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Dive into the research topics where Günter Schulter is active.

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Featured researches published by Günter Schulter.


Biological Psychology | 2010

Trait and state positive affect and cardiovascular recovery from experimental academic stress

Ilona Papousek; Karin Nauschnegg; Manuela Paechter; Helmut K. Lackner; Nandu Goswami; Günter Schulter

As compared to negative affect, only a small number of studies have examined influences of positive affect on cardiovascular stress responses, of which only a few were concerned with cardiovascular recovery. In this study, heart rate, low- and high-frequency heart rate variability, blood pressure, and levels of subjectively experienced stress were obtained in 65 students before, during and after exposure to academic stress in an ecologically valid setting. Higher trait positive affect was associated with more complete cardiovascular and subjective post-stress recovery. This effect was independent of negative affect and of affective state during anticipation of the stressor. In contrast, a more positive affective state during anticipation of the challenge was related to poor post-stress recovery. The findings suggest that a temporally stable positive affect disposition may be related to adaptive responses, whereas positive emotional states in the context of stressful events can also contribute to prolonged post-stress recovery.


Psychophysiology | 2002

Covariations of EEG asymmetries and emotional states indicate that activity at frontopolar locations is particularly affected by state factors

Ilona Papousek; Günter Schulter

To test the hypothesis that activation asymmetries of the most anterior parts of the prefrontal cortex may be related to state-dependent regulation of emotion, spontaneous changes of cortical activation asymmetries from one session to a second one were related to spontaneous mood changes in two large samples (ns = 56 and 128). The interval between sessions was 2 to 4 weeks. Results show that mood changes specifically covary with changes of EEG asymmetry at the frontopolar electrode positions, but not with changes at other locations (dorsolateral frontal, temporal, and parietal). Anxiety, tension, and depression were found to decrease when frontopolar activation asymmetry shifted to the right. Taking the new findings into account may contribute to the refinement and extension of theories on EEG laterality and emotion.


Laterality | 1999

Quantitative assessment of five behavioural laterality measures: distributions of scores and intercorrelations among right-handers.

Ilona Papousek; Günter Schulter

Five behavioural laterality measures (degree of right-handedness, ear dominance, ocular dominance, line bisection performance, and lateral preference as assessed by preferred direction of conjugate lateral eye movements) were analysed in 1171 right-handers by merging data from 15 different samples. All laterality aspects were assessed quantitatively by using well controlled performance measures instead of questionnaires. The distributions and intercorrelations of the measures as well as their test-retest reliabilities were examined. Results show moderately high reliabilities for all measures, and clearly demonstrate considerable variability among dextrals in the direction and magnitude of the obtained behavioural laterality measures. Most importantly, independence of the different measures questions some common assumptions in laterality research. It seems unlikely, for instance, that handedness and other aspects of laterality may be a product of one single underlying mechanism of brain lateralisation.


Journal of Psychosomatic Research | 2002

Dissociated autonomic regulation during stress and physical complaints

Ilona Papousek; Günter Schulter; Ernst Premsberger

OBJECTIVE In order to evaluate the relevance of individual differences in the regulation of autonomic subsystems to psychosomatic processes, reactivity of the autonomic nervous system to an emotional stressor was related to the occurrence of physical complaints. In contrast to most other studies, the measures were related to the degree of actually experienced stress. METHODS In a large sample (n=111), electrodermal activity (EDA) and heart rate variability (HRV) were obtained at rest and during emotional stress. Physical complaints were assessed by a standardized symptom checklist providing subscales for different physiological systems. RESULTS Subjects who were actually stressed by the stress induction procedure but showed only weak reactivity of EDA, and subjects who were only slightly stressed but showed a marked EDA response reported a high amount of gastrointestinal complaints. A greater decrease of high-frequency HRV from the rest to the stress condition was associated with reports of relatively more cardiovascular complaints. CONCLUSION Findings indicate that the link between regulation of EDA and gastrointestinal functions has to be localized in higher brain structures and support the hypothesis that minor autonomic dysregulation may represent one pathway linking negative affect and the development of physical disorders.


International Journal of Psychophysiology | 2001

Associations between EEG asymmetries and electrodermal lability in low vs. high depressive and anxious normal individuals.

Ilona Papousek; Günter Schulter

In order to investigate one aspect of cortical-autonomic control, cortical activation asymmetries, measured by EEG, were related to activity of the sympathetic nervous system, measured by EDA (electrodermal lability, number of spontaneous fluctuations), in two large samples. Since it may help to explain the participation of psychological factors in the development of various somatic complaints and disorders, we examined whether inter-individual differences in autonomic nervous system regulation may exist that are related to stress/anxiety and depression within the normal range. Results demonstrate substantial modifications of functional hemisphere asymmetries in the modulation of EDA by these emotional factors and suggest that activation asymmetries in orbital and dorsolateral frontal regions reflect two different cortical sub-systems regulating electrodermal activity. The findings may, to some extent, provide an explanation for contradictory results in previous studies and may encourage research in psychosomatics and other clinical fields (e.g. schizophrenia).


Psychophysiology | 2012

Frontal brain asymmetry and affective flexibility in an emotional contagion paradigm

Ilona Papousek; Eva M. Reiser; Bernhard Weber; H. Harald Freudenthaler; Günter Schulter

This study was aimed at examining the relation of an individuals EEG asymmetry in the lateral frontal cortex, assessed in resting conditions, to affective flexibility. An auditory paradigm was used to induce negative (sad) and positive (cheerful) affective states, and state-dependent shifts of dorsolateral EEG asymmetry in response to and after the emotional provocations were observed. A Left>Right activation pattern at rest was associated with a shift to the right during negative and a shift to the left during positive stimulation, and efficient recovery after negative stimulation. Right>Left participants appeared unresponsive to both sounds. Distinct and differentiated responses to provocation with negative and positive affect and efficient recovery suggest that Left>Right prefrontal activity at rest is related to a flexible pattern of affective responding, which has been linked to adaptive emotional processing in the relevant literature.


Biological Psychology | 2014

Prefrontal EEG alpha asymmetry changes while observing disaster happening to other people: Cardiac correlates and prediction of emotional impact

Ilona Papousek; Elisabeth M. Weiss; Günter Schulter; Andreas Fink; Eva M. Reiser; Helmut K. Lackner

Changes of EEG alpha asymmetry in terms of increased right versus left sided activity in prefrontal cortex are considered to index activation of the withdrawal/avoidance motivational system. The present study aimed to add evidence of the validity of individual differences in the EEG alpha asymmetry response and their relevance regarding the impact of emotional events. The magnitude of the EEG alpha asymmetry response while watching a film consisting of scenes of real injury and death correlated with components of transient cardiac responses to sudden horrifying events happening to persons in the film which index withdrawal/avoidance motivation and heightened attention and perceptual intake. Additionally, it predicted greater mood deterioration following the film and film-related intrusive memories and avoidance over the following week. The study provides further evidence for prefrontal EEG alpha asymmetry changes in response to relevant stimuli reflecting an individuals sensitivity to negative social-emotional cues encountered in everyday life.


Journal of Personality Assessment | 2012

Psychometric Evaluation and Experimental Validation of the Statistics Anxiety Rating Scale

Ilona Papousek; Kai Ruggeri; Daniel Macher; Manuela Paechter; Moritz Heene; Elisabeth M. Weiss; Günter Schulter; H. Harald Freudenthaler

The Statistics Anxiety Rating Scale (STARS) was adapted into German to examine its psychometric properties (n = 400). Two validation studies (n = 66, n = 96) were conducted to examine its criterion-related validity. The psychometric properties of the questionnaire were very similar to those previously reported for the original English version in various countries and other language versions. Confirmatory factor analysis indicated 2 second-order factors: One was more closely related to anxiety and the other was more closely related to negative attitudes toward statistics. Predictive validity of the STARS was shown both in an experimental exam-like situation in the laboratory and during a real examination situation. Taken together, the findings indicate that statistics anxiety as assessed by the STARS is a useful construct that is more than just an expression of a more general disposition to anxiety.


Biological Psychology | 2013

I got it! Transient cardiovascular response to the perception of humor

Helmut K. Lackner; Elisabeth M. Weiss; Günter Schulter; Helmut Hinghofer-Szalkay; Andrea Christiane Samson; Ilona Papousek

The aim of the present study was to examine the transient cardiovascular response to the perception of humor, that is, the impact of the cognitive process of insight as well as the modulation of the response by the affective appraisal of the humor. To this end transient heart rate, stroke volume, cardiac output, and blood pressure responses were obtained in the immediate context of detecting the punch line in cartoons. Fine-grained analysis of the transient behavior of cardiovascular variables during viewing the cartoons was contrasted to non-humorous cartoon-like pictures. The detection of a punch line was accompanied by relative heart rate acceleration in conjunction with increased cardiac output, which was more pronounced the more amusing the cartoons were perceived. These results provide first evidence of the usefulness of cardiovascular variables for detecting the moment of insight and the quantification of the size of the emotional response accompanying it.


International Journal of Psychophysiology | 1998

Bilateral electrodermal activity: relationships to state and trait characteristics of hemisphere asymmetry

Günter Schulter; Ilona Papousek

Influences of trait and state characteristics of individual brain lateralization on bilateral electrodermal activity (EDA) were examined. EDA was observed in two different recording conditions: (1) non-specific skin conductance responses (ns.SCRs) were obtained during a stimulus-free recording period of 5 min; and (2) stimulus evoked skin conductance responses (SCRs) were elicited by 80 dichotically presented pairs of pure tones which--at the same time--constituted the items of a test to estimate subjects lateral ear dominance. In addition to ear dominance, degree of right-handedness and hemispheric preference, i.e. preferred direction of conjugate lateral eye movements (CLEMs) were assessed as trait-like characteristics of individual laterality. With respect to asymmetry of ns.SCRs, no effects of the laterality variables were observed. Analysis of SCRs, however, resulted in significant interactions of ear dominance and hemispheric preference with degree of right-handedness indicating higher SCR amplitudes on the hand contralateral to the preferred hemisphere in strong dextrals. Weak right-handers showed a different pattern of bilateral asymmetries, partly in the opposite direction. Additionally, phasic effects of cortical asymmetry on SCRs seem to be modified by trait characteristics of individual laterality. Results underline the importance of precisely controlling degree of handedness in studies of bilateral electrodermal activity. Furthermore, the observed effects support the assumption of cortical influences on EDA, but argue against the existence of a single cortical mechanism modulating asymmetries in the electrodermal system.

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Helmut K. Lackner

Medical University of Graz

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