Christine Firk
RWTH Aachen University
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Featured researches published by Christine Firk.
Deutsches Arzteblatt International | 2013
Kerstin Konrad; Christine Firk; Peter J. Uhlhaas
BACKGROUND Adolescence is the phase of life between late childhood and adulthood. Typically, adolescents seek diversion, new experiences, and strong emotions, sometimes putting their health at serious risk. In Germany, for example, 62% of all deaths among persons aged 15 to 20 are due to traumatic injuries. Neuroscientific explanations have been proposed for typical adolescent behavior; with these explanations in mind, one can derive appropriate ways of dealing with adolescents. METHOD We selectively review pertinent articles retrieved from the PubMed database about the structural and functional development of the brain in adolescence. RESULTS New findings in developmental psychology and neuroscience reveal that a fundamental reorganization of the brain takes place in adolescence. In postnatal brain development, the maximum density of gray matter is reached first in the primary sensorimotor cortex, and the prefrontal cortex matures last. Subcortical brain areas, especially the limbic system and the reward system, develop earlier, so that there is an imbalance during adolescence between the more mature subcortical areas and less mature prefrontal areas. This may account for typical adolescent behavior patterns, including risk-taking. CONCLUSION The high plasticity of the adolescent brain permits environmental influences to exert particularly strong effects on cortical circuitry. While this makes intellectual and emotional development possible, it also opens the door to potentially harmful influences.
Zeitschrift Fur Kinder-und Jugendpsychiatrie Und Psychotherapie | 2013
Brigitte Dahmen; Christine Firk; Kerstin Konrad; Beate Herpertz-Dahlmann
Adolescent mothers and their children are exposed to multiple psychosocial risk factors and represent a high-risk group for adverse developmental outcomes. It is not the mothers young age alone which contributes to the developmental risk of the mother-child dyad. Rather, both the combination of risks, such as poverty, domestic violence, dysfunctional family relationships, or a psychiatric disorder, all of which predispose to adolescent pregnancy, as well as the strains of parenthood during the mothers own developmental stage add to the psychosocial risks of children of teenage mothers. Early motherhood can lead to lower levels of education and a lower socioeconomic status. In addition, there is a higher risk for psychopathology in both the teenage mother and her child. This article provides an overview of the current research findings regarding adolescent parenting and its associated risks. Risk factors leading to early motherhood are reviewed and associated with differences in parenting behaviors and the developmental outcomes of their children. This article will conclude with a short overview on intervention programs for adolescent mothers and their children. Further research is needed to develop age-appropriate support programs for adolescent mothers and their children to cope with the complexity of risks and improve their developmental trajectories.
Autism Research | 2017
Martin Schulte-Rüther; Ellen Otte; Kübra Adigüzel; Christine Firk; Beate Herpertz-Dahlmann; Iring Koch; Kerstin Konrad
It has been suggested that an early deficit in the human mirror neuron system (MNS) is an important feature of autism. Recent findings related to simple hand and finger movements do not support a general dysfunction of the MNS in autism. Studies investigating facial actions (e.g., emotional expressions) have been more consistent, however, mostly relied on passive observation tasks. We used a new variant of a compatibility task for the assessment of automatic facial mimicry responses that allowed for simultaneous control of attention to facial stimuli. We used facial electromyography in 18 children and adolescents with Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and 18 typically developing controls (TDCs). We observed a robust compatibility effect in ASD, that is, the execution of a facial expression was facilitated if a congruent facial expression was observed. Time course analysis of RT distributions and comparison to a classic compatibility task (symbolic Simon task) revealed that the facial compatibility effect appeared early and increased with time, suggesting fast and sustained activation of motor codes during observation of facial expressions. We observed a negative correlation of the compatibility effect with age across participants and in ASD, and a positive correlation between self‐rated empathy and congruency for smiling faces in TDC but not in ASD. This pattern of results suggests that basic motor mimicry is intact in ASD, but is not associated with complex social cognitive abilities such as emotion understanding and empathy. Autism Res 2017, 10: 298–310.
Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry | 2015
Christine Firk; Verena Mainz; Martin Schulte-Ruether; Gereon R. Fink; Beate Herpertz-Dahlmann; Kerstin Konrad
BACKGROUND Previous studies have reported that cognitive deficits occur in patients with anorexia nervosa (AN) and that these deficits may represent a predisposition towards developing AN or perpetuate the disorder. Specifically, dysfunctional implicit learning may contribute to the development of highly resistant dieting behaviours that are fundamental to the persistence of the disorder. Thus, the aims of this study were (a) to investigate implicit sequence learning in adolescent patients with AN before and after weight recovery and (b) to elucidate the associated neural mechanisms in acute AN relative to healthy controls. METHODS In a behavioural study, implicit sequence learning was assessed using a serial reaction time task in 27 adolescents with AN before (T1) and after weight recovery (T2) compared with age-matched healthy controls (HC) who were assessed at similar time intervals. The neural correlates of implicit sequence learning were subsequently investigated in 19 AN patients shortly after they were admitted to the hospital and 20 HC using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). RESULTS At T1, AN patients showed reduced sequence learning compared with HC. However, no behavioural differences between HC and AN patients were found at T2. At the neural level, acute AN patients showed reduced thalamic activation during sequence learning compared with HC subjects. CONCLUSIONS Our data suggest that the impaired implicit learning observed in adolescent AN patients before weight gain is a state-related dysfunction that normalises with weight gain. Thus, implicit learning deficits do not appear to represent a predisposition towards developing AN; rather, these deficits should be considered when planning psychotherapeutic interventions for acute AN. Reduced thalamic activation during the acute stage of AN may indicate a starvation-induced dysfunction of the neural circuitry that is involved in behavioural flexibility.
Zeitschrift Fur Kinder-und Jugendpsychiatrie Und Psychotherapie | 2013
Brigitte Dahmen; Christine Firk; Kerstin Konrad; Beate Herpertz-Dahlmann
Adolescent mothers and their children are exposed to multiple psychosocial risk factors and represent a high-risk group for adverse developmental outcomes. It is not the mothers young age alone which contributes to the developmental risk of the mother-child dyad. Rather, both the combination of risks, such as poverty, domestic violence, dysfunctional family relationships, or a psychiatric disorder, all of which predispose to adolescent pregnancy, as well as the strains of parenthood during the mothers own developmental stage add to the psychosocial risks of children of teenage mothers. Early motherhood can lead to lower levels of education and a lower socioeconomic status. In addition, there is a higher risk for psychopathology in both the teenage mother and her child. This article provides an overview of the current research findings regarding adolescent parenting and its associated risks. Risk factors leading to early motherhood are reviewed and associated with differences in parenting behaviors and the developmental outcomes of their children. This article will conclude with a short overview on intervention programs for adolescent mothers and their children. Further research is needed to develop age-appropriate support programs for adolescent mothers and their children to cope with the complexity of risks and improve their developmental trajectories.
Infant Behavior & Development | 2018
Christine Firk; Kerstin Konrad; Beate Herpertz-Dahlmann; Wolfgang Scharke; Brigitte Dahmen
BACKGROUND Adolescent motherhood is accompanied by a constellation of risk factors that translate into developmental risk for the off-spring. Socioeconomic risk that is associated with adolescent motherhood as well as maternal interactive behaviors may contribute to the impact of adolescent motherhood on childrens developmental outcome. OBJECTIVE Therefore, the aim of the current study was to investigate differences in childrens cognitive development between children of adolescent and adult mothers in their first two years of life and to examine whether socioeconomic risk (e.g. such as educational and financial problems) and/or maternal sensitivity mediate developmental differences between children of adolescent and adult mothers. METHODS Adolescent mothers (<21 years; N = 64) and adult mothers (>25 years; N = 34) and their infants were included in the current study. Child cognitive development and maternal sensitivity were assessed at three different time points (T1: mean child age 5.26 months; T2: mean child age 14.69 months; T3: mean child age 21.16 months). RESULTS Children of adult mothers showed better cognitive performance at T3 compared to children of adolescent mothers but not at T1 and T2. A multiple mediation model including socioeconomic risk and maternal sensitivity as serial mediators demonstrated that the effect of adolescent motherhood on cognitive development was mediated in a causal effect chain with socioeconomic risk negatively affecting maternal sensitivity and maternal sensitivity affecting childrens cognitive development. DISCUSSION The present findings demonstrate that maternal interactive behaviors are not only a simple predictor of cognitive development but may also act as a mediator of the association between more distal variables such as socioeconomic risk and cognitive development in adolescent mothers. This supports the need to promote prevention and intervention programs for adolescent mothers during the early postpartum period to reduce socioeconomic problems and enhance maternal interactive behaviors.
Zeitschrift Fur Kinder-und Jugendpsychiatrie Und Psychotherapie | 2013
Brigitte Dahmen; Christine Firk; Kerstin Konrad; Beate Herpertz-Dahlmann
Adolescent mothers and their children are exposed to multiple psychosocial risk factors and represent a high-risk group for adverse developmental outcomes. It is not the mothers young age alone which contributes to the developmental risk of the mother-child dyad. Rather, both the combination of risks, such as poverty, domestic violence, dysfunctional family relationships, or a psychiatric disorder, all of which predispose to adolescent pregnancy, as well as the strains of parenthood during the mothers own developmental stage add to the psychosocial risks of children of teenage mothers. Early motherhood can lead to lower levels of education and a lower socioeconomic status. In addition, there is a higher risk for psychopathology in both the teenage mother and her child. This article provides an overview of the current research findings regarding adolescent parenting and its associated risks. Risk factors leading to early motherhood are reviewed and associated with differences in parenting behaviors and the developmental outcomes of their children. This article will conclude with a short overview on intervention programs for adolescent mothers and their children. Further research is needed to develop age-appropriate support programs for adolescent mothers and their children to cope with the complexity of risks and improve their developmental trajectories.
Deutsches Arzteblatt International | 2013
Kerstin Konrad; Christine Firk; Peter J. Uhlhaas
1. Afdahl N, O’Brien C, Godofskky E, Rodriguez-Torres M, Pappas SC, Pockros P, et al. Valopictibaine (NM283), alone or with PEG-interferon, compared to PEG-interferon/ribavirin (PEG-IFN/RBV) retreatment in patients with HCV-1 infection and prior non-response to PEG-IFN/RBV: one-year results. Paper presented at: 42nd Annual Meeting of the European Association for the Study of the Liver; April 11-15, 2007; Barcelona, Spain. 2. Schiff E, Poordad F, Jacobson I, Flamm S, Bacon BR, Lawitz E, et al. Boceprevir combination therapy in null responders: response dependent on interferon responsiveness. In: Program and Abstracts of the 43rd Annual Meeting of the European Association for the Study of the Liver; April 23-27, 2008; Milan, Italy. 3. Jensen DB, Freilich B, Andreone P, DiBisceglie A, Brandao-Mello CE, Reddy KR, et al. Pegylated interferon alfa-2a (40kD) plus ribavirin (RBV) in prior non-responders to pegylated interferon alfa-2b (12kD)/RBV: final efficacy and safety outcomes of the REPEAT study [Abstract LB4]. HEPATOLOGY 2007;46(Suppl):291A-292A.
Psychopathology | 2016
Hannah F. Behrendt; Kerstin Konrad; Tamme W. Goecke; Roya Fakhrabadi; Beate Herpertz-Dahlmann; Christine Firk
Trials | 2015
Christine Firk; Brigitte Dahmen; Christin Lehmann; Anke Niessen; Julia Koslowski; Geraldine Rauch; Reinhild Schwarte; Kerstin Stich; Kerstin Konrad; Beate Herpertz-Dahlmann