The fact that dopamine amplifies some signals and mutes others in the "receptor sites" suggests that it is part of the process of reinforcement in the brain.
Dopamine is a neurotransmitter, one of those synthetic substances that is in charge of transmitting signals in the middle of the nerve cells (neurons) of the brain. Not very many neurons really make dopamine. A few, in a piece of the cerebrum called the substantia nigra, are the phones that kick the bucket amid Parkinsons malady. The elements of others, situated in a piece of the cerebrum called the ventral tegmental region (VTA), are less very much characterized and are the significant wellspring of the previously mentioned debate (and the focal point of this post). At the point when dopamine neurons wind up actuated, they discharge dopamine.