264 results match your criteria: "Department of Biological and Clinical Psychology[Affiliation]"

Background: Hyperhidrosis (excessive sweating, OMIM %114110) is a complex disorder with multifactorial causes. Emotional strains and social stress increase symptoms and lead to a vicious circle. Previously, we showed significantly higher depression scores, and normal cortisol awakening responses in patients with primary focal hyperhidrosis (PFH).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Patients suffering from social anxiety disorder (SAD) fear social interaction and evaluation, which severely undermines their everyday life. There is evidence of increased prosocial behavior after acute social stress exposure in healthy individuals, which may be interpreted as stress-regulating " behavior. In a randomized controlled trial, we measured empathic abilities in a first diagnostic session.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

ENTREN-F family-system based intervention for managing childhood obesity: Study protocol for a randomized controlled trial at primary care.

Obes Res Clin Pract

September 2022

Department of Biological and Health Psychology, Faculty of Psychology (Department of Biological and Clinical Psychology), Autonomous University of Madrid, Spain. Electronic address:

Background: Pediatric obesity is a primary public health concern, and designing effective programs for managing it is of the utmost importance. The objective of this study was to describe the protocol study of a three-arm, parallel, randomized controlled trial aimed at assessing the efficacy of a family-system-based intervention ("ENTREN-F" program) for managing childhood obesity, compared to the "ENTREN" program (no "F" - without specific family-system-based workshop) and a control group (behavioral monitoring).

Methods/design: The ENTREN-F program was a multicomponent family-system-based intervention carried out by a multidisciplinary team in the primary health care setting.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Parental socialization may influence the development of children's autonomic nervous system (ANS), a key stress-response system. However, to date no quantitative synthesis of the literature linking parenting and child ANS physiology has been conducted. To address this gap, we conducted a pre-registered meta-analysis.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Although body image disturbances play a central role in the development, maintenance and relapse of binge eating disorder (BED), studies investigating the neural basis underlying body processing in BED are still missing. To address this gap, we conducted a preregistered (German Clinical Trials Register [Deutsches Register Klinischer Studien; DRKS], Registration DRKS00008107) combined functional magnetic resonance (fMRI)/eye tracking study in which 38 women with BED and 22 healthy controls weight-matched for overall equivalence processed images of their own bodies, an unfamiliar weight-matched body, and visually matched nonbody control stimuli while performing a one-back task. Women with BED responded with higher left fusiform body area (FBA) activity than controls during body image processing.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: The study aimed to investigate the link between burnout symptoms and prosocial behaviour, as well as the role of acute stress and vagally-mediated heart rate variability (vmHRV) on this association.

Methods: Seventy men were randomly assigned to either the stress or the control condition of the Trier Social Stress Test for Groups (TSST-G). Prosocial behaviour was assessed via a social decision-making paradigm during the respective TSST-G condition.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Here, we tested the feasibility of a new paradigm developed to investigate the mechanisms of exposure-therapy. The protocol was previously developed for the use with adults and optimized to closely model the mechanisms underlying exposure, i.e.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Interoception in preschoolers: New insights into its assessment and relations to emotion regulation and stress.

Biol Psychol

October 2021

Department of Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy for Children and Adolescents, University of Trier, Trier, Germany. Electronic address:

Interoception may play an important role for emotion regulation and stress, thereby affecting mental health in children and adults. Yet, little is known on interoception in preschool children. Therefore, we investigated interoceptive accuracy using the adapted Jumping Jack Paradigm (JJP) and its relationship with emotion regulation and stress.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Establishment of Emotional Memories Is Mediated by Vagal Nerve Activation: Evidence from Noninvasive taVNS.

J Neurosci

September 2021

Department of Biological Psychology and Affective Science, Faculty of Human Sciences, University of Potsdam, 14476, Potsdam, Germany

Emotional memories are better remembered than neutral ones, but the mechanisms leading to this memory bias are not well understood in humans yet. Based on animal research, it is suggested that the memory-enhancing effect of emotion is based on central noradrenergic release, which is triggered by afferent vagal nerve activation. To test the causal link between vagus nerve activation and emotional memory in humans, we applied continuous noninvasive transcutaneous auricular vagus nerve stimulation (taVNS) during exposure to emotional arousing and neutral scenes and tested subsequent, long-term recognition memory after 1 week.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Body odours and their importance for human chemical communication, e.g., in the mother-child relationship, are an increasing focus of recent research.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The modulation of social behavior and empathy via oral contraceptives and female sex hormones.

Psychoneuroendocrinology

September 2021

Department of Biological and Clinical Psychology, University of Trier, D54290 Trier, Germany. Electronic address:

Oral contraceptives (OC) and endogenous female sex hormones in naturally cycling women (NC) are related to a wide range of psychological variables (eg, cognition and affect). Little research on social behavior has been done. One study documented a tendency towards more prosocial behavior in NC than OC women, but the underlying neuroendocrine mechanisms remain unknown.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The influence of stress on distractor-response bindings.

Stress

November 2021

Department of Cognitive Psychology, University of Trier, Trier, Germany.

Stimuli and responses that occur in close temporal contiguity are bound to each other and stored in short-term episodic traces or event files. A repetition of any of the features within an event file results in the retrieval of the entire event file and can influence responding. Along with task-relevant features, event files also contain task-irrelevant features, which are also bound to responses - distractor-response binding.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Further developments of exposure-based therapy (EBT) require more knowledge about transfer of treatment to non-trained everyday contexts. However, little is known about transfer effects of EBT. Using a standardized EBT protocol in 275 patients with panic disorder and agoraphobia we investigated the transfer of EBT to a highly standardized context during a Behavioral Avoidance Test (BAT; being entrapped in a small and dark test chamber) and not part of the exposure sessions.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A growing body of research aims at solving what is often referred to as the in olfactory perception. Although computational efforts have made it possible to predict perceptual impressions from the physicochemical space of odors, studies with large psychophysical datasets from non-experts remain scarce. Following previous approaches, we developed a physicochemical odor space using 4094 molecular descriptors of 1389 odor molecules.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Gaze behavior is associated with the cortisol response to acute psychosocial stress in the virtual TSST.

J Neural Transm (Vienna)

September 2021

Department of Biological and Clinical Psychology, University of Trier, Johanniterufer 15, 54290, Trier, Germany.

Background: The Trier Social Stress Test (TSST) is a reliable tool for psychobiological stress induction. Because of its socio-evaluative nature, it has been useful for investigating gaze behavior. It has been shown that healthy people avoid looking toward faces when under stress, a finding that corroborates studies demonstrating avoidance of eye contact in social anxiety disorder.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We examined the effect of psychosocial stress on electrophysiological markers of novelty and deviance processing, the N2 and P300, as well as sex differences therein. Participants underwent the Trier Social Stress Test (TSST) or a control procedure, followed by an oddball paradigm. A physiological stress response was induced in both sexes in the TSST condition.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Theoretically, panic disorder and agoraphobia pathology can be conceptualized as a cascade of dynamically changing defensive responses to threat cues from inside the body. Guided by this trans-diagnostic model we tested the interaction between defensive activation and vagal control as a marker of prefrontal inhibition of subcortical defensive activation. We investigated ultra-short-term changes of vagally controlled high frequency heart rate variability (HRV) during a standardized threat challenge (entrapment) in n = 232 patients with panic disorder and agoraphobia, and its interaction with various indices of defensive activation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Looking at the bigger picture: Cortical volume, thickness and surface area characteristics in borderline personality disorder with and without posttraumatic stress disorder.

Psychiatry Res Neuroimaging

May 2021

Department of Biological and Clinical Psychology, University of Trier, Johanniterufer 15, 54290 Trier, Germany; Institute of Psychobiology, University of Trier, Trier, Germany. Electronic address:

Borderline personality disorder (BPD) is a severe psychiatric disorder accompanied by multiple comorbidities. Neuroimaging studies have identified structural abnormalities in BPD with most findings pointing to gray matter volume reductions in the fronto-limbic network, although results remain inconsistent. Similar alterations were found in posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), a common comorbidity of BPD.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Effects of glucose intake on stress reactivity in young, healthy men.

Psychoneuroendocrinology

April 2021

Department of Biological and Clinical Psychology, University of Trier, D-54290, Trier, Germany. Electronic address:

The psychobiological stress response has a broad impact on energy metabolism, while the availability of energy may, in turn, affect the stress response. Specifically, a reduced cortisol response has been found after 8-11 hours of fasting, while glucose intake has led to an increase in cortisol reactivity. We compared the effects of standardized glucose or artificial sweetener drinks, as well as water, ingested prior to a physical (cold pressor test, CPT) or a psychosocial stressor (Trier Social Stress Test, TSST) after four hours of fasting.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Many eye tracking studies use facial stimuli presented on a display to investigate attentional processing of social stimuli. To introduce a more realistic approach that allows interaction between two real people, we evaluated a new eye tracking setup in three independent studies in terms of data quality, short-term reliability and feasibility. Study 1 measured the robustness, precision and accuracy for calibration stimuli compared to a classical display-based setup.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Latent class growth analyses reveal overrepresentation of dysfunctional fear conditioning trajectories in patients with anxiety-related disorders compared to controls.

J Anxiety Disord

March 2021

Department of Clinical Psychology, Utrecht University, Utrecht, The Netherlands; Altrecht Academic Anxiety Center, Utrecht, The Netherlands; Department of Psychiatry, University Medical Center Groningen and University of Groningen, GGZ Drenthe, Department of Specialist Training, The Netherlands. Electronic address:

Recent meta-analyses indicated differences in fear acquisition and extinction between patients with anxiety-related disorders and comparison subjects. However, these effects are small and may hold for only a subsample of patients. To investigate individual trajectories in fear acquisition and extinction across patients with anxiety-related disorders (N = 104; before treatment) and comparison subjects (N = 93), data from a previous study (Duits et al.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Stress encompasses profound psychological and physiological changes that are observable on all levels, from cellular mechanisms, humoral changes, and brain activation to subjective experience and behavior. While the impact of stress on health has already been studied for decades, a more recent field of research has revealed effects of stress on human social cognition and behavior. Initial studies have attempted to elucidate the underlying biological mechanisms of these stress-induced effects by measuring physiological responses or by using pharmacological approaches.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Borderline personality disorder classification based on brain network measures during emotion regulation.

Eur Arch Psychiatry Clin Neurosci

September 2021

Department of Clinical Psychology, University of Amsterdam, Nieuwe Achtergracht 129B, 1001 NK, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) is characterized by an increased emotional sensitivity and dysfunctional capacity to regulate emotions. While amygdala and prefrontal cortex interactions are regarded as the critical neural mechanisms underlying these problems, the empirical evidence hereof is inconsistent. In the current study, we aimed to systematically test different properties of brain connectivity and evaluate the predictive power to detect borderline personality disorder.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Effects of nightmares on the cortisol awakening response: An ambulatory assessment pilot study.

Psychoneuroendocrinology

December 2020

Department of Biological and Clinical Psychology, University of Trier, D-54290, Trier, Germany. Electronic address:

Previous studies have reported an association between sleep-related factors such as sleep duration, sleep quality and time of awakening with the cortisol awakening response (CAR). Preliminary evidence suggests that frequent nightmares are associated with a blunted CAR. In the present pilot study we investigated the effect of acute nightmares on the CAR and the cortisol profile of the subsequent day using a within-subject ambulatory assessment study design.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The Agony of Choice? Preserved Affective Decision Making in Early Multiple Sclerosis.

Front Neurol

September 2020

Department of Neurology With Institute of Translational Neurology, University Hospital Münster, Westfälische-Wilhelms-University Münster, Münster, Germany.

Cognitive impairment (CI) is an early and frequent symptom of multiple sclerosis (MS). Likewise, affective symptoms (e.g.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF