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Dive into the research topics where Christine Mohr is active.

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Featured researches published by Christine Mohr.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2006

Neural Basis of Embodiment: Distinct Contributions of Temporoparietal Junction and Extrastriate Body Area

Shahar Arzy; Gregor Thut; Christine Mohr; Christoph M. Michel; Olaf Blanke

Embodiment, the sense of being localized within ones physical body, is a fundamental aspect of the self. Recently, researchers have started to show that self and body processing require distinct brain mechanisms, suggesting two posterior brain regions as key loci: the temporoparietal junction (TPJ), which is involved in self processing and multisensory integration of body-related information; and the extrastriate body area (EBA), which responds selectively to human bodies and body parts. Here we used evoked potential mapping and a distributed linear inverse solution to show that activations in EBA and TPJ code differentially for embodiment and self location, because the location and timing of brain activation depended on whether mental imagery is performed with mentally embodied (EBA) or disembodied (TPJ) self location. In a second experiment, we showed that only EBA activation, related to embodied self location, but not TPJ activation, related to disembodied self location, was modified by the subjects body position during task performance (supine or sitting). This suggests that embodied self location and actual body location share neural mechanisms. Collectively, these data show that distributed brain activity at the EBA and TPJ as well as their timing are crucial for the coding of the self as embodied and as spatially situated within the human body.


Psychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences | 2001

Associative processing and paranormal belief

Lorena R. R. Gianotti; Christine Mohr; Diego A. Pizzagalli; Dietrich Lehmann; Peter Brugger

Abstract In the present study we introduce a novel task for the quantitative assessment of both originality and speed of individual associations. This ‘BAG’ (Bridge‐the‐Associative‐Gap) task was used to investigate the relationships between creativity and paranormal belief. Twelve strong ‘believers’ and 12 strong ‘skeptics’ in paranormal phenomena were selected from a large student population (n > 350). Subjects were asked to produce single‐word associations to word pairs. In 40 trials the two stimulus words were semantically indirectly related and in 40 other trials the words were semantically unrelated. Separately for these two stimulus types, response commonalities and association latencies were calculated. The main finding was that for unrelated stimuli, believers produced associations that were more original (had a lower frequency of occurrence in the group as a whole) than those of the skeptics. For the interpretation of the result we propose a model of association behavior that captures both ‘positive’ psychological aspects (i.e., verbal creativity) and ‘negative’ aspects (susceptibility to unfounded inferences), and outline its relevance for psychiatry. This model suggests that believers adopt a looser response criterion than skeptics when confronted with ‘semantic noise’. Such a signal detection view of the presence/absence of judgments for loose semantic relations may help to elucidate the commonalities between creative thinking, paranormal belief and delusional ideation.


Journal of Psycholinguistic Research | 2001

Loose but Normal: A Semantic Association Study

Christine Mohr; Roger E. Graves; Lorena R. R. Gianotti; Diego A. Pizzagalli; Peter Brugger

An abnormal facilitation of the spreading activation within semantic networks is thought to underlie schizophrenics remote associations and referential ideas. In normal subjects, elevated magical ideation (MI) has also been associated with a style of thinking similar to that of schizotypal subjects. We thus wondered whether normal subjects with a higher MI score would judge “loose associations” as being more closely related than do subjects with a lower MI score. In two experiments, we investigated whether judgments of the semantic distance between stimulus words varied as a function of MI. In the first experiment, random word pairs of two word classes, animals and fruits, were presented. Subjects had to judge the semantic distance between word pairs. In the second experiment, sets of three words were presented, consisting of a pair of indirectly related, or unrelated nouns plus a third noun. Subjects had to judge the semantic distance of the third noun to the word pair. The results of both experiments showed that higher MI subjects considered unrelated words as more closely associated than did lower MI subjects. We conjecture that for normal subjects high on MI “loose associations” may not be loose after all. We also note that the tendency to link uncommon, nonobvious, percepts may not only be the basis of paranormal and paranoid ideas of reference, but also a prerequisite of creative thinking.


Behavioral Neuroscience | 2003

Opposite turning behavior in right-handers and non-right-handers suggests a link between handedness and cerebral dopamine asymmetries

Christine Mohr; T Landis; Hs Bracha; Peter Brugger

The strong right hand preference in humans remains a riddle; no lateralized behavior other than fine finger dexterity relates to it. The relation between handedness and language dominance may be far weaker than currently judged; after all, both right-handers and non-right-handers utilize the left brain for speech. There is, however, a lateralized motor preference in animals, turning behavior, that is strongly associated with hemispheric dopamine (DA) asymmetries. Turning consistently occurs towards the side with less DA. The authors tested 69 right-handers and 24 non-right-handers with a device recording spontaneous turning behavior for 20 hr within 3 days. Findings indicate that right-handers preferred left-sided turning and non-right-handers preferred right-sided turning. This result suggests a link between handedness and DA asymmetries.


Schizophrenia Research | 2001

Unilateral olfactory perception and magical ideation

Christine Mohr; Christina Maria Röhrenbach; Matthias Laska; Peter Brugger

We assessed olfactory detection thresholds and discrimination abilities in 40 healthy right-handers (20 women and 20 men). All subjects were also required to complete the Magical Ideation (MI) scale, a well-validated 30-item schizotypy inventory. Over both nostrils, we found elevated thresholds for subjects with high MI scores (at or above the median score of 9.0) compared with those with low scores. In men but not women, specifically left-nostril acuity was inversely correlated to MI raw scores. MI was unrelated to olfactory discrimination performance. These results suggest an association, at least in healthy men, between even moderate signs of schizotypy and deficits in odor detection. The selective impairment of left-nostril performance adds to the growing evidence for left temporal lobe functional abnormalities in people high on MI. This laterality effect is known from previous studies in patients with schizophrenia. However, as a rule, in psychiatric patients olfactory identification rather than simple detection performance was found to be impaired, indicating that the integration of odor information is affected at different levels of processing in schizotypy compared with schizophrenia. Work with completely normal subjects may reasonably complement clinical studies of olfactory perception. Among its advantages are the good subject compliance and the absence of medication effects.


European Archives of Psychiatry and Clinical Neuroscience | 2005

Levodopa reverses gait asymmetries related to anhedonia and magical ideation

Christine Mohr; T. Landis; H. S. Bracha; M. Fathi; Peter Brugger

AbstractAnimals and men turn preferentially awaynfrom the hemisphere with the more active dopaminen(DA) system. Consistent with the idea of a right–hemisphericnhyperdopaminergia in schizophrenia, a leftsidednturning bias was described for unmedicated psychoticnpatients. We investigated the modulating role ofnDA and schizophrenia–like thought on whole–bodynturns in a controlled double–blind study. The number ofnveers to either side when walking blindfolded straightnahead (20 meter) was assessed in 40 healthy righthandednmen (20 men received levodopa, the remainingnparticipants placebo). Side preferences were analyzed innterms of individuals’ positive (Magical Ideation, MI) andnnegative (Physical Anhedonia, PhysAn) schizotypal features.nIn the placebo group, increasing MI scores werenrelated to increasing left–sided veering and increasingnPhysAn scores were related to increasing right–sidednveering. In the levodopa group, this relationship betweennpreferred veering side and type of schizotypy wasnreversed. The finding in the placebo group suggests annassociation between MI and a relative right–hemisphericnhyperdopaminergia. Unexpectedly, levodopandid not enhance this veering bias, but reversed it, suggestingnthat psychosis–protective mechanisms exist innthe healthy positive “schizotypic” brain. Also unexpectedly,nlevodopa made “anhedonics” veer like “magics” afternplacebo, suggesting that DA agonists suppress negativenschizotypal symptoms.


Neuroscience Letters | 2003

Human locomotion: levodopa keeps you straight

Christine Mohr; Theodor Landis; H.Stefan Bracha; Marc Fathi; Peter Brugger

Locomotion depends on an intact dopamine system. This system seems to be functionally asymmetric, as evidenced by an asymmetric turning preference. Using a double-blind procedure, the effect of levodopa on the number of veers when walking blindfolded along a straight line (20 m) in the middle of a corridor was tested in 40 healthy dextral men. One group received 200 mg levodopa, while the other group received placebo. We found that (1). subjects veered less after levodopa than after placebo, and (2). improved straight-walking tendency was most prominent for the levodopa group which veered less often to the right side than the placebo group. These findings imply that spatial orientation skills improved under levodopa. We conjecture that a task-dependent dopamine demand during our task was satisfied by levodopa supplementation, and over-proportionately so by the right hemisphere.


Journal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology | 2003

Hands, Arms, and Minds: Interactions Between Posture and Thought

Christine Mohr; Gregor Thut; Theodor Landis; Peter Brugger

Based on earlier reports of inconsistent postural preferences in psychiatric populations, we assessed armfolding (AF) and hand clasping (HC) postures in 361 healthy right-handers with different degrees of magical ideation (MI). Subjects generally preferred the congruent combination of a left-arm-top (AF) and a left-thumb-top position (HC). Incongruent subjects, in particular those with a right-arm-top/left-thumb-top position, scored higher on MI than did congruent subjects. Our main finding was thus an association between a style of thinking (MI) and lateral preferences for limb postures, inconsistent across distal (primarily contralaterally innervated) and more proximal (more bilaterally innervated) parts of the body. This association is interpreted in the frame of lesser hemispheric asymmetries in subjects bordering to schizotypal personalities.


Psychiatry Research-neuroimaging | 2002

Deviant olfactory experiences, magical ideation, and olfactory sensitivity: a study with healthy German and Japanese subjects

Christine Mohr; Fabienne Hübener; Matthias Laska

Little is known about the relationship between olfactory hallucinations and olfactory sensitivity in psychiatric populations. However, in healthy subjects, a psychotic-like feature, namely magical ideation, has been linked to deviant olfactory experiences. We thus assessed olfactory sensitivity, magical ideation and deviant olfactory experiences in 42 healthy subjects (21 Germans and 21 age- and gender-matched Japanese). The results show that: (1) Germans had significantly higher magical ideation scores and a higher frequency of deviant olfactory experiences than Japanese, and more Germans than Japanese reported having had deviant olfactory experiences at least once in their lives; (2) in Germans, the occurrence of deviant olfactory experiences was correlated with higher magical ideation scores; and (3) there was no relationship between olfactory sensitivity (olfactory thresholds) and either deviant olfactory experiences or magical ideation, respectively. We conclude that: (1) the lack of deviant olfactory experiences in Japanese may best be explained by cultural differences in the response attitude towards questionnaires requiring self-disclosure; (2) the positive relationship between magical ideation and deviant olfactory experiences strengthens the supposed link between psychotic-like features in healthy populations and real hallucinations of psychiatric patients; and (3) the absence of a relationship between olfactory sensitivity and deviant olfactory experiences suggests that their anatomical-functional correlates within temporo-limbic regions may differ.


Journal of Psychopharmacology | 2005

Blinking and schizotypal thinking.

Christine Mohr; Peter S. Sándor; T. Landis; M. Fathi; Peter Brugger

Spontaneous eye blink rate (SBR) is thought to be a biological marker for cerebral dopamine (DA) activity. Accordingly, positive psychotic symptoms have been found to be associated with an increased SBR and negative psychotic symptoms with a decreased SBR. However, modulations of the DA system in patient populations also result from prior neuroleptic treatment. Here, we tested the possible relationship between SBR and positive and negative schizotypal thought. To test the direct influence of DA on SBR in general and as a function of schizotypy, half of a sample of 40 healthy men received levodopa and the other half placebo in a double-blind procedure. SBR did not differ between substance groups suggesting that a pharmacologically induced DA increase in healthy individuals does not generally increase SBR. However, in the levodopa group, increasing SBR correlated with increasing negative schizotypy scores, while no relationship was found between SBR and (1) negative schizotypy in the placebo group, or (2) positive schizotypy in either substance group. We conjecture that a pre-existing hypodopaminergic state in high negative schizotypy scorers, made these individuals susceptible to an increased DA concentration, as it has been observed in Parkinson’s disease. Furthermore, the absence of any relationship in the placebo group might suggest that variations in DA concentration as a function of schizotypy are too subtle to influence SBR. Finally, the lack of any association of SBR with positive schizotypy might indicate that SBR and positive schizotypy are mediated by functionally distinct neural circuits

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Christoph M. Michel

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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