Katharina Koch, PhD

Katharina Koch, PhD

Deutschland
978 Follower:innen 500  Kontakte

Info

I am a Clinical Psychologist, certified in Cognitive Behavioral Therapy and a Ph.D. in…

Serviceleistungen

Berufserfahrung

  • nilo.health Grafik

    nilo.health

    Berlin, Germany

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    San Francisco Bay Area

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    Tübingen Area, Germany

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    Tübingen und Umgebung, Deutschland

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    Rom und Umgebung, Italien

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    Amsterdam und Umgebung, Niederlande

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    Amsterdam und Umgebung, Niederlande

Ausbildung

  • Academy for Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (TAVT)

Bescheinigungen und Zertifikate

  • Approbation Psychologische Psychotherapeutin Grafik

    Approbation Psychologische Psychotherapeutin

    Regierungspräsidium Stuttgart

    Ausgestellt:
  • Clinical Psychologist

    TAVT, Regierungspraesidium BW

    Ausgestellt:

Veröffentlichungen

  • Neural correlates of processing emotional prosody in unipolar depression

    Human Brain Mapping

    Major depressive disorder (MDD) is characterized by a biased emotion perception. In the auditory domain, MDD patients have been shown to exhibit attenuated processing of positive emotions expressed by speech melody (prosody). So far, no neuroimaging studies examining the neural basis of altered processing of emotional prosody in MDD are available. In this study, we addressed this issue by examining the emotion bias in MDD during evaluation of happy, neutral, and angry prosodic stimuli on a…

    Major depressive disorder (MDD) is characterized by a biased emotion perception. In the auditory domain, MDD patients have been shown to exhibit attenuated processing of positive emotions expressed by speech melody (prosody). So far, no neuroimaging studies examining the neural basis of altered processing of emotional prosody in MDD are available. In this study, we addressed this issue by examining the emotion bias in MDD during evaluation of happy, neutral, and angry prosodic stimuli on a five‐point Likert scale during functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). As expected, MDD patients rated happy prosody less intense than healthy controls (HC). At neural level, stronger activation in the middle superior temporal gyrus (STG) and the amygdala was found in all participants when processing emotional as compared to neutral prosody. MDD patients exhibited an increased activation of the amygdala during processing prosody irrespective of valence while no significant differences between groups were found for the STG, indicating that altered processing of prosodic emotions in MDD occurs rather within the amygdala than in auditory areas. Concurring with the valence‐specific behavioral effect of attenuated evaluation of positive prosodic stimuli, activation within the left amygdala of MDD patients correlated with ratings of happy, but not neutral or angry prosody. Our study provides first insights in the neural basis of reduced experience of positive information and an abnormally increased amygdala activity during prosody processing.

    Andere Autor:innen
    • Sophia Stegmaier
    • Lena Schwarz
    • Michael Erb
    • Maren Reinl
    • Klaus Scheffler
    • Dirk Wildgruber
    • Thomas Ethofer
    Veröffentlichung anzeigen
  • Mortality salience modulates cortical responses to painful somatosensory stimulation: Evidence from slow wave and delta band activity

    NeuroImage

    Social psychology studies show that awareness of one's eventual death profoundly influences human cognition and behaviour by inducing defensive reactions against end-of-life-related anxiety. Much less is known about the impact of reminders of mortality on brain activity. Here we tested whether reminders of mortality can induce a modulation of the slow electroencephalographic activity triggered by somatosensory nociceptive or auditory threatening stimulation and if this modulation is related to…

    Social psychology studies show that awareness of one's eventual death profoundly influences human cognition and behaviour by inducing defensive reactions against end-of-life-related anxiety. Much less is known about the impact of reminders of mortality on brain activity. Here we tested whether reminders of mortality can induce a modulation of the slow electroencephalographic activity triggered by somatosensory nociceptive or auditory threatening stimulation and if this modulation is related to mood and anxiety as well as personality traits. We found a specific slow wave (SW) modulation only for nociceptive stimulation and only following mortality salience induction (compared to reminders of an important failed exam). The enhancement of SW negativity at the scalp vertex was associated with increased state anxiety and negative mood, whereas higher self-esteem was associated with reduced SW amplitude. In addition, mortality salience was linked to an increased amplitude of frontal delta band, which was correlated also with increased positive mood and higher self-esteem. The results indicate that SW and delta spectral activity may represent both proximal and distal defences associated with reminders of death and that neurophysiological correlates of somatosensory representation of painful and threatening stimuli may be useful for existential neuroscience studies.

    Andere Autor:innen
    • Elia Valentini
    • Valentina Nicolardi
    • Maria Aglioti
    Veröffentlichung anzeigen
  • Thoughts of death modulate psychophysical and cortical responses to threatening stimuli

    PLoS ONE

    Existential social psychology studies show that awareness of one's eventual death profoundly influences human cognition and behaviour by inducing defensive reactions against end-of-life related anxiety. Much less is known about the impact of reminders of mortality on brain activity. Therefore we explored whether reminders of mortality influence subjective ratings of intensity and threat of auditory and painful thermal stimuli and the associated electroencephalographic activity. Moreover, we…

    Existential social psychology studies show that awareness of one's eventual death profoundly influences human cognition and behaviour by inducing defensive reactions against end-of-life related anxiety. Much less is known about the impact of reminders of mortality on brain activity. Therefore we explored whether reminders of mortality influence subjective ratings of intensity and threat of auditory and painful thermal stimuli and the associated electroencephalographic activity. Moreover, we explored whether personality and demographics modulate psychophysical and neural changes related to mortality salience (MS). Following MS induction, a specific increase in ratings of intensity and threat was found for both nociceptive and auditory stimuli. While MS did not have any specific effect on nociceptive and auditory evoked potentials, larger amplitude of theta oscillatory activity related to thermal nociceptive activity was found after thoughts of death were induced. MS thus exerted a top-down modulation on theta electroencephalographic oscillatory amplitude, specifically for brain activity triggered by painful thermal stimuli. This effect was higher in participants reporting higher threat perception, suggesting that inducing a death-related mind-set may have an influence on body-defence related somatosensory representations.

    Andere Autor:innen
    Veröffentlichung anzeigen
  • Fine-grained analysis of shared neural circuits between perceived and observed pain: implications for the study of empathy for pain

    Journal of Neurophysiology

    Fine-grained analysis of shared neural
    circuits between perceived and observed pain: implications for the
    study of empathy for pain.
    J Neurophysiol
    108: 1805–1807, 2012.
    First published May 23, 2012; doi:10.1152/jn.00181.2012.—Feeling
    pain and seeing it in others activates largely overlapping neural
    substrates. A recent study (Corradi-Dell’Acqua C, Hofstetter C, Vuil-
    leumier P.
    J Neurosci
    31: 17996–18006, 2011) for the first time raises
    the question of whether…

    Fine-grained analysis of shared neural
    circuits between perceived and observed pain: implications for the
    study of empathy for pain.
    J Neurophysiol
    108: 1805–1807, 2012.
    First published May 23, 2012; doi:10.1152/jn.00181.2012.—Feeling
    pain and seeing it in others activates largely overlapping neural
    substrates. A recent study (Corradi-Dell’Acqua C, Hofstetter C, Vuil-
    leumier P.
    J Neurosci
    31: 17996–18006, 2011) for the first time raises
    the question of whether shared neural activations specifically code
    pain-related contents or merely their negative-aversive implication.
    The authors conclude that mid-insula and mid-cingulate share information specific to the presence of pain, whereas anterior insula shares information about its aversive content. We suggest that, together with valence and arousal, the control of saliency and threat may have an important heuristic potential in the study of empathy for pain.

    Veröffentlichung anzeigen

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