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Featured researches published by Henrik Kessler.


Acta Psychologica | 2010

Expression intensity, gender and facial emotion recognition: Women recognize only subtle facial emotions better than men.

Holger Hoffmann; Henrik Kessler; Tobias Eppel; Stefanie Rukavina; Harald C. Traue

Two experiments were conducted in order to investigate the effect of expression intensity on gender differences in the recognition of facial emotions. The first experiment compared recognition accuracy between female and male participants when emotional faces were shown with full-blown (100% emotional content) or subtle expressiveness (50%). In a second experiment more finely grained analyses were applied in order to measure recognition accuracy as a function of expression intensity (40%-100%). The results show that although women were more accurate than men in recognizing subtle facial displays of emotion, there was no difference between male and female participants when recognizing highly expressive stimuli.


Diagnostica | 2009

Emotion Regulation Questionnaire – Eine deutschsprachige Fassung des ERQ von Gross und John

Birgit Abler; Henrik Kessler

Zusammenfassung. Eines der ersten validierten Instrumente zur wissenschaftlichen Untersuchung von Emotionsregulationsprozessen, stellt der englischsprachige Emotion Regulation Questionnaire (ERQ) von Gross und John (2003) dar. Dieser erlaubt es, Praferenzen fur zwei haufig angewandte Strategien zur Emotionsregulation, namlich Unterdruckung (suppression) und Neubewertung (reappraisal) zu erfassen. Die deutsche Version wurde in drei Ubersetzungsschritten an jeweils einer Gruppe von Studenten (n = 113/167/174) erprobt. Dabei stand eine moglichst enge Orientierung am englischen Original sowie die Optimierung der Faktoren-Ladungen auf die zwei Komponenten im Vordergrund. Eine Faktorenanalyse mit iterativer Kommunalitatenschatzung und Varimax-Rotation wurde verwendet. Entsprechend unserem Ziel erreichten die Alpha-Werte (innere Konsistenz) als Reliabilitatsmas fur Unterdruckung und Neubewertung die Durchschnittswerte des amerikanischen Originalfragebogens. Wir entwickelten ein Instrument, das einfach und in kur...


PLOS ONE | 2012

Changes in Prefrontal-Limbic Function in Major Depression after 15 Months of Long-Term Psychotherapy

Anna Buchheim; Roberto Viviani; Henrik Kessler; Horst Kächele; Manfred Cierpka; Gerhard Roth; Carol George; Otto F. Kernberg; Georg Bruns; Svenja Taubner

Neuroimaging studies of depression have demonstrated treatment-specific changes involving the limbic system and regulatory regions in the prefrontal cortex. While these studies have examined the effect of short-term, interpersonal or cognitive-behavioural psychotherapy, the effect of long-term, psychodynamic intervention has never been assessed. Here, we investigated recurrently depressed (DSM-IV) unmedicated outpatients (N = 16) and control participants matched for sex, age, and education (N = 17) before and after 15 months of psychodynamic psychotherapy. Participants were scanned at two time points, during which presentations of attachment-related scenes with neutral descriptions alternated with descriptions containing personal core sentences previously extracted from an attachment interview. Outcome measure was the interaction of the signal difference between personal and neutral presentations with group and time, and its association with symptom improvement during therapy. Signal associated with processing personalized attachment material varied in patients from baseline to endpoint, but not in healthy controls. Patients showed a higher activation in the left anterior hippocampus/amygdala, subgenual cingulate, and medial prefrontal cortex before treatment and a reduction in these areas after 15 months. This reduction was associated with improvement in depressiveness specifically, and in the medial prefrontal cortex with symptom improvement more generally. This is the first study documenting neurobiological changes in circuits implicated in emotional reactivity and control after long-term psychodynamic psychotherapy.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Individualized and Clinically Derived Stimuli Activate Limbic Structures in Depression: An fMRI Study

Henrik Kessler; Svenja Taubner; Anna Buchheim; Thomas F. Münte; Michael Stasch; Horst Kächele; Gerhard Roth; Armin Heinecke; Peter Erhard; Manfred Cierpka; Daniel Wiswede

Objectives In the search for neurobiological correlates of depression, a major finding is hyperactivity in limbic-paralimbic regions. However, results so far have been inconsistent, and the stimuli used are often unspecific to depression. This study explored hemodynamic responses of the brain in patients with depression while processing individualized and clinically derived stimuli. Methods Eighteen unmedicated patients with recurrent major depressive disorder and 17 never-depressed control subjects took part in standardized clinical interviews from which individualized formulations of core interpersonal dysfunction were derived. In the patient group such formulations reflected core themes relating to the onset and maintenance of depression. In controls, formulations reflected a major source of distress. This material was thereafter presented to subjects during functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) assessment. Results Increased hemodynamic responses in the anterior cingulate cortex, medial frontal gyrus, fusiform gyrus and occipital lobe were observed in both patients and controls when viewing individualized stimuli. Relative to control subjects, patients with depression showed increased hemodynamic responses in limbic-paralimbic and subcortical regions (e.g. amygdala and basal ganglia) but no signal decrease in prefrontal regions. Conclusions This study provides the first evidence that individualized stimuli derived from standardized clinical interviewing can lead to hemodynamic responses in regions associated with self-referential and emotional processing in both groups and limbic-paralimbic and subcortical structures in individuals with depression. Although the regions with increased responses in patients have been previously reported, this study enhances the ecological value of fMRI findings by applying stimuli that are of personal relevance to each individuals depression.


Psychiatry MMC | 2011

The Role of Mentalization in the Psychoanalytic Treatment of Chronic Depression

Svenja Taubner; Henrik Kessler; Anna Buchheim; Horst Kächele; Lenka Staun

Mentalization has been proposed as a key concept in understanding therapeutic change in patients with Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD). However, little is known about mentalization in chronic depression. This study investigated the role of mentalization in the long-term psychoanalytic treatment of chronic depression. Mentalization measured with the Reflective Functioning Scale (RFS) was examined in patients with chronic depression (n = 20) in long-term psychoanalytic treatment and compared to healthy controls (n = 20). Results show that global RF scores did not differ significantly between patients and controls. However, depressed patients tended to have lower RF scores concerning issues of loss. Furthermore, RF was unrelated to symptoms and distress as assessed by the Beck Depression Inventory (BDI) and the SCL-90. RF did not predict therapeutic outcome as measured with the BDI but predicted changes in general distress after 8 months of psychoanalytic treatment as measured by the SCL-90. Moreover, correlations between RF and the Helping Alliance Questionnaire indicated that patients with higher RF were able to establish a therapeutic alliance more easily compared to patients with low RF.


The Physician and Sportsmedicine | 2011

Neural correlates of the perception of dynamic versus static facial expressions of emotion.

Henrik Kessler; Cornelia Doyen-Waldecker; Christian Hofer; Holger Hoffmann; Harald C. Traue; Birgit Abler

AIM This study investigated brain areas involved in the perception of dynamic facial expressions of emotion. METHODS A group of 30 healthy subjects was measured with fMRI when passively viewing prototypical facial expressions of fear, disgust, sadness and happiness. Using morphing techniques, all faces were displayed as still images and also dynamically as a film clip with the expressions evolving from neutral to emotional. RESULTS Irrespective of a specific emotion, dynamic stimuli selectively activated bilateral superior temporal sulcus, visual area V5, fusiform gyrus, thalamus and other frontal and parietal areas. Interaction effects of emotion and mode of presentation (static/dynamic) were only found for the expression of happiness, where static faces evoked greater activity in the medial prefrontal cortex. CONCLUSIONS Our results confirm previous findings on neural correlates of the perception of dynamic facial expressions and are in line with studies showing the importance of the superior temporal sulcus and V5 in the perception of biological motion. Differential activation in the fusiform gyrus for dynamic stimuli stands in contrast to classical models of face perception but is coherent with new findings arguing for a more general role of the fusiform gyrus in the processing of socially relevant stimuli.


systems man and cybernetics | 2013

Transsituational Individual-Specific Biopsychological Classification of Emotions

Steffen Walter; Jonghwa Kim; David Hrabal; Stephen Crawcour; Henrik Kessler; Harald C. Traue

The goal of automatic biopsychological emotion recognition of companion technologies is to ensure reliable and valid classification rates. In this paper, emotional states were induced via a Wizard-of-Oz mental trainer scenario, which is based on the valence-arousal-dominance model. In most experiments, classification algorithms are tested via leave-out cross-validation of one situation. These studies often show very high classification rates, which are comparable with those in our experiment (92.6%). However, in order to guarantee robust emotion recognition based on biopsychological data, measurements have to be taken across several situations with the goal of selecting stable features for individual emotional states. For this purpose, our mental trainer experiment was conducted twice for each subject with a 10-min break between the two rounds. It is shown that there are robust psychobiological features that can be used for classification (70.1%) in both rounds. However, these are not the same as those that were found via feature selection performed only on the first round (classification: 53.0%).


Behavioural Brain Research | 2014

An investigation of facial emotion recognition impairments in alexithymia and its neural correlates

Sebastian Jongen; Nikolai Axmacher; Nico A.W. Kremers; Holger Hoffmann; Kerstin Limbrecht-Ecklundt; Harald C. Traue; Henrik Kessler

Alexithymia is a personality trait that involves difficulties identifying emotions and describing feelings. It is hypothesized that this includes facial emotion recognition but limited knowledge exists about possible neural correlates of this assumed deficit. We hence tested thirty-seven healthy subjects with either a relatively high or low degree of alexithymia (HDA versus LDA), who performed in a reliable and standardized test of facial emotion recognition (FEEL, Facially Expressed Emotion Labeling) in the functional MRI. LDA subjects had significantly better emotion recognition scores and showed relatively more activity in several brain areas associated with alexithymia and emotional awareness (anterior cingulate cortex), and the extended system of facial perception concerned with aspects of social communication and emotion (amygdala, insula, striatum). Additionally, LDA subjects had more activity in the visual area of social perception (posterior part of the superior temporal sulcus) and the inferior frontal cortex. HDA subjects, on the other hand, exhibited greater activity in the superior parietal lobule. With differences in behaviour and brain responses between two groups of otherwise healthy subjects, our results indirectly support recent conceptualizations and epidemiological data, that alexithymia is a dimensional personality trait apparent in clinically healthy subjects rather than a categorical diagnosis only applicable to clinical populations.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Can the Neural Basis of Repression Be Studied in the MRI Scanner? New Insights from Two Free Association Paradigms

Jo-Birger Schmeing; Aram Kehyayan; Henrik Kessler; Anne T. A. Do Lam; Juergen Fell; Anna Schmidt; Nikolai Axmacher

Background The psychodynamic theory of repression suggests that experiences which are related to internal conflicts become unconscious. Previous attempts to investigate repression experimentally were based on voluntary, intentional suppression of stimulus material. Unconscious repression of conflict-related material is arguably due to different processes, but has never been studied with neuroimaging methods. Methods We used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) in addition with skin conductance recordings during two free association paradigms to identify the neural mechanisms underlying forgetting of freely associated words according to repression theory. Results In the first experiment, free association to subsequently forgotten words was accompanied by increases in skin conductance responses (SCRs) and reaction times (RTs), indicating autonomic arousal, and by activation of the anterior cingulate cortex. These findings are consistent with the hypothesis that these associations were repressed because they elicited internal conflicts. To test this idea more directly, we conducted a second experiment in which participants freely associated to conflict-related sentences. Indeed, these associations were more likely to be forgotten than associations to not conflict-related sentences and were accompanied by increases in SCRs and RTs. Furthermore, we observed enhanced activation of the anterior cingulate cortex and deactivation of hippocampus and parahippocampal cortex during association to conflict-related sentences. Conclusions These two experiments demonstrate that high autonomic arousal during free association predicts subsequent memory failure, accompanied by increased activation of conflict-related and deactivation of memory-related brain regions. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that during repression, explicit memory systems are down-regulated by the anterior cingulate cortex.


Cognition & Emotion | 2010

Perceived realism of dynamic facial expressions of emotion: Optimal durations for the presentation of emotional onsets and offsets

Holger Hoffmann; Harald C. Traue; Franziska Bachmayr; Henrik Kessler

The presentation of facial displays of emotions is an important method in emotion-recognition studies in various basic and applied settings. This study intends to make a methodological contribution and investigates the perceived realism of dynamic facial expressions for six emotions (fear, sadness, anger, happiness, disgust, and surprise). We presented dynamic displays of faces evolving from a neutral to an emotional expression (onsets) and faces evolving from an emotional expression to a neutral one (offsets). Participants rated the perceived realism of stimuli of different durations (240–3040 ms) and adjusted the duration of each sequence until they perceived it as maximally realistic. Durations perceived as most realistic are reported for each emotion, providing an important basis for the construction of dynamic facial stimuli for future research.

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