40 results on '"Wessing I"'
Search Results
2. Dual training as clinician-scientist in child and adolescent psychiatry: are we there yet?
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Revet, A. Hebebrand, J. Bhide, S. Caseiro, J. Conti, E. Deutz, M. Isac, A. Kanellopoulos, A. Kalyoncu, T. Maasalo, K. Markovska-Simoska, S. Mitkovic-Voncina, M. Molteni, S. Mosheva, M. Mudra, S. Philipp, J. Prins-Aardema, C. Gonzalez, M.R. Šebela, A. Seitz, J. Stene, L.E. Davidović, N.V. Wessing, I. Klauser, P.
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- 2018
3. Dual training as clinician-scientist in child and adolescent psychiatry: are we there yet?
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Revet, A, Hebebrand, J, Bhide, Sampada, Caseiro, J, Conti, E, Deutz, M, Isac, A, Kanellopoulos, A, Kalyoncu, T, Maasalo, K, Markovska-Simoska, S, Mitkovic-Voncina, M, Molteni, S, Mosheva, M, Mudra, S, Philipp, J, Prins-Aardema, C, Gonzalez, MR, Šebela, A, Seitz, J, Stene, LE, Davidović, NV, Wessing, I, Klauser, P, Revet, A, Hebebrand, J, Bhide, Sampada, Caseiro, J, Conti, E, Deutz, M, Isac, A, Kanellopoulos, A, Kalyoncu, T, Maasalo, K, Markovska-Simoska, S, Mitkovic-Voncina, M, Molteni, S, Mosheva, M, Mudra, S, Philipp, J, Prins-Aardema, C, Gonzalez, MR, Šebela, A, Seitz, J, Stene, LE, Davidović, NV, Wessing, I, and Klauser, P
- Published
- 2018
4. Processing of appetitive food stimuli in adolescent Anorexia Nervosa. Pilot data of a MEG study
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Romero Frausto, H, Kappes, K, Romer, G, Junghöfer, M, Wessing, I, Romero Frausto, H, Kappes, K, Romer, G, Junghöfer, M, and Wessing, I
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- 2016
5. Körperbildstörung und visuelle Körpermassschätzung bei Jugendlichen mit Anorexia Nervosa: Eine parallele MEG Und EEG Studie
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Wessing, I., Romero Frausto, H., Rahder, I., Dalhoff, A., Rösmann, K., and Junghöfer, M.
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- 2023
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6. Implementing psychiatric day treatment for infants, toddlers, preschoolers and their families: a study from a clinical and organizational perspective
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Fürniss, T. (Tilman), Müller, J.M. (Jörg), Achtergarde, S. (Sandra), Wessing, I. (Ida), Averbeck-Holocher, M. (Marlies), Postert, C. (Christian), and Universitäts- und Landesbibliothek Münster
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Psychiatry and Mental health ,Case Study ,Health Policy ,Medicine and health ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Infant, Toddler and preschooler mental health ,Phychiatric Mental Health ,ddc:610 ,Parent–child interaction therapy ,Preschool Family Day Hospital ,Adults as psychiatric patients in child psychiatry - Abstract
Background: An increasing number of empirical studies indicate that infants, toddlers and preschoolers may suffer from non-transient mental illnesses featuring developmental psychopathology. A few innovative child psychiatric approaches have been developed to treat infants, toddlers and preschoolers and their families, but have not yet been conceptually presented and discussed in the framework of different healthcare systems. The organizational and clinical experience gained while developing specific approaches may be important across disciplines and guide future developments in psychiatric treatment of infants, toddlers, preschoolers and their families. Results: This article introduces the Preschool Family Day Hospital for Infants, Toddlers and Preschoolers and their Families at Münster University Hospital, Germany. This hospital is unique in the German healthcare system with regard to its social-service institution division of labor. Specifically, it uses an intermittent treatment approach and an integrated interactional family psychiatric approach to treat children and their parents as separate patients. This multidisciplinary, developmentally and family-oriented approach includes components of group treatments with children and separate treatments with parents. Specific techniques include video-assisted treatments of the parent–child interaction, psychiatric and psychotherapeutic treatments for parents, and conjoint family therapies that include both parents and siblings. Conclusions: The Family Day Hospital for infants, toddlers and preschoolers and their families offers innovative family-oriented treatments for those who suffer from a wide range of severe child psychiatric disorders that cannot be sufficiently treated in outpatient settings. Treatment is based on the need for family-oriented approaches to the early psychiatric treatment of infants, toddlers and preschoolers. Family day hospitals are an innovative approach to preschool child psychiatry that requires further evaluation.
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- 2013
7. Stimulation of the ventromedial prefrontal cortex and the perception of affective faces. An effective connectivity analysis.
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Wyczesany M, Leśniewska A, Winker C, Domagała M, Kroker T, Kałamała P, Ligeza TS, Rehbein MA, Roesmann K, Wessing I, and Junghöfer M
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- Humans, Male, Female, Adult, Young Adult, Facial Recognition physiology, Emotions physiology, Brain Mapping, Neural Pathways physiology, Photic Stimulation methods, Prefrontal Cortex physiology, Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation, Magnetoencephalography, Facial Expression
- Abstract
The ventromedial prefrontal cortex is widely linked with emotional phenomena, including appraisal, modulation, and reward processing. Its perigenual part is suggested to mediate the appetitive value of stimulation. In our previous study, besides changes in evoked MEG responses, we were able to induce an apparent behavioral bias toward more positive valence while interpreting the ambiguous, morphed faces after the effect of excitatory tDCS stimulation of the perigenual ventromedial cortex (pgVM). In the present study, we reanalyze these data to reveal the importance of functional links between the vmPFC and other brain areas during the perception of emotional (fearful or happy) faces. Using the Directed Transfer Function method, we estimated MEG source-based effective connectivity on the 1.5 sec epochs during the passive presentation of facial stimuli in two counterbalanced sessions, preceded by either an excitatory or inhibitory tDCS session. We observed a prominent session effect as the connectivity changed after excitatory compared to inhibitory stimulation. These included increased outflows from the pgVM to most analyzed cortical regions, especially in the right hemisphere, a massive decrease in source activity in the right temporal region, and increased transfer of visual information towards many network nodes. Some interaction effects were also visible, with no involvement of the pgVM itself but with other nodes of the considered network. Overall, our data show that the stimulation focused at the pgVM elicited widespread network effects, including the areas mediating attention, visual processing, and emotions, as well as those associated with regulatory functions., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest In behalf of authors I declare no conflicts of interest related to the submission, (Copyright © 2025 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2025
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8. Visual body size estimation in adolescent anorexia nervosa: Behavioural and neurophysiological data suggest intact visual perception and biased emotional attention.
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Romero Frausto H, Rahder I, Dalhoff AW, Roesmann K, Romer G, Junghöfer M, and Wessing I
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- Humans, Adolescent, Female, Emotions physiology, Attention physiology, Brain physiopathology, Case-Control Studies, Anorexia Nervosa physiopathology, Anorexia Nervosa psychology, Visual Perception physiology, Body Image psychology, Body Size, Electroencephalography
- Abstract
Body image disturbance is a key symptom of anorexia nervosa (AN). AN patients report body dissatisfaction and overestimate their own body size in several tasks. This study aimed to clarify whether this overestimation arises from deficits in visual perception. To this end, 36 adolescent restrictive-type AN patients and 42 matched healthy controls performed metric and depictive body size estimation (BSE) tasks. Magneto- and electroencephalography were measured during the size estimation of 66 computer-generated body pictures varying in size from underweight to overweight. AN patients versus controls showed overestimation across self-referential metric and depictive BSE tasks, but similar performance in a depictive BSE task without self-reference and similar early neurophysiological responses. Starting mid-latency (200 ms), AN patients showed relatively more neural activity in response to underweight body pictures and less neural activity in response to higher-weight body pictures in distributed brain regions. A secondary comparison of AN patients with slight vs. distinct overestimation during self-referential BSE uncovered relatively stronger neural responses to body pictures corresponding to the estimated body mass index. These results suggest that body image disturbances in adolescent restrictive-type AN patients depend on self-reference and do not represent a deficit of visual perception, but rather biased emotional attention., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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9. The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on administrative eating disorder prevalence in the outpatient sector and on severity of anorexia nervosa.
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Tam FI, Ochmann R, Marschall J, Leschzinski H, Seidel M, Klink L, Föcker M, Bühren K, Dahmen B, Jaite C, Herpertz-Dahlmann B, Seitz J, Gilsbach S, Correll CU, Müller AE, Hebebrand J, Bell R, Legenbauer T, Holtmann M, Becker K, Weber L, Romanos M, Egberts K, Kaess M, Fleischhaker C, Möhler E, Wessing I, Hagmann D, Hahn F, Thiemann U, Antony G, Gramatke K, Roessner V, and Ehrlich S
- Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic appears to have had a considerable impact on the mental health of children and adolescents, particularly regarding eating disorders. However, it remains unclear whether the pandemic affected only the frequency or also the severity of eating disorders. We examined potential pandemic-related changes in the administrative prevalence of eating disorders in the outpatient sector compared with other mental disorders using German statutory health insurance data for the age group 10 to 16 years. We also examined disorder severity of anorexia nervosa using data from the multicenter German Registry of Children and Adolescents with Anorexia Nervosa in the same age group. Our results showed a marked increase in the administrative prevalence of eating disorders (based on documented diagnoses) in the outpatient sector among girls but not among boys. A similar pattern was found for internalizing disorders, whereas the administrative prevalences of externalizing disorders decreased. Regarding the severity of anorexia nervosa among inpatients, we found no pandemic-related changes in body mass index standard deviation score at admission, body weight loss before admission, psychiatric comorbidities and psychopharmacological medication. Given the administrative prevalence increase in the outpatient sector, the lack of impact of the pandemic on the inpatient sector may also be partly due to a shift in healthcare utilization towards outpatient services during the pandemic. Thus, the higher number of children and adolescents requiring specialized and timely outpatient care may be a major concern under pandemic conditions., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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10. Premorbid body weight predicts weight loss in both anorexia nervosa and atypical anorexia nervosa: Further support for a single underlying disorder.
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Hebebrand J, Seitz J, Föcker M, Viersen HP, Huss M, Bühren K, Dahmen B, Becker K, Weber L, Correll CU, Jaite C, Egberts K, Romanos M, Ehrlich S, Seidel M, Roessner V, Fleischhaker C, Möhler E, Hahn F, Kaess M, Legenbauer T, Hagmann D, Renner TJ, Schulze UME, Thiemann U, Wessing I, Antony G, Herpertz-Dahlmann B, Matthews A, and Peters T
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- Adolescent, Humans, Female, Body Weight, Body Mass Index, Weight Loss, Thinness, Anorexia Nervosa diagnosis, Anorexia Nervosa psychology
- Abstract
Objective: For adolescents, DSM-5 differentiates anorexia nervosa (AN) and atypical AN with the 5th BMI-centile-for-age. We hypothesized that the diagnostic weight cut-off yields (i) lower weight loss in atypical AN and (ii) discrepant premorbid BMI distributions between the two disorders. Prior studies demonstrate that premorbid BMI predicts admission BMI and weight loss in patients with AN. We explore these relationships in atypical AN., Method: Based on admission BMI-centile < or ≥5th, participants included 411 female adolescent inpatients with AN and 49 with atypical AN from our registry study. Regression analysis and t-tests statistically addressed our hypotheses and exploratory correlation analyses compared interrelationships between weight loss, admission BMI, and premorbid BMI in both disorders., Results: Weight loss in atypical AN was 5.6 kg lower than in AN upon adjustment for admission age, admission height, premorbid weight and duration of illness. Premorbid BMI-standard deviation scores differed by almost one between both disorders. Premorbid BMI and weight loss were strongly correlated in both AN and atypical AN., Discussion: Whereas the weight cut-off induces discrepancies in premorbid weight and adjusted weight loss, AN and atypical AN overall share strong weight-specific interrelationships that merit etiological consideration. Epidemiological and genetic associations between AN and low body weight may reflect a skewed premorbid BMI distribution. In combination with prior findings for similar psychological and medical characteristics in AN and atypical AN, our findings support a homogenous illness conceptualization. We propose that diagnostic subcategorization based on premorbid BMI, rather than admission BMI, may improve clinical validity., Public Significance: Because body weights of patients with AN must drop below the 5th BMI-centile per DSM-5, they will inherently require greater weight loss than their counterparts with atypical AN of the same sex, age, height and premorbid weight. Indeed, patients with atypical AN had a 5.6 kg lower weight loss after controlling for these variables. In comparison to the reference population, we found a lower and higher mean premorbid weight in patients with AN and atypical AN, respectively. Considering previous psychological and medical comparisons showing little differences between AN and atypical AN, we view a single disorder as the most parsimonious explanation. Etiological models need to particularly account for the strong relationship between weight loss and premorbid body weight., (© 2024 The Authors. International Journal of Eating Disorders published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
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- 2024
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11. Higher-order comparative reward processing is affected by noninvasive stimulation of the ventromedial prefrontal cortex.
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Kroker T, Rehbein MA, Wyczesany M, Bölte J, Roesmann K, Wessing I, and Junghöfer M
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- Humans, Reward, Prefrontal Cortex physiology, Magnetoencephalography, Reinforcement, Psychology, Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation methods
- Abstract
A crucial skill, especially in rapidly changing environments, is to be able to learn efficiently from prior rewards or losses and apply this acquired knowledge in upcoming situations. Often, we must weigh the risks of different options and decide whether an option is worth the risk or whether we should choose a safer option. The ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC) is suggested as a major hub for basic but also higher-order reward processing. Dysfunction in this region has been linked to cognitive risk factors for depression and behavioral addictions, including reduced optimism and feedback learning. Here, we test whether modulations of vmPFC excitability via noninvasive transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) can alter reward anticipation and reward processing. In a financial gambling task, participants chose between a higher and a lower monetary risk option and eventually received feedback whether they won or lost. Simultaneously feedback on the unchosen option was presented as well. Behavioral and magnetoencephalographic correlates of reward processing were evaluated in direct succession of either excitatory or inhibitory tDCS of the vmPFC. We were able to show modulated reward approach behavior (expectancy of greater reward magnitudes) as well as altered reevaluation of received feedback by vmPFC tDCS as indicated by modified choice behavior following the feedback. Thereby, tDCS not only influenced early, rather basic reward processing, but it also modulated higher-order comparative feedback evaluation of gains and losses relative to alternative outcomes. The neural results underline this idea, as stimulation-driven modulations of the basic reward-related effect occurred at rather early time intervals and were followed by stimulation effects related to comparative reward processing. Importantly, behavioral ratings were correlated with neural activity in left frontal areas. Our results imply a dual function of the vmPFC consisting of approaching reward (as indicated by more risky choices) and elaborately evaluating outcomes. In addition, our data suggest that vmPFC activity is associated with adaptive decision-making in the future via modulated behavioral adaptation or reinforcement learning., (© 2023 The Authors. Journal of Neuroscience Research published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
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- 2024
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12. A phenomenologically grounded specification of varieties of adolescent depression.
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Sánchez Guerrero HA and Wessing I
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Researchers are increasingly acknowledging that psychopathological conditions usually grouped together under the generic label "depression" are highly diverse. However, no differential therapeutic approach currently exists that is sensitive to the varieties of depression afflicting young people. In fact, the discussion is missing something much more fundamental: a specification of the types of adolescent depression. Recent research that has aimed to classify different kinds of depression has mainly studied adult populations and predominantly used technically complicated measurements of biological markers. The neglect of the potential particularities of dysphoric disorders affecting youths is unfortunate, and the exclusive focus on biological parameters unnecessarily restrictive. Moreover, this one-sidedness obfuscates more directly available sources of clinically relevant data that could orient conceptualization efforts in child and adolescent psychiatry. Particularly, clues for discriminating different types of adolescent depression may be obtained by analyzing personally articulated accounts of how affected young people experience changes in their relation to the world and to themselves. Thus, here we present and discuss the findings of a study that explored the possibility of specifying types of adolescent depression in a phenomenological way. The study investigated the association between these types and the vicissitudes of personality development. In accounts given by youths diagnosed with depression during semi-structured interviews, we identified themes and examined their phenomenological centrality. Specifically, our qualitative analyses aimed to determine the relative importance of certain themes with respect to the overall intelligibility of the described changes to the relational space. Based on the findings of these analyses, we differentiate three specifiers of adolescent depression and suggest an association between particular types of experiences and the trajectory of affected adolescents' personality development. To our knowledge, this is the first phenomenologically grounded specification of types of adolescent depression with potential therapeutic significance. Thus, based on this contribution, we propose that modes of scientific exploration that are close to phenomenological philosophy-which have been ignored in the context of developmental psychopathology-could offer a foundation to theories developed in the field of child and adolescent psychiatry., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2024 Sánchez Guerrero and Wessing.)
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- 2024
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13. Excitatory stimulation of the ventromedial prefrontal cortex reduces cognitive gambling biases via improved feedback learning.
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Kroker T, Wyczesany M, Rehbein MA, Roesmann K, Wessing I, Wiegand A, Bölte J, and Junghöfer M
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- Adult, Humans, Feedback, Prefrontal Cortex physiology, Bias, Cognition, Gambling pathology, Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation
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Humans are subject to a variety of cognitive biases, such as the framing-effect or the gambler's fallacy, that lead to decisions unfitting of a purely rational agent. Previous studies have shown that the ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC) plays a key role in making rational decisions and that stronger vmPFC activity is associated with attenuated cognitive biases. Accordingly, dysfunctions of the vmPFC are associated with impulsive decisions and pathological gambling. By applying a gambling paradigm in a between-subjects design with 33 healthy adults, we demonstrate that vmPFC excitation via transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) reduces the framing-effect and the gambler's fallacy compared to sham stimulation. Corresponding magnetoencephalographic data suggest improved inhibition of maladaptive options after excitatory vmPFC-tDCS. Our analyses suggest that the underlying mechanism might be improved reinforcement learning, as effects only emerge over time. These findings encourage further investigations of whether excitatory vmPFC-tDCS has clinical utility in treating pathological gambling or other behavioral addictions., (© 2023. Springer Nature Limited.)
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- 2023
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14. Non-invasive stimulation reveals ventromedial prefrontal cortex function in reward prediction and reward processing.
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Rehbein MA, Kroker T, Winker C, Ziehfreund L, Reschke A, Bölte J, Wyczesany M, Roesmann K, Wessing I, and Junghöfer M
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Introduction: Studies suggest an involvement of the ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC) in reward prediction and processing, with reward-based learning relying on neural activity in response to unpredicted rewards or non-rewards (reward prediction error, RPE). Here, we investigated the causal role of the vmPFC in reward prediction, processing, and RPE signaling by transiently modulating vmPFC excitability using transcranial Direct Current Stimulation (tDCS)., Methods: Participants received excitatory or inhibitory tDCS of the vmPFC before completing a gambling task, in which cues signaled varying reward probabilities and symbols provided feedback on monetary gain or loss. We collected self-reported and evaluative data on reward prediction and processing. In addition, cue-locked and feedback-locked neural activity via magnetoencephalography (MEG) and pupil diameter using eye-tracking were recorded., Results: Regarding reward prediction (cue-locked analysis), vmPFC excitation (versus inhibition) resulted in increased prefrontal activation preceding loss predictions, increased pupil dilations, and tentatively more optimistic reward predictions. Regarding reward processing (feedback-locked analysis), vmPFC excitation (versus inhibition) resulted in increased pleasantness, increased vmPFC activation, especially for unpredicted gains (i.e., gain RPEs), decreased perseveration in choice behavior after negative feedback, and increased pupil dilations., Discussion: Our results support the pivotal role of the vmPFC in reward prediction and processing. Furthermore, they suggest that transient vmPFC excitation via tDCS induces a positive bias into the reward system that leads to enhanced anticipation and appraisal of positive outcomes and improves reward-based learning, as indicated by greater behavioral flexibility after losses and unpredicted outcomes, which can be seen as an improved reaction to the received feedback., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2023 Rehbein, Kroker, Winker, Ziehfreund, Reschke, Bölte, Wyczesany, Roesmann, Wessing and Junghöfer.)
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- 2023
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15. Developmental aspects of fear generalization - A MEG study on neurocognitive correlates in adolescents versus adults.
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Roesmann K, Wessing I, Kraß S, Leehr EJ, Klucken T, Straube T, and Junghöfer M
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- Child, Adult, Humans, Adolescent, Conditioning, Classical physiology, Anxiety psychology, Conditioning, Operant, Generalization, Psychological physiology, Fear psychology
- Abstract
Background: Fear generalization is pivotal for the survival-promoting avoidance of potential danger, but, if too pronounced, it promotes pathological anxiety. Similar to adult patients with anxiety disorders, healthy children tend to show overgeneralized fear responses., Objective: This study aims to investigate neuro-developmental aspects of fear generalization in adolescence - a critical age for the development of anxiety disorders., Methods: We compared healthy adolescents (14-17 years) with healthy adults (19-34 years) regarding their fear responses towards tilted Gabor gratings (conditioned stimuli, CS; and slightly differently titled generalization stimuli, GS). In the conditioning phase, CS were paired (CS+) or remained unpaired (CS-) with an aversive stimulus (unconditioned stimuli, US). In the test phase, behavioral, peripheral and neural responses to CS and GS were captured by fear- and UCS expectancy ratings, a perceptual discrimination task, pupil dilation and source estimations of event-related magnetic fields., Results: Closely resembling adults, adolescents showed robust generalization gradients of fear ratings, pupil dilation, and estimated neural source activity. However, in the UCS expectancy ratings, adolescents revealed shallower generalization gradients indicating overgeneralization. Moreover, adolescents showed stronger visual cortical activity after as compared to before conditioning to all stimuli., Conclusion: Various aspects of fear learning and generalization appear to be mature in healthy adolescents. Yet, cognitive aspects might show a slower course of development., Competing Interests: Disclosure statement The authors have no conflicts of interest to declare., (Copyright © 2022 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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16. Noninvasive stimulation of the ventromedial prefrontal cortex modulates rationality of human decision-making.
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Kroker T, Wyczesany M, Rehbein MA, Roesmann K, Wessing I, and Junghöfer M
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- Humans, Prefrontal Cortex diagnostic imaging, Impulsive Behavior, Affect, Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation, Behavior, Addictive
- Abstract
The framing-effect is a bias that affects decision-making depending on whether the available options are presented with positive or negative connotations. Even when the outcome of two choices is equivalent, people have a strong tendency to avoid the negatively framed option. The ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC) is crucial for rational decision-making, and dysfunctions in this region have been linked to cognitive biases, impulsive behavior and gambling addiction. Using a financial decision-making task in combination with magnetoencephalographic neuroimaging, we show that excitatory compared to inhibitory non-invasive transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) of the vmPFC reduces framing-effects while improving the assessment of loss-probabilities, ultimately leading to increased overall gains. Behavioral and neural data consistently suggest that this improvement in rational decision-making is predominately due to an attenuation of biases towards negative affect (loss-aversion and risk-aversion). These findings recommend further research towards clinical applications of vmPFC-tDCS as in addictive disorders., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
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- 2022
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17. Influence of Identity Development on Weight Gain in Adolescent Anorexia Nervosa.
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Budde LI, Wilms S, Föcker M, Dalhoff A, Müller JM, and Wessing I
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Background: Anorexia Nervosa (AN) typically begins during early adolescence, an important phase of personality development. A substantial proportion of adolescent AN patients shows impaired personality functioning, which might be a relevant but understudied aspect of illness severity. The developmental status of identity as key element of personality is suggested to influence inpatient treatment outcome in adolescents with AN., Methods: This study analyzed existing data of N = 60 adolescents with AN. Multilevel models assessed the influence of identity functioning, measured by the Assessment of Identity Development in Adolescence (AIDA) at admission, on weight gain [BMI (body mass index), BMI-SDS (BMI standard deviation score)] during 10 weeks of inpatient treatment. Moreover, the influence of other indicators of illness severity, i.e., eating disorders and comorbid psychopathologies, was explored., Results: As expected, higher AIDA scores negatively influenced the course of weight gain. A similar effect was observed for other psychopathology measures, especially body image distortion. In general, higher weight at admission was associated with less weight gain. Higher weight at admission was also predicted by higher other psychopathology measures, but not AIDA scores., Conclusion: The course of weight gain during inpatient treatment was hampered in adolescent AN patients who have difficulties developing a stable identity. Unlike other aspects of psychopathology, this was independent of the initial weight. Thus, in addition to the level of underweight and other aspects of psychopathology, difficulties in identity development constitute a relevant aspect of illness severity in AN. This recommends consideration of identity development during treatment., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2022 Budde, Wilms, Föcker, Dalhoff, Müller and Wessing.)
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- 2022
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18. Neural correlates of fear conditioning are associated with treatment-outcomes to behavioral exposure in spider phobia - Evidence from magnetoencephalography.
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Roesmann K, Toelle J, Leehr EJ, Wessing I, Böhnlein J, Seeger F, Schwarzmeier H, Siminski N, Herrmann MJ, Dannlowski U, Lueken U, Klucken T, Straube T, and Junghöfer M
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- Animals, Fear physiology, Magnetoencephalography, Treatment Outcome, Phobic Disorders therapy, Spiders
- Abstract
Background: Models of anxiety disorders and the rationale of exposure therapy (ET) are grounded on classical fear conditioning. Yet, it is unclear whether lower fear ratings of conditioned safety versus threat cues and corresponding neural markers of safety-learning and/or fear inhibition assessed before treatment would predict better outcomes of behavioral exposure., Methods: Sixty-six patients with spider phobia completed pre-treatment clinical and experimental fear conditioning assessments, one session of virtual reality ET, a post-treatment clinical assessment, and a 6-month follow-up assessment. Tilted Gabor gratings served as conditioned stimuli (CS) that were either paired (CS+) or remained unpaired (CS-) with an aversive phobia-related and phobia-unrelated unconditioned stimulus (UCS). CS+/CS- differences in fear ratings and magnetoencephalographic event-related fields (ERFs) were related to percentual symptom reductions from pre- to post-treatment, as assessed via spider phobia questionnaire (SPQ), behavioral avoidance test (BAT), and remission status at 6-month follow-up., Results: We observed no associations between pre-treatment CS+/CS- differences in fear ratings and any treatment outcome. CS+/CS- differences in source estimations of ERFs revealed that higher CS- activity in bilateral dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dlPFC) was related with SPQ- and BAT-reductions. Associations between CS+/CS- differences and treatment outcomes were also observed in left ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC) regions, which additionally revealed associations with the follow-up remission status., Conclusions: Results provide initial evidence that neural pre-treatment CS+/CS- differences may hold predictive information regarding outcomes of behavioral exposure. Our findings highlight a key role of neural responses to safety cues with potentially inhibitory effects on affect-generating structures during fear conditioning., (Copyright © 2022 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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19. Reasons for admission and variance of body weight at referral in female inpatients with anorexia nervosa in Germany.
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Peters T, Kolar D, Föcker M, Bühren K, Dahmen B, Becker K, Weber L, Correll CU, Jaite C, Egberts KM, Romanos M, Ehrlich S, Seidel M, Roessner V, Fleischhaker C, von Gontard A, Hahn F, Huss M, Kaess M, Legenbauer T, Renner TJ, Schulze UME, Sinzig J, Wessing I, Antony G, Herpertz-Dahlmann B, Gradl-Dietsch G, and Hebebrand J
- Abstract
Background: Body mass index (BMI) at hospital admission in patients with anorexia nervosa (AN) represents a prognostic marker for mortality, chronicity and future body weight. The current study focused on the associations between BMI standard deviation score (BMI-SDS) at admission and reasons for seeking inpatient treatment. Further interest was given to the relationship between premorbid weight and weight at admission, as well as the effect of both weight at referral and reasons for admission on treatment outcome., Methods: Data ascertained in the German Register of Children and Adolescents with AN were analysed to assess the parental and patient overlap for 23 predefined reasons for admission, using factor analyses and regressions models., Results: Complete parent-patient data sets were available for 360 patients out of 769. The highest consensus rates between parents and patients were obtained for weight and eating behavior related reasons and hyperactivity. Based on factor analysis, four factors emerged. Premorbid BMI-SDS, age and 'low body weight' as stated by patients or parents explained almost 40% of the variance of the BMI-SDS at admission., Conclusions: Results underscore the relevance of age and premorbid BMI for BMI at admission. Only single reasons for admission explained further variance, with 'low body weight' having the largest effect. Approximately 40% of the variance of BMI-SDS was explained. For the first time, the effect of premorbid BMI for BMI at admission was robustly demonstrated in a multicenter study. Of the variance in BMI-SDS at discharge, our model could explain 37%, with reasons for admission having a small effect. Further investigation of the reasons for admission would be worthwhile to improve treatment and prognosis., (© 2021. The Author(s).)
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- 2021
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20. Vitamin D Level Trajectories of Adolescent Patients with Anorexia Nervosa at Inpatient Admission, during Treatment, and at One Year Follow Up: Association with Depressive Symptoms.
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Föcker M, Timmesfeld N, Bühlmeier J, Zwanziger D, Führer D, Grasemann C, Ehrlich S, Egberts K, Fleischhaker C, Wewetzer C, Wessing I, Seitz J, Herpertz-Dahlmann B, Hebebrand J, and Libuda L
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- Adolescent, Aftercare statistics & numerical data, Anorexia Nervosa psychology, Anorexia Nervosa therapy, Child, Cross-Sectional Studies, Depression psychology, Female, Humans, Inpatients statistics & numerical data, Male, Psychiatric Status Rating Scales, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Vitamin D analogs & derivatives, Vitamin D blood, Vitamin D Deficiency blood, Anorexia Nervosa blood, Depression blood, Vitamin D Deficiency psychology
- Abstract
(1) Background: Evidence has accumulated that patients with anorexia nervosa (AN) are at higher risk for vitamin D deficiency than healthy controls. In epidemiologic studies, low 25(OH) vitamin D (25(OH)D) levels were associated with depression. This study analyzed the relationship between 25(OH)D serum levels in adolescent patients and AN and depressive symptoms over the course of treatment. (2) Methods: 25(OH)D levels and depressive symptoms were analyzed in 93 adolescent (in-)patients with AN from the Anorexia Nervosa Day patient versus Inpatient (ANDI) multicenter trial at clinic admission, discharge, and 1 year follow up. Mixed regression models were used to analyze the relationship between 25(OH)D levels and depressive symptoms assessed by the Beck Depression Inventory (BDI-II). (3) Results: Although mean 25(OH)D levels constantly remained in recommended ranges (≥50 nmol/L) during AN treatment, levels decreased from (in)patient admission to 1 year follow up. Levels of 25(OH)D were neither cross-sectionally, prospectively, nor longitudinally associated with the BDI-II score. (4) Conclusions: This study did not confirm that 25(OH)D levels are associated with depressive symptoms in patients with AN. However, increasing risks of vitamin D deficiency over the course of AN treatment indicate that clinicians should monitor 25(OH)D levels.
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- 2021
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21. Age dependency of body mass index distribution in childhood and adolescent inpatients with anorexia nervosa with a focus on DSM-5 and ICD-11 weight criteria and severity specifiers.
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Engelhardt C, Föcker M, Bühren K, Dahmen B, Becker K, Weber L, Correll CU, Egberts KM, Ehrlich S, Roessner V, Fleischhaker C, von Gontard A, Hahn F, Jenetzky E, Kaess M, Legenbauer T, Renner TJ, Schulze UME, Sinzig J, Wessing I, Antony G, Herpertz-Dahlmann B, Peters T, and Hebebrand J
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Age Factors, Child, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Female, Hospitalization, Humans, International Classification of Diseases, Severity of Illness Index, Anorexia Nervosa diagnosis, Anorexia Nervosa therapy, Body Mass Index
- Abstract
Both DSM-5 and ICD-11 have provided weight cut-offs and severity specifiers for the diagnosis of anorexia nervosa (AN) in childhood, adolescence and adulthood. The aims of the current study focusing on inpatients aged < 19 years were to assess (1) the relationship between age and body mass index (BMI; kg/m
2 ), BMI-centiles, BMI-standard deviation scores (BMI-SDS) and body height-SDS at referral, (2) the percentages of patients fulfilling the DSM-5 and ICD-11 weight criteria and severity categories for AN, and (3) the validity of the AN severity specifiers via analysis of both weight related data at discharge and inpatient treatment duration. The German Registry for Anorexia Nervosa encompassed complete data sets for 469 female patients (mean age = 15.2 years; range 8.9-18.9 years) with a diagnosis of AN (n = 404) or atypical AN (n = 65), who were ascertained at 16 German child and adolescent psychiatric hospitals. BMI at referral increased up to age 15 to subsequently plateau. Approximately one tenth of all patients with AN had a BMI above the fifth centile. The ICD-11 specifier based on a BMI-centile of 0.3 for childhood and adolescent AN entailed two equally sized groups of patients. Discharge data revealed limited validity of the specifiers. Height-SDS was not correlated with age thus stunting had no impact on our data. We corroborate the evidence to use the tenth instead of the fifth BMI-centile as the weight criterion in children and adolescents. Weight criteria should not entail major diagnostic shifts during the transition from adolescence to adulthood. The severity specifiers based on BMI or BMI-centiles do not seem to have substantial clinical validity., (© 2020. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2021
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22. Increased early motivational response to food in adolescent anorexia nervosa revealed by magnetoencephalography.
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Romero Frausto H, Roesmann K, Klinkenberg IAG, Rehbein MA, Föcker M, Romer G, Junghoefer M, and Wessing I
- Abstract
Background: It remains unclear to what extent reduced nutritional intake in anorexia nervosa (AN) is a consequence of a reduced motivational response to food. Although self-reports typically suggest AN patients have a reduced appetitive response, behavioral and neurophysiological measures have revealed evidence for both increased and reduced attentional biases towards food stimuli. The mechanisms influencing food perception in AN, might be clarified using time-sensitive magnetoencephalography (MEG) to differentiate the early (more automatic processing) stages from the late (more controlled) stages., Methods: MEG was recorded in 22 partially weight-restored adolescent AN patients and 29 age- and gender-matched healthy control (HC) participants during a rapid serial visual presentation paradigm using 100 high-calorie food, 100 low-calorie food, and 100 non-food pictures. Neural sources of event-related fields were estimated using the L2-Minimum-Norm method and analyzed in early (50-300 ms) and late (350-500 ms) time intervals., Results: AN patients rated high-calorie food as less palatable and reported overall less food craving than HC participants. Nevertheless, in response to food pictures AN patients showed relative increased neural activity in the left occipito-temporal and inferior frontal regions in the early time interval. No group differences occurred in the late time interval., Conclusions: MEG results speak against an overall reduced motivational response to food in AN. Instead, relative increased early food processing in the visual cortex suggests greater motivated attention. A greater appetitive response to food might be an adaptive mechanism in a state of undernourishment. Yet, this relative increased food processing in AN was no longer present later, arguably reflecting rapid downregulation.
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- 2021
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23. Incontinence and constipation in adolescent patients with anorexia nervosa-Results of a multicenter study from a German web-based registry for children and adolescents with anorexia nervosa.
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Mattheus HK, Wagner C, Becker K, Bühren K, Correll CU, Egberts KM, Ehrlich S, Fleischhaker C, Föcker M, Hahn F, Hebebrand J, Herpertz-Dahlmann B, Jaite C, Jenetzky E, Kaess M, Legenbauer PhD T, Pfeiffer PhD JP, Renner Md TJ, Roessner V, Schulze U, Sinzig J, Wessing I, and von Gontard A
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Female, Germany, Humans, Male, Registries, Surveys and Questionnaires, Anorexia Nervosa complications, Constipation etiology, Diurnal Enuresis etiology, Fecal Incontinence etiology, Nocturnal Enuresis etiology
- Abstract
Objective: Nocturnal enuresis (NE), daytime urinary incontinence (DUI), and fecal incontinence (FI) are common disorders in childhood and are frequently accompanied by comorbid psychiatric disorders. Despite a high association between urinary and fecal incontinence with psychiatric and neurodevelopmental disorders, research on comorbidity between incontinence and anorexia nervosa (AN) remains scarce. Yet, it is well known that somatic consequences of AN include metabolic and gastrointestinal disorders. The study sought to assess the prevalence of incontinence and constipation in children and adolescents with AN and to examine associations of these two symptoms with body weight at admission and with BMI changes during inpatient treatment., Methods: Data collected between 2015 and 2017 by a multicenter German web-based registry for AN were analyzed. Three hundred and forty-eight patients with AN (96.3% female, mean age = 15.1 ± 1.8 years) were assessed regarding AN subtype, psychiatric comorbidity, body weight, incontinence, and constipation., Results: Overall, 27.6% of patients had constipation, 1.8% had NE and 1.8% DUI. Prevalence of constipation did not significantly differ between AN subtypes. Constipation did not lead to any significant differences in weight/BMI changes during inpatient treatment., Discussion: This is the largest study of incontinence and constipation in patients with AN, so far. Our results indicate that constipation is highly prevalent in adolescent patients with AN and reflects a clinically relevant condition. Despite, patients with AN do not have an increased prevalence of incontinence compared with the general population. Future studies should include medical examinations like ultrasound and physical examination of the lower abdomen to evaluate the severity of constipation., (© 2019 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.)
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- 2020
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24. Fear generalization of implicit conditioned facial features - Behavioral and magnetoencephalographic correlates.
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Roesmann K, Wiens N, Winker C, Rehbein MA, Wessing I, and Junghoefer M
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- Adult, Electroencephalography, Female, Humans, Male, Young Adult, Attention physiology, Cerebral Cortex physiology, Conditioning, Classical physiology, Facial Recognition physiology, Fear physiology, Generalization, Psychological physiology, Magnetoencephalography, Motivation physiology, Nerve Net physiology
- Abstract
Acquired fear responses often generalize from conditioned stimuli (CS) towards perceptually similar, but harmless generalization stimuli (GS). Knowledge on similarities between CS and GS may be explicit or implicit. Employing behavioral measures and whole-head magnetoencephalography, we here investigated the neurocognitive mechanisms underpinning implicit fear generalization. Twenty-nine participants underwent a classical conditioning procedure in which 32 different faces were either paired with an aversive scream (16 CS+) or remained unpaired (16 CS-). CS+ and CS- faces systematically differed from each other regarding their ratio of eye distance and mouth width. High versus low values on this "threat-related feature (TF)" implicitly predicted the presence or absence of the aversive scream. In pre- and post-conditioning phases, all CS and 32 novel GS faces were presented. 16 GS+ faces shared the TF of the 16 CS+ faces, while 16 GS- faces shared the TF of the 16 CS- faces. Behavioral tests confirmed that participants were fully unaware of TF-US contingencies. CS+ compared to CS- faces revealed higher unpleasantness, arousal and US-expectancy ratings. A generalization of these behavioral fear responses to GS+ compared to GS- faces was observed by trend only. Source-estimations of event-related fields showed stronger neural responses to both CS+ and GS+ compared to CS- and GS- in anterior temporal (<100 ms) and temporo-occipital (<150 ms; 553-587 ms) ventral brain regions. Reverse effects were found in dorsal frontal areas (<100 ms; 173-203 ms; 257-290 ms). Neural data also revealed selectively enhanced responses to CS+ but not GS+ stimuli in occipital regions (110-167 ms; 330-413 ms), indicating perceptual discrimination. Our data suggest that the prioritized perceptual analysis of threat-associated conditioned faces in ventral networks rapidly generalizes to novel faces sharing threat-related features. This generalization process occurs in absence of contingency awareness and may thus contribute to implicit attentional biases. The coexisting perceptual discrimination suggests that fear generalization is not a mere consequence of insufficient stimulus discrimination but rather an active, integrative process., (Copyright © 2019. Published by Elsevier Inc.)
- Published
- 2020
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25. Maternal perception of children's fear: A fMRI study in mothers of preschool children.
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Wessing I, Platzbecker F, Dehghan-Nayyeri M, Romer G, and Pfleiderer B
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- Adult, Child, Preschool, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Nerve Net diagnostic imaging, Photic Stimulation methods, Brain diagnostic imaging, Facial Expression, Fear psychology, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Mother-Child Relations psychology, Mothers psychology
- Abstract
A secure attachment relationship is facilitated by a mother´s ability to perceive her child´s emotions, especially her child´s fear. Prior studies showed that maternal perception of an own child activated a neural network including amygdala, insula and nucleus accumbens (NAcc). Results for different emotions were inconsistent and there are no reports on children´s fear. The goal of this study was to investigate neural responses of 17 mothers to photos of their own and an unknown preschool child with happy and fearful expressions by functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). Whole brain analyses showed that a fearful (vs. happy) own child elicited larger activity in the visual cortex. Region of interest (ROI) analyses (amygdala, insula, NAcc) revealed stronger responses to a happy (vs. fearful) unknown child, but equally strong responses to one´s own child´s expressions. Moreover, an own (vs. unknown) fearful child elicited larger activity in the insula and NAcc. This suggests that mothers allocated more visual attention towards their own child´s fear, but showed consistent emotional involvement with their own child across expressions. Mothers might respond with stronger empathy and approach motivation towards an own (vs. unknown) fearful child, in line with a key role of fear in the attachment relationship.
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- 2019
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26. Clinical Characteristics of Inpatients with Childhood vs. Adolescent Anorexia Nervosa.
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Jaite C, Bühren K, Dahmen B, Dempfle A, Becker K, Correll CU, Egberts KM, Ehrlich S, Fleischhaker C, von Gontard A, Hahn F, Kolar D, Kaess M, Legenbauer T, Renner TJ, Schulze U, Sinzig J, Thomae E, Weber L, Wessing I, Antony G, Hebebrand J, Föcker M, and Herpertz-Dahlmann B
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Aging, Child, Female, Hospitalization, Humans, Male, Patient Discharge, Anorexia Nervosa therapy, Inpatients
- Abstract
We aimed to compare the clinical data at first presentation to inpatient treatment of children (<14 years) vs. adolescents (≥14 years) with anorexia nervosa (AN), focusing on duration of illness before hospital admission and body mass index (BMI) at admission and discharge, proven predictors of the outcomes of adolescent AN. Clinical data at first admission and at discharge in 289 inpatients with AN (children: n = 72; adolescents: n = 217) from a German multicenter, web-based registry for consecutively enrolled patients with childhood and adolescent AN were analyzed. Inclusion criteria were a maximum age of 18 years, first inpatient treatment due to AN, and a BMI <10th BMI percentile at admission. Compared to adolescents, children with AN had a shorter duration of illness before admission (median: 6.0 months vs. 8.0 months, p = 0.004) and higher BMI percentiles at admission (median: 0.7 vs. 0.2, p = 0.004) as well as at discharge (median: 19.3 vs. 15.1, p = 0.011). Thus, in our study, children with AN exhibited clinical characteristics that have been associated with better outcomes, including higher admission and discharge BMI percentile. Future studies should examine whether these factors are actually associated with positive long-term outcomes in children.
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- 2019
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27. Perceptive Body Image Distortion in Adolescent Anorexia Nervosa: Changes After Treatment.
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Dalhoff AW, Romero Frausto H, Romer G, and Wessing I
- Abstract
One key symptom of anorexia nervosa (AN) is body image distortion (BID). For example, AN patients who are asked to perform body size estimation tasks tend to overestimate their body size; this is thought to indicate a distortion of the perceptive component of body image. Although BID is an important treatment objective, only few treatment approaches explicitly target body image, and even fewer target the perceptive component. Moreover, very little is known about how patients' perceptive body image changes after treatment and related weight gain. Consequently, we investigated changes of the perceptive BID in adolescent AN patients at the beginning (T1) and the end (T2) of inpatient treatment using a body size estimation task. A total of 38 AN patients performed the test for Body Image Distortion in Children and Adolescents (BID-CA) within the first 2 weeks of inpatient treatment and at the end of treatment. The results were compared to 48 healthy control (HC) participants performing the same task once. At T1, AN patients overestimated their body size more than HC, i.e., a total overestimation of 33% in AN patients vs . 11% in HC. At T2, AN patients overestimated their arm size to the same degree that they did at TI, but overestimations for the thigh and waist were reduced, and their overestimations for the waist no longer differed from the HC group. Thus, after treatment, AN patients were partly able to more realistically estimate their body size. Several factors may have influenced the observed changes in body size estimation, including task repetition, deliberate adjustment, growing into their preexisting perceptive body image through weight gain, as well as targeted and non-specific psychotherapeutic treatments. In conclusion, the perceptive BID in adolescent AN patients is persistent but also modifiable. Although diverse factors presumably play a role in changing BID, these findings suggest that AN patients may benefit from targeted treatment of BID., (Copyright © 2019 Dalhoff, Romero Frausto, Romer and Wessing.)
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- 2019
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28. Seasonal variation of BMI at admission in German adolescents with anorexia nervosa.
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Kolar DR, Bühren K, Herpertz-Dahlmann B, Becker K, Egberts K, Ehrlich S, Fleischhaker C, von Gontard A, Hahn F, Huss M, Jaite C, Kaess M, Legenbauer T, Renner TJ, Roessner V, Schulze U, Sinzig J, Wessing I, Hebebrand J, Föcker M, and Jenetzky E
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Female, Germany epidemiology, Humans, Male, Photoperiod, Registries, Sunlight, Anorexia Nervosa epidemiology, Body Mass Index, Seasons
- Abstract
Objective: Recent preliminary studies indicated a seasonal association of BMI at admission to inpatient treatment for anorexia nervosa (AN), indicating lower BMI in the cold season for restrictive AN. An impaired thermoregulation was proposed as the causal factor, based on findings in animal models of AN. However, findings regarding seasonality of BMI and physical activity levels in the general population indicate lower BMI and higher physical activity in summer than in winter. Therefore, we aimed to thoroughly replicate the findings regarding seasonality of BMI at admission in patients with AN in this study., Method: AN subtype, age- and gender-standardized BMI scores (BMI-SDS) at admission, mean daily sunshine duration and ambient temperature at the residency of 304 adolescent inpatients with AN of the multi-center German AN registry were analyzed., Results: A main effect of DSM-5 AN subtype was found (F(2,298) = 6.630, p = .002), indicating differences in BMI-SDS at admission between restrictive, binge/purge and subclinical AN. No main effect of season on BMI-SDS at admission was found (F(1,298) = 4.723, p = .025), but an interaction effect of DSM-5 subtype and season was obtained (F(2,298) = 6.625, p = .001). Post-hoc group analyses revealed a lower BMI-SDS in the warm season for restrictive AN with a non-significant small effect size (t(203.16) = 2.140, p = .033; Hedges'g = 0.28). Small correlations of mean ambient temperature (r = -.16) and daily sunshine duration (r = -.22) with BMI-SDS in restrictive AN were found. However, the data were widely scattered., Conclusions: Our findings are contrary to previous studies and question the thermoregulatory hypothesis, indicating that seasonality in AN is more complex and might be subject to other biological or psychological factors, for example physical activity or body dissatisfaction. Our results indicate only a small clinical relevance of seasonal associations of BMI-SDS merely at admission. Longitudinal studies investigating within-subject seasonal changes might be more promising to assess seasonality in AN and of higher clinical relevance., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
- Published
- 2018
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29. Dual training as clinician-scientist in child and adolescent psychiatry: are we there yet?
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Revet A, Hebebrand J, Bhide S, Caseiro J, Conti E, Deutz M, Isac A, Kanellopoulos A, Kalyoncu T, Maasalo K, Markovska-Simoska S, Mitkovic-Voncina M, Molteni S, Mosheva M, Mudra S, Philipp J, Prins-Aardema C, Gonzalez MR, Šebela A, Seitz J, Stene LE, Davidović NV, Wessing I, and Klauser P
- Published
- 2018
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30. Young Investigators in Child and Adolescent Psychiatry (YICAP) – die Nachwuchsforscher-Organisation der DGKJP.
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Seitz J, von Polier G, Birkle SM, and Wessing I
- Published
- 2017
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31. [The inpatient treatment of patients with anorexia nervosa in German clinics].
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Föcker M, Heidemann-Eggert E, Antony G, Becker K, Egberts K, Ehrlich S, Fleischhaker C, Hahn F, Jaite C, Kaess M, M E Schulze U, Sinzig J, Wagner C, Legenbauer T, Renner T, Wessing I, Herpertz-Dahlmann B, Hebebrand J, and Bühren K
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Day Care, Medical, Diagnostic Tests, Routine, Female, Germany, Health Services Research, Humans, Outcome and Process Assessment, Health Care, Psychiatric Department, Hospital, Surveys and Questionnaires, Weight Gain, Anorexia Nervosa therapy, Patient Admission
- Abstract
Objective: The medium- and long-term effects and side effects of inpatient treatment of patients with anorexia nervosa is still a matter of debate. The German S3-guidelines underline the importance of providing specialized and competent treatment. In this article we focus on the inpatient service structure in German child and adolescent psychiatric clinics with regard to their diagnostic and therapeutic concepts., Methods: A self-devised questionnaire was sent to 163 German child and adolescent psychiatric clinics. The questionnaire focused on the characteristics of the respective clinic as well as its diagnostic and therapeutic strategies., Results: All clinics with an inpatient service for patients with anorexia nervosa (N = 84) provide single-therapy, family-based interventions and psychoeducation. A target weight is defined in nearly all clinics, and the mean intended weight gain per week is 486 g (range: 200 g to 700 g/week; SD = 117). Certain diagnostic tests and therapeutic interventions are used heterogeneously., Conclusions: This is the first study investigating the inpatient service structure for patients with anorexia nervosa in German clinics. Despite the provision of guideline-based therapy in all clinics, heterogeneous approaches were apparent with respect to specific diagnostic and therapeutic concepts.
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- 2017
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32. Hypervigilance-avoidance in children with anxiety disorders: magnetoencephalographic evidence.
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Wessing I, Romer G, and Junghöfer M
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Female, Humans, Male, Anxiety physiopathology, Anxiety Disorders physiopathology, Cerebral Cortex physiopathology, Facial Expression, Facial Recognition physiology, Magnetoencephalography methods, Neural Inhibition physiology
- Abstract
Background: An altered pattern of threat processing is deemed critical for the development of anxiety disorders (AD). According to the hypervigilance-avoidance hypothesis, AD patients show hypervigilance to threat cues at early stages of processing but avoid threat cues at later stages of processing. Consistently, adults with AD show enhanced neurophysiological responses to threat in early time windows and reduced responses to threat in late time windows. The presence of such a hypervigilance-avoidance effect and its underlying neural sources remain to be determined in clinically anxious children., Methods: Twenty-three children diagnosed with an AD and 23 healthy control children aged 8-14 years saw faces with angry and neutral expressions while whole-head magnetoencephalography (MEG) was recorded. Neural sources were estimated based on L2-Minimum Norm inverse source modeling and analyzed in early, midlatency, and late time windows., Results: In visual cortical regions, early threat processing was relatively enhanced in patients compared to controls, whereas this relation was inverted in a late interval. Consistent with the idea of affective regulation, the right dorsolateral prefrontal cortex revealed relatively reduced inhibition of early threat processing but revealed enhanced inhibition at a late interval in patients. Both visual-sensory and prefrontal effects were correlated with individual trait anxiety., Conclusions: These results support the hypothesis of early sensory hypervigilance followed by later avoidance of threat in anxiety disordered children, presumably modulated by early reduced and later enhanced prefrontal inhibition. This neuronal hypervigilance-avoidance pattern unfolds gradually with increasing trait anxiety, reflecting a progressively biased allocation of attention to threat., (© 2016 Association for Child and Adolescent Mental Health.)
- Published
- 2017
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33. Rapid prefrontal cortex activation towards aversively paired faces and enhanced contingency detection are observed in highly trait-anxious women under challenging conditions.
- Author
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Rehbein MA, Wessing I, Zwitserlood P, Steinberg C, Eden AS, Dobel C, and Junghöfer M
- Abstract
Relative to healthy controls, anxiety-disorder patients show anomalies in classical conditioning that may either result from, or provide a risk factor for, clinically relevant anxiety. Here, we investigated whether healthy participants with enhanced anxiety vulnerability show abnormalities in a challenging affective-conditioning paradigm, in which many stimulus-reinforcer associations had to be acquired with only few learning trials. Forty-seven high and low trait-anxious females underwent MultiCS conditioning, in which 52 different neutral faces (CS+) were paired with an aversive noise (US), while further 52 faces (CS-) remained unpaired. Emotional learning was assessed by evaluative (rating), behavioral (dot-probe, contingency report), and neurophysiological (magnetoencephalography) measures before, during, and after learning. High and low trait-anxious groups did not differ in evaluative ratings or response priming before or after conditioning. High trait-anxious women, however, were better than low trait-anxious women at reporting CS+/US contingencies after conditioning, and showed an enhanced prefrontal cortex (PFC) activation towards CS+ in the M1 (i.e., 80-117 ms) and M170 time intervals (i.e., 140-160 ms) during acquisition. These effects in MultiCS conditioning observed in individuals with elevated trait anxiety are consistent with theories of enhanced conditionability in anxiety vulnerability. Furthermore, they point towards increased threat monitoring and detection in highly trait-anxious females, possibly mediated by alterations in visual working memory.
- Published
- 2015
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34. Cognitive emotion regulation in children: Reappraisal of emotional faces modulates neural source activity in a frontoparietal network.
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Wessing I, Rehbein MA, Romer G, Achtergarde S, Dobel C, Zwitserlood P, Fürniss T, and Junghöfer M
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- Adaptation, Psychological physiology, Adolescent, Anxiety physiopathology, Child, Female, Humans, Magnetoencephalography, Male, Nerve Net physiopathology, Prefrontal Cortex physiology, Visual Cortex physiology, Cognition physiology, Emotions physiology, Facial Expression, Frontal Lobe physiology, Nerve Net physiology, Parietal Lobe physiology
- Abstract
Emotion regulation has an important role in child development and psychopathology. Reappraisal as cognitive regulation technique can be used effectively by children. Moreover, an ERP component known to reflect emotional processing called late positive potential (LPP) can be modulated by children using reappraisal and this modulation is also related to children's emotional adjustment. The present study seeks to elucidate the neural generators of such LPP effects. To this end, children aged 8-14 years reappraised emotional faces, while neural activity in an LPP time window was estimated using magnetoencephalography-based source localization. Additionally, neural activity was correlated with two indexes of emotional adjustment and age. Reappraisal reduced activity in the left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex during down-regulation and enhanced activity in the right parietal cortex during up-regulation. Activity in the visual cortex decreased with increasing age, more adaptive emotion regulation and less anxiety. Results demonstrate that reappraisal changed activity within a frontoparietal network in children. Decreasing activity in the visual cortex with increasing age is suggested to reflect neural maturation. A similar decrease with adaptive emotion regulation and less anxiety implies that better emotional adjustment may be associated with an advance in neural maturation., (Copyright © 2015 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2015
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35. YICAP/ECAP international young investigators paper and grant writing workshop.
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Mudra S, Völker U, Schweren L, Wessing I, and Seitz J
- Subjects
- Adolescent Psychiatry, Child Psychiatry, Congresses as Topic, Germany, Humans, Workforce, Financing, Organized, Research Personnel education, Research Support as Topic, Writing
- Published
- 2015
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36. [Attachment Patterns and their Relation to the Development of Anxiety Symptoms in Childhood and Adolescence].
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Achtergarde S, Müller JM, Postert C, Wessing I, Mayer A, and Romer G
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- Adolescent, Child, Child, Preschool, Humans, Mother-Child Relations, Object Attachment, Risk Factors, Anxiety Disorders diagnosis, Anxiety Disorders psychology, Reactive Attachment Disorder diagnosis, Reactive Attachment Disorder psychology
- Abstract
From the perspective of attachment theory, insecure attachment can be seen as a key risk factor for the development of anxiety symptoms and anxiety disorders. This systematic review addresses the current state of empirical research on the relationship between attachment status and anxiety symptoms respective anxiety disorders in childhood and adolescence. 21 current international studies published between 2010 and 2014 were included in this systematic review. These studies were heterogeneous in target populations, methods and study design. The majority of studies supported the assumed correlation between insecure attachment and anxiety symptoms or anxiety disorders. These findings are more evident in studies with school-age children than with preschool children or adolescents. Furthermore, the disorganized-disoriented type of attachment seems to be a particular risk factor for the development of anxiety symptoms and anxiety disorders. Results were discussed in relation to attachment theory and with reference to the results of previous relevant reviews.
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- 2015
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37. Rapid plasticity in the prefrontal cortex during affective associative learning.
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Rehbein MA, Steinberg C, Wessing I, Pastor MC, Zwitserlood P, Keuper K, and Junghöfer M
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- Adult, Brain Mapping, Emotions physiology, Female, Humans, Magnetoencephalography, Male, Photic Stimulation, Conditioning, Classical, Fear physiology, Learning physiology, Prefrontal Cortex physiology
- Abstract
MultiCS conditioning is an affective associative learning paradigm, in which affective categories consist of many similar and complex stimuli. Comparing visual processing before and after learning, recent MultiCS conditioning studies using time-sensitive magnetoencephalography (MEG) revealed enhanced activation of prefrontal cortex (PFC) regions towards emotionally paired versus neutral stimuli already during short-latency processing stages (i.e., 50 to 80 ms after stimulus onset). The present study aimed at showing that this rapid differential activation develops as a function of the acquisition and not the extinction of the emotional meaning associated with affectively paired stimuli. MEG data of a MultiCS conditioning study were analyzed with respect to rapid changes in PFC activation towards aversively (electric shock) paired and unpaired faces that occurred during the learning of stimulus-reinforcer contingencies. Analyses revealed an increased PFC activation towards paired stimuli during 50 to 80 ms already during the acquisition of contingencies, which emerged after a single pairing with the electric shock. Corresponding changes in stimulus valence could be observed in ratings of hedonic valence, although participants did not seem to be aware of contingencies. These results suggest rapid formation and access of emotional stimulus meaning in the PFC as well as a great capacity for adaptive and highly resolving learning in the brain under challenging circumstances.
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- 2014
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38. [Multiprofessional intermittent psychiatric treatment of children in preschool age and their parents in a family day clinic].
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Postert C, Achtergarde S, Wessing I, Romer G, Fürniss T, Averbeck-Holocher M, and Müller JM
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- Child Behavior Disorders diagnosis, Child Behavior Disorders psychology, Child, Preschool, Combined Modality Therapy, Education, Nonprofessional, Female, Germany, Hospitals, University, Humans, Infant, Male, Parent-Child Relations, Video Recording, Child Behavior Disorders therapy, Cooperative Behavior, Day Care, Medical, Family Therapy methods, Interdisciplinary Communication
- Abstract
Psychiatric treatment of children in preschool age (0-6 years) and their parents is an expanding field of research due to its high clinical significance. Specific family psychiatric treatment programs have been developed to meet the demands of this young age group, but are little known. A multiprofessional intermittent treatment approach sensitive to developmental and family context has been established in the Preschool Family Day Hospital for Infants, Toddlers and Preschoolers and their Families at Münster University Hospital, Germany. Group and individual therapeutic interventions for both children and parents, video-based parent-child-interaction therapy, psychiatric and psychotherapeutic treatments of parents and family therapeutic interventions integrating siblings are supporting and enhancing each other in an innovative and integrated family psychiatric program. First results of evaluation studies are reported that show that this treatment is effective.
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- 2014
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39. The neural basis of cognitive change: reappraisal of emotional faces modulates neural source activity in a frontoparietal attention network.
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Wessing I, Rehbein MA, Postert C, Fürniss T, and Junghöfer M
- Subjects
- Adult, Brain Mapping methods, Evoked Potentials physiology, Face, Female, Humans, Magnetoencephalography, Male, Photic Stimulation, Young Adult, Attention, Emotions physiology, Frontal Lobe physiology, Neural Pathways physiology, Parietal Lobe physiology, Thinking physiology
- Abstract
Emotions can be regulated effectively via cognitive change, as evidenced by cognitive behavioural therapy. The neural correlates of cognitive change were investigated using reappraisal, a strategy that involves the reinterpretation of emotional stimuli. Hemodynamic studies revealed cortical structures involved in reappraisal and highlighted the role of the prefrontal cortex in regulating subcortical affective processing. Studies using event-related potentials elucidated the timing of reappraisal by showing effective modulation of the Late Positive Potential (LPP) after 300ms but also even earlier effects. The present study investigated the spatiotemporal dynamics of the cortical network underlying cognitive change via inverse source modelling based on whole-head magnetoencephalography (MEG). During MEG recording, 28 healthy participants saw angry and neutral faces and followed instructions designed to down- or up-regulate emotions via reappraisal. Differences between angry and neutral face processing were specifically enhanced during up-regulation, first in the parietal cortex during M170 and across the whole cortex during LPP-M, with particular involvement of the parietal and dorsal prefrontal cortex regions. Thus, our data suggest that the reappraisal of emotional faces involves specific modulations in a frontoparietal attention network., (Copyright © 2013 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Early emotion discrimination in 8- to 10-year-old children: magnetoencephalographic correlates.
- Author
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Wessing I, Fürniss T, Zwitserlood P, Dobel C, and Junghöfer M
- Subjects
- Affect physiology, Cerebral Cortex physiology, Child, Data Interpretation, Statistical, Evoked Potentials physiology, Evoked Potentials, Visual physiology, Female, Functional Laterality physiology, Humans, Male, Photic Stimulation, Discrimination, Psychological physiology, Emotions physiology, Magnetoencephalography
- Abstract
Emotional cues motivate attention and modulate event-related potentials as well as magnetic fields in adults. Central components enhanced by emotional content are Early Posterior Negativity (EPN, 150-300 ms) and Late Positive Potential (LPP, >300 ms). Previous electroencephalography studies in children revealed a differentiation of the late component in response to emotional scenes, but failed to detect an EPN effect. Twenty-two children aged 8-10 years saw 200 arousing pleasant and non-arousing neutral pictures in a rapid serial visual presentation (RSVP) design, while event-related magnetic fields were recorded with whole-head magnetoencephalography (MEG). Analysis of MEG data based on individual picture ratings yielded LPP-m but also EPN-m effects with topography and latency resembling that of adults. Thus, the mechanism of motivated attention at early processing stages (>150 ms) appears mature in children of this age group., (Copyright © 2011 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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