Publications by authors named "Maike Hollandt"

Article Synopsis
  • Anxiety disorders impact brain connectivity, but how this varies among different types of anxiety disorders (like panic disorder and social anxiety disorder) isn't fully understood due to limited studies.
  • Researchers examined the brain connectivity of 439 anxiety disorder patients and 105 healthy controls using resting-state fMRI, finding notable differences in connectivity patterns, especially in panic disorder and agoraphobia patients.
  • The study revealed that panic disorder patients had increased connectivity in brain regions linked to emotion regulation, unlike those with social anxiety disorder or specific phobia, suggesting the potential for personalized treatment approaches based on these neurological differences.
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Data-based predictions of individual Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) treatment response are a fundamental step towards precision medicine. Past studies demonstrated only moderate prediction accuracy (i.e.

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Article Synopsis
  • Exposure-based cognitive-behavioral therapy has been shown to effectively treat anxiety disorders, but its impact on daily behaviors like social and physical activity had not been widely researched.
  • In a study involving 126 participants, including individuals with anxiety disorders and healthy controls, researchers tracked activities, social interactions, mood, and physical symptoms before, during, and after therapy using smartphones and motion sensors.
  • The findings revealed that therapy led to improvements in mood, social interactions, and physical activity levels, particularly in patients with initial higher depression scores, suggesting that this treatment could enhance overall daily functioning and reduce the risk of relapse.*
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Background: As psychotherapy involves at least two individuals, it is essential to include the interaction perspective research. During interaction, synchrony, i.e.

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It is hypothesized that the ability to discriminate between threat and safety is impaired in individuals with high dispositional negativity, resulting in maladaptive behavior. A large body of research investigated differential learning during fear conditioning and extinction protocols depending on individual differences in intolerance of uncertainty (IU) and trait anxiety (TA), two closely-related dimensions of dispositional negativity, with heterogenous results. These might be due to varying degrees of induced threat/safety uncertainty.

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Background And Objectives: Basic research suggest behavioral strategies for interferencing the reconsolidation of fear memories to be a promising approach in reducing clinical fears. However, first clinical studies revealed mixed results highlighting the need to identify boundary conditions. We experimentally tested the specific hypothesis that post-retrieval threat exposure prevents context renewal usually observed in protocols without fear memory reactivation.

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Article Synopsis
  • A multicenter randomized controlled trial was conducted to compare two types of exposure therapy for anxiety disorders: temporally intensified exposure (PeEx-I) and standard exposure (PeEx-S), each involving 12 sessions over 100 minutes.
  • Both therapies showed significant reductions in anxiety symptoms, with similar effectiveness at post-treatment and follow-up, but PeEx-I led to a faster response time—32% quicker than PeEx-S.
  • PeEx-I also resulted in less disability and improved quality of life at follow-up, while maintaining lower dropout rates and not increasing relapse rates, suggesting it may be a more effective approach.
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Adapting threat-related memories towards changing environments is a fundamental ability of organisms. One central process of fear reduction is suggested to be extinction learning, experimentally modeled by extinction training that is repeated exposure to a previously conditioned stimulus (CS) without providing the expected negative consequence (unconditioned stimulus, US). Although extinction training is well investigated, evidence regarding process-related changes in neural activation over time is still missing.

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Extinction learning is suggested to be a central mechanism during exposure-based cognitive behavioral psychotherapy. A positive association between the patients' pretreatment extinction learning performance and treatment outcome would corroborate the hypothesis. Indeed, there is first correlational evidence between reduced extinction learning and therapy efficacy.

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Exposure-based psychological interventions currently represent the empirically best established first line form of cognitive-behavioural therapy for all types of anxiety disorders. Although shown to be highly effective in both randomized clinical and other studies, there are important deficits: (1) the core mechanisms of action are still under debate, (2) it is not known whether such treatments work equally well in all forms of anxiety disorders, including comorbid diagnoses like depression, (3) it is not known whether an intensified treatment with more frequent sessions in a shorter period of time provides better outcome than distributed sessions over longer time intervals. This paper reports the methods and design of a large-scale multicentre randomized clinical trial (RCT) involving up to 700 patients designed to answer these questions.

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