from the ventral striatum to the ventral pallidum. Although the suppression had little effect on the monkeys’ behaviour during the reward-only trials, it made them significantly more willing to start in the face of a potentially unpleasant outcome. The suppression did not, however, alter how the animals weighed reward against punishment.

If confirmed in humans, the findings could shift how clinicians approach one of depression’s most debilitating symptoms. Treatments often aim to restore enjoyment or reduce anxiety, yet many patients continue to struggle to start simple tasks. By pinpointing a circuit that selectively dampens motivation in the face of discomfort, the study opens the door to therapies aimed at lowering that barrier.

Note that the authors acknowledged that this is a smaller study that was done on only two male monkeys, so future studies should include females, find specific cell types, and find biochemical pathways across the signaling circuit

The paper (should be open access): https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2025.12.035

    • Sims@lemmy.ml
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      2 months ago

      Liar… ;) Your circuit already knows: 1. that the article is certainly overly worded with complex terms and no fucking pictures or video to ease the cognitive load. 2. that it is SO much easier to just get an overall opinion from the comment section, and 3. maybe a few well-deserved feel-good likes will come your way…

      Your circuit and environment never gave you a chance, buddy ;-P

  • TrackinDaKraken@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    I’ve become so cynical in recent years, I find myself looking for the downside, and especially how this could be abused by the rich people who sell these “therapies”.

    No drug is developed under capitalism without the end goal of profit. The filthy rich have no morals. The power of the product will be abused. That is why we so rarely get pharmaceutical cures, only maintenance. If they provide an actual cure, they can’t sell a lifetime subscription to the product.

    I could expand and go on, especially regarding the current push for longevity drugs (imagine how that could be abused!), but you get the jist.

  • i_love_FFT@jlai.lu
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    2 months ago

    What is the effect of lumping “discomfort” and “punishment” together?

    From the abstract, it seems the procedure makes the money more willing to ignore the potential punishment, but they express this research as something on the path to test depression.

    • Ach@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      It pains me that the only way I can refute this is that it probably wouldn’t be worth the money to neurologically enslave soldiers since we’re pretty fucking close to just having tech that kills way more people for less money.

      • ᓚᘏᗢ@piefed.social
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        2 months ago

        It’ll still need to be tested on humans though.

        And if it this motivational compliance ‘treatment’ works and is cheap enough, why wouldn’t armies and prison/slave labour use it, they’ll always need grunts to do jobs no one else wants to.

  • HylicManoeuvre@mander.xyz
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    2 months ago

    What a shitty clickbait article, “this neural circuit” mentioning it not even once by name.

    It’s the VS-VP pathway btw

    • neatchee@piefed.social
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      2 months ago

      Previous work on task initiation has implicated a neural circuit connecting two parts of the brain known as the ventral striatum and ventral pallidum

      yes they did. Ctrl-F helps

      EDIT: shame that 11 people upvoted this without verifying the accusation when it’s so easy and even shows in the OP summary

    • 0x0@infosec.pub
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      2 months ago

      This was a great way for you to prove that you don’t know what VS or VP stands for lmao

    • Passerby6497@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      Previous work on task initiation has implicated a neural circuit connecting two parts of the brain known as the ventral striatum and ventral pallidum[…] But attempts to isolate the circuit’s role have fallen short[…] In the new study, Amemori and his team used a more precise approach.

      What a shitty clickbait article, “this neural circuit” mentioning it not even once by name.

      It’s the VS-VP pathway btw

      But ‘VS-VP pathway’ could mean anything!!1!

    • ZephyrXero@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      Imagine that, wanting to make the article more accessible to people who aren’t intimately familiar with such terms