How Brain Chemicals Affect Your Thoughts, Feelings, and Actions
🧠 How Brain Chemicals Affect Your Thoughts, Feelings, and Actions
Your brain and body are constantly being influenced by natural chemicals. These neurotransmitters and hormones are like messengers — they help you feel things, focus your thoughts, and decide how to act. Here's what the main ones do:
💭 Thoughts & Focus
- Dopamine: Your brain’s “goal getter.” It gives you the drive to chase rewards, learn new things, and build habits.
- Acetylcholine (not in the table but worth noting): Helps you stay focused and remember stuff.
💓 Feelings & Mood
- Serotonin: Helps you feel stable and calm. Low levels are linked to depression and anxiety.
- Cortisol: The stress chemical. It helps you handle tough situations, but too much over time can wear you down emotionally.
- Oxytocin: The “bonding” hormone. It kicks in when you feel close to someone or are caring for others.
🧘♀️ Calm & Safety
- GABA: Your brain’s “brake pedal.” It slows things down, helps you relax, and fights anxiety.
- Melatonin: Signals your body that it’s time to sleep. It rises at night to make you drowsy.
⚡ Action & Drive
- Norepinephrine: Gives you that alert, on-edge feeling when something important is happening — like during a test or emergency.
- Testosterone: Fuels confidence, assertiveness, and competition. Everyone has it (not just men), but levels vary.
🧩 What It All Means
Your feelings and actions aren’t random. They’re shaped by this mix of chemicals working together. For example:
- Feeling super focused and motivated? Likely high dopamine and norepinephrine.
- Calm and content? Your GABA and serotonin are doing their job.
- Stressed or anxious? Maybe your cortisol is too high or GABA too low.
- Struggling to sleep? Could be a melatonin issue.
✅ Bottom Line
Your brain chemistry plays a huge role in:
- How you feel
- What you pay attention to
- How you respond to life
Understanding these chemicals can help you build better habits, manage your emotions, and even improve your mental health.
Brain Chemicals
Dopamine
Reward, motivation
Craving, habit, reinforcement learning
Reward, motivation
Craving, habit, reinforcement learning
Serotonin
Mood regulation
Calm, satisfaction, reduced reactivity
Mood regulation
Calm, satisfaction, reduced reactivity
Norepinephrine
Alertness, arousal
Vigilance, focus, fight-or-flight
Alertness, arousal
Vigilance, focus, fight-or-flight
GABA
Inhibition, calming
Relaxation, anti-anxiety
Inhibition, calming
Relaxation, anti-anxiety
Glutamate
Excitation, memory
Learning, neural growth
Excitation, memory
Learning, neural growth
Cortisol
Stress response
Anxiety, burnout, hypervigilance
Stress response
Anxiety, burnout, hypervigilance
Oxytocin
Social bonding
Empathy, trust, prosocial behavior
Social bonding
Empathy, trust, prosocial behavior
Testosterone
Assertiveness, drive
Confidence, risk-taking, competition
Assertiveness, drive
Confidence, risk-taking, competition
Estrogen
Emotional stability
Mood modulation, stress resilience
Emotional stability
Mood modulation, stress resilience
Melatonin
Sleep regulation
Drowsiness, circadian rhythm entrainment
Sleep regulation
Drowsiness, circadian rhythm entrainment
🔹 Dopamine
- Function: Reward, motivation, reinforcement learning, movement
- Where: Mesolimbic pathway (reward), nigrostriatal pathway (motor control)
- Evidence:
- Central to incentive salience (Berridge & Robinson, 1998)
- Altered in Parkinson’s disease (low dopamine) and addiction (highly dysregulated reward prediction)
- Key Effect: Drives goal pursuit, habit formation, reinforcement
🔹 Serotonin (5-HT)
- Function: Mood regulation, social behavior, impulse control, sleep
- Where: Produced in the raphe nuclei, acts widely in the brain
- Evidence:
- SSRIs improve depressive symptoms by enhancing synaptic serotonin (Cipriani et al., 2018, Lancet)
- Involved in emotion regulation and aggression inhibition (Carver et al., 2008)
- Key Effect: Regulates emotional balance and impulse inhibition
🔹 Norepinephrine (Noradrenaline)
- Function: Alertness, attention, arousal, fight-or-flight
- Where: Locus coeruleus origin, widespread cortical influence
- Evidence:
- Key in stress response and cognitive readiness (Arnsten, 2009)
- Altered norepinephrine linked to PTSD, ADHD
- Key Effect: Increases arousal, vigilance, and stress reactivity
🔹 GABA (Gamma-Aminobutyric Acid)
- Function: Brain’s primary inhibitory neurotransmitter
- Where: Found throughout cortex, basal ganglia, cerebellum
- Evidence:
- GABAergic drugs (e.g., benzodiazepines) reduce anxiety (Lydiard, 2003)
- Deficits linked to epilepsy, panic disorder, insomnia
- Key Effect: Calms overactive neural circuits, reduces anxiety
🔹 Glutamate
- Function: Brain’s main excitatory neurotransmitter; essential for learning and memory
- Where: Widespread in CNS, especially hippocampus
- Evidence:
- Synaptic plasticity via NMDA/AMPA receptors (Malenka & Bear, 2004)
- Excess = neurotoxicity in stroke, ALS, Alzheimer’s
- Key Effect: Increases signal strength, critical for learning
🔹 Acetylcholine
- Function: Learning, attention, memory, REM sleep
- Where: Basal forebrain and brainstem projections to cortex and hippocampus
- Evidence:
- Disruption linked to Alzheimer’s disease
- Nicotine enhances cholinergic transmission, improving attention short term
- Key Effect: Supports focused attention and encoding new information
🧬 HORMONES (Long-Term Systemic Regulators)
Hormones act more slowly but influence broader patterns like stress response, mood, sleep, bonding, and risk-taking.
🔹 Cortisol
- Function: Primary stress hormone, mobilizes glucose for energy
- Where: Secreted by adrenal glands under control of HPA axis
- Evidence:
- Chronic elevation linked to depression, insomnia, cognitive decline (McEwen, 1998)
- Diurnal cortisol rhythm dysregulated in PTSD and MDD
- Key Effect: Triggers energy release, increases alertness under threat
🔹 Adrenaline (Epinephrine)
- Function: Acute fight-or-flight hormone
- Where: Secreted by adrenal medulla
- Evidence:
- Rapidly increases heart rate and respiration during stress
- Acts alongside norepinephrine in acute stress states (Sapolsky, 2004)
- Key Effect: Prepares body for immediate action
🔹 Oxytocin
- Function: Bonding, empathy, trust, social affiliation
- Where: Synthesized in hypothalamus, released by posterior pituitary
- Evidence:
- Facilitates pair bonding and parental behavior in mammals (Feldman, 2012)
- Intranasal oxytocin enhances emotion recognition in some studies
- Key Effect: Enhances social connection and emotional trust
🔹 Testosterone
- Function: Aggression, competitiveness, dominance, libido
- Where: Gonads (testes, ovaries), regulated by hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal axis
- Evidence:
- Related to dominance motivation, not just aggression (Carré & Olmstead, 2015)
- Sensitive to contextual factors like status threat
- Key Effect: Influences social dominance and risk preferences
🔹 Estrogen & Progesterone
- Function: Emotional regulation, cognitive flexibility, bonding
- Where: Ovaries; modulate serotonergic, dopaminergic systems
- Evidence:
- Estrogen modulates hippocampal plasticity (Woolley, 1998)
- Fluctuations tied to perimenopausal mood changes, PMDD
- Key Effect: Influence mood stability, emotional sensitivity
🔹 Melatonin
- Function: Regulates circadian rhythms and sleep
- Where: Pineal gland, secreted in darkness
- Evidence:
- Increases sleep onset and improves sleep quality
- Disturbed in insomnia, SAD, shift work disorder
- Key Effect: Promotes sleep and synchronizes biological clock
Sources & Further Reading
- McEwen BS (1998). “Stress, adaptation, and disease.” Annals of the NY Academy of Sciences.
- Berridge KC & Robinson TE (1998). “What is the role of dopamine in reward?” Brain Research Reviews.
- Arnsten AFT (2009). “Stress signaling pathways that impair prefrontal cortex structure and function.” Nature Reviews Neuroscience.
- Sapolsky RM (2004). Why Zebras Don’t Get Ulcers.
- Feldman R (2012). “Oxytocin and social affiliation.” Hormones and Behavior.
- Cipriani A et al. (2018). “Comparative efficacy and acceptability of 21 antidepressant drugs.” The Lancet.
- Carver CS, Johnson SL, Joormann J (2008). “Serotonergic function, two-mode models of self-regulation.” Psychological Bulletin.