Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Jacqueline Counotte is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Jacqueline Counotte.


Schizophrenia Bulletin | 2016

Environmental Social Stress, Paranoia and Psychosis Liability: A Virtual Reality Study

Wim Veling; Roos Pot-Kolder; Jacqueline Counotte; Jim van Os; Mark van der Gaag

The impact of social environments on mental states is difficult to assess, limiting the understanding of which aspects of the social environment contribute to the onset of psychotic symptoms and how individual characteristics moderate this outcome. This study aimed to test sensitivity to environmental social stress as a mechanism of psychosis using Virtual Reality (VR) experiments. Fifty-five patients with recent onset psychotic disorder, 20 patients at ultra high risk for psychosis, 42 siblings of patients with psychosis, and 53 controls walked 5 times in a virtual bar with different levels of environmental social stress. Virtual social stressors were population density, ethnic density and hostility. Paranoia about virtual humans and subjective distress in response to virtual social stress exposures were measured with State Social Paranoia Scale (SSPS) and self-rated momentary subjective distress (SUD), respectively. Pre-existing (subclinical) symptoms were assessed with the Community Assessment of Psychic Experiences (CAPE), Green Paranoid Thoughts Scale (GPTS) and the Social Interaction Anxiety Scale (SIAS). Paranoia and subjective distress increased with degree of social stress in the environment. Psychosis liability and pre-existing symptoms, in particular negative affect, positively impacted the level of paranoia and distress in response to social stress. These results provide experimental evidence that heightened sensitivity to environmental social stress may play an important role in the onset and course of psychosis.


Psychological Medicine | 2016

Childhood trauma, psychosis liability and social stress reactivity: a virtual reality study

Wim Veling; Jacqueline Counotte; Roos Pot-Kolder; J. van Os; M. van der Gaag

BACKGROUND Childhood trauma is associated with higher risk for mental disorders, including psychosis. Heightened sensitivity to social stress may be a mechanism. This virtual reality study tested the effect of childhood trauma on level of paranoid ideations and distress in response to social stress, in interaction with psychosis liability and level of social stress exposure. METHOD Seventy-five individuals with higher psychosis liability (55 with recent onset psychotic disorder and 20 at ultra-high risk for psychosis) and 95 individuals with lower psychosis liability (42 siblings and 53 controls) were exposed to a virtual café in five experiments with 0-3 social stressors (crowded, other ethnicity and hostility). Paranoid ideation was measured after each experiment. Subjective distress was self-rated before and after experiments. Multilevel random regression analyses were used to test main effects of childhood trauma and interaction effects. RESULTS Childhood trauma was more prevalent in individuals with higher psychosis liability, and was associated with higher level of (subclinical) psychotic and affective symptoms. Individuals with a history of childhood trauma responded with more subjective distress to virtual social stress exposures. The effects of childhood trauma on paranoia and subjective distress were significantly stronger when the number of virtual environmental stressors increased. Higher psychosis liability increased the effect of childhood trauma on peak subjective distress and stress reactivity during experiments. CONCLUSIONS Childhood trauma is associated with heightened social stress sensitivity and may contribute to psychotic and affective dysregulation later in life, through a sensitized paranoid and stress response to social stressors.


Schizophrenia Research | 2017

High Psychosis Liability is Associated with Altered Autonomic Balance during Exposure to Virtual Reality Social Stressors

Jacqueline Counotte; Roos Pot-Kolder; Arie M. van Roon; Olivier Hoskam; Mark van der Gaag; Wim Veling

BACKGROUND Social stressors are associated with an increased risk of psychosis. Stress sensitisation is thought to be an underlying mechanism and may be reflected in an altered autonomic stress response. Using an experimental Virtual Reality design, the autonomic stress response to social stressors was examined in participants with different liability to psychosis. METHOD Fifty-five patients with recent onset psychotic disorder, 20 patients at ultra-high risk for psychosis, 42 siblings of patients with psychosis and 53 controls were exposed to social stressors (crowdedness, ethnic minority status and hostility) in a Virtual Reality environment. Heart rate variability parameters and skin conductance levels were measured at baseline and during Virtual Reality experiments. RESULTS High psychosis liability groups had significantly increased heart rate and decreased heart rate variability compared to low liability groups both at baseline and during Virtual Reality experiments. Both low frequency (LF) and high frequency (HF) power were reduced, while the LF/HF ratio was similar between groups. The number of virtual social stressors significantly affected heart rate, HF, LF/HF and skin conductance level. There was no interaction between psychosis liability and amount of virtual social stress. CONCLUSION High liability to psychosis is associated with decreased parasympathetic activity in virtual social environments, which reflects generally high levels of arousal, rather than increased autonomic reactivity to social stressors.


Brain Behavior and Immunity | 2018

A pilot study on immuno-psychiatry in the 22q11.2 deletion syndrome: A role for Th17 cells in psychosis?

Elfi Vergaelen; Carmen Schiweck; Kristof Van Steeland; Jacqueline Counotte; Wim Veling; Ann Swillen; Hemmo A. Drexhage; Stephan Claes

BACKGROUND A growing body of evidence supports a role for immune alterations in Schizophrenia Spectrum Disorders (SSD). A high prevalence (25-40%) of SSD has been found in patients with 22q11.2 deletion syndrome (22q11.2DS), which is known for T-cell deficits due to thymus hypoplasia. This study is the first to explore the association between the T-cell subsets and psychotic symptoms in adults with 22q11.2DS. METHODS 34 individuals (aged 19-38 yrs.) with 22q11.2DS and 34 healthy age- and gender matched control individuals were included. FACS analysis of the blood samples was performed to define T-cell subsets. Ultra-high risk for psychosis or diagnosis of SSD was determined based on CAARMS interviews and DSM-5 criteria for SSD. Positive psychotic symptom severity was measured based on the PANSS positive symptoms subscale. RESULTS A partial T-cell immune deficiency in 22q11.2DS patients was confirmed by significantly reduced percentages of circulating T and T-helper cells. Significantly higher percentages of inflammatory Th1, Th17, and memory T-helper cells were found in adults with 22q11.2DS. Most importantly an increased Th17 percentage was found in adults with psychotic symptoms as compared to non-psychotic adults with 22q11.2DS, and Th17 percentage were related to the presence of positive psychotic symptoms. CONCLUSIONS Given the literature on the role of T cells and in particular of Th17 cells and IL-17 in hippocampus development, cognition and behavior, these results support the hypothesis for a role of Th17 cells in the development and/or regulation of psychotic symptoms in 22q11.2DS. This pilot study underlines the importance to further study the role of T-cell defects and of Th17 cells in the development of psychiatric symptoms. It also supports the possibility to use 22q11.2DS as a model to study T-cell involvement in the development of SSD.


Schizophrenia Research | 2017

Social environments and interpersonal distance regulation in psychosis: A virtual reality study

Chris Geraets; Marije van Beilen; Roos Pot-Kolder; Jacqueline Counotte; Mark van der Gaag; Wim Veling

BACKGROUND Experimentally studying the influence of social environments on mental health and behavior is challenging, as social context is difficult to standardize in laboratory settings. Virtual Reality (VR) enables studying social interaction in terms of interpersonal distance in a more ecologically valid manner. Regulation of interpersonal distance may be abnormal in patients with psychotic disorders and influenced by environmental stress, symptoms or distress. AIMS To investigate interpersonal distance in people with a psychotic disorder and at ultrahigh risk for psychosis (UHR) compared to siblings and controls in virtual social environments, and explore the relationship between clinical characteristics and interpersonal distance. METHODS Nineteen UHR patients, 52 patients with psychotic disorders, 40 siblings of patients with a psychotic disorder and 47 controls were exposed to virtual cafés. In five virtual café visits, participants were exposed to different levels of social stress, in terms of crowdedness, ethnicity and hostility. Measures on interpersonal distance, distress and state paranoia were obtained. Baseline measures included trait paranoia, social anxiety, depressive, positive and negative symptoms. RESULTS Interpersonal distance increased when social stressors were present in the environment. No difference in interpersonal distance regulation was found between the groups. Social anxiety and distress were positively associated with interpersonal distance in the total sample. CONCLUSION This VR paradigm indicates that interpersonal distance regulation in response to environmental social stressors is unaltered in people with psychosis or UHR. Environmental stress, social anxiety and distress trigger both people with and without psychosis to maintain larger interpersonal distances in social situations.


Cyberpsychology, Behavior, and Social Networking | 2018

Anxiety Partially Mediates Cybersickness Symptoms in Immersive Virtual Reality Environments

Roos Pot-Kolder; Wim Veling; Jacqueline Counotte; Mark van der Gaag

The use of virtual reality (VR) in psychological treatment is expected to increase. Cybersickness (CS) is a negative side effect of VR exposure and is associated with treatment dropout. This study aimed to investigate the following: (a) if gender differences in CS can be replicated, (b) if differences in anxiety and CS symptoms between patients and controls can be replicated, and (c) whether the relationship between exposure to VR and CS symptoms is mediated by anxiety. A sample (N = 170) of participants with different levels of psychosis liability was exposed to VR environments. CS and anxiety were assessed with self-report measures before and after the VR experiment. This study replicated gender differences in CS symptoms, most of which were present before exposure to VR. It also replicated findings that a significant correlation between anxiety and CS can be found in healthy individuals, but not in patients. In a VR environment, anxiety partially mediated CS symptoms, specifically nausea and disorientation. A partial explanation for the differences found between patients and controls may lie in a ceiling effect for the symptoms of CS. A second explanation may be the partial overlap between CS symptoms and physiological anxiety responses. CS symptoms reported at baseline cannot be explained by exposure to VR, but are related to anxiety. Caution is required when interpreting studies on both CS and anxiety, until the specificity in measurements has been improved. Since anxiety mediated the CS symptoms, CS is expected to decline during treatment together with the reduction of anxiety.


Schizophrenia Research | 2014

Poster #T249 PSYCHOSIS LIABILITY, PARANOIA AND DISTRESS IN EXPERIMENTAL VIRTUAL REALITY SOCIAL ENVIRONMENTS

Wim Veling; Roos Pot-Kolder; Jacqueline Counotte; Mark van der Gaag

Background: Psychotic syndromes can be understood as disorders of adaptation to social context. It is not clear, however, how symptoms of psychosis develop in the daily social environment, in interaction with individual liability. Virtual Reality (VR) technology may help to investigate relationships between environment and psychosis, as it allows controlled exposure to various social risk environments. Methods: Four groups (total N=54) with different liability to psychosis (patients with first episode psychosis (FEP), siblings, ultra high risk individuals (UHR) and healthy controls) were exposed to virtual social environments. Psychological and physiological responses were measured repeatedly. The virtual environment was varied with regard to social stressors (population density, ethnic density and hostility of avatars). Results: Paranoid thoughts and social anxiety in real life correlated significantly with paranoid thoughts about avatars and subjective distress in virtual social stress environments (Spearmans correlation coefficients 0.4 0.5, p


Schizophrenia Research | 2018

Self-esteem moderates affective and psychotic responses to social stress in psychosis: A virtual reality study

Alyssa Jongeneel; Roos Pot-Kolder; Jacqueline Counotte; Mark van der Gaag; Wim Veling

BACKGROUND Higher liability to psychosis is associated with low self-esteem and increased sensitivity to social stress. Recently, we reported a positive relation between liability to psychosis and affective and psychotic responses to social stress. This study investigated how self-esteem moderates paranoia, peak subjective distress and stress reactivity of people with different psychosis liability in response to social stressors in virtual reality. METHODS Ninety-four individuals with lower (41 siblings and 53 controls) and 75 persons with higher psychosis liability (55 with recent onset psychotic disorder and 20 at ultra-high risk for psychosis) explored five times a virtual café with various social stressors (crowdedness, ethnic minority status, and hostility). They rated momentary paranoia (State Social Paranoia Scale) after each experiment and subjective distress on a visual analogue scale before and after the experiments. Positive and negative self-esteem were assessed with the Self-Esteem Rating Scale. RESULTS Momentary paranoia, peak subjective distress, and reactivity to social stressors were associated with negative self-esteem, but not positive self-esteem. Effects of both positive and negative self-esteem on psychotic and affective stress responses, but not stress reactivity, became significantly stronger when individuals were exposed to more stressful environments. Effects of self-esteem on momentary paranoia and peak subjective distress did not differ between the high liability and low liability group. Persons with lower psychosis liability had a stronger effect of negative self-esteem on stress reactivity than persons with higher liability. CONCLUSIONS Positive and negative self-esteem may play an important role in affective and psychotic responses to social stress.


Schizophrenia Bulletin | 2017

Self-reported Cognitive Biases Moderate the Associations Between Social Stress and Paranoid Ideation in a Virtual Reality Experimental Study

Roos Pot-Kolder; Wim Veling; Jacqueline Counotte; Mark van der Gaag

Introduction Cognitive biases are associated with psychosis liability and paranoid ideation. This study investigated the moderating relationship between pre-existing self-reported cognitive biases and the occurrence of paranoid ideation in response to different levels of social stress in a virtual reality environment. Methods This study included 170 participants with different levels of psychosis liability (55 recent onset psychosis, 20 ultrahigh risk for psychosis, 42 siblings of psychotic patients, and 53 controls). All participants were exposed to virtual environments with different levels of social stress. The level of experienced paranoia in the virtual environments was measured with the State Social Paranoia Scale. Cognitive biases were assessed with a self-report continuous measure. Also, cumulative number of cognitive biases was calculated using dichotomous measures of the separate biases, based on general population norm scores. Results Higher belief inflexibility bias (Z = 2.83, P < .001), attention to threat bias (Z = 3.40, P < .001), external attribution bias (Z = 2.60, P < .001), and data-gathering bias (Z = 2.07, P < .05) were all positively associated with reported paranoid ideation in the social virtual environments. Level of paranoid response increased with number of cognitive biases present (B = 1.73, P < .001). The effect of environmental stressors on paranoid ideation was moderated by attention to threat bias (Z = 2.78, P < .01) and external attribution bias (Z = 2.75, P < .01), whereas data-gathering bias and belief inflexibility did not moderate the relationship. Conclusion There is an additive effect of separate cognitive biases on paranoid response to social stress. The effect of social environmental stressors on paranoid ideation is further enhanced by attention to threat bias and external attribution bias.


Brain Behavior and Immunity | 2017

Th17/T regulator cell balance and NK cell numbers in relation to psychosis liability and social stress reactivity

Jacqueline Counotte; Hemmo A. Drexhage; J.M. Wijkhuijs; Roos Pot-Kolder; Veerle Bergink; Hans W. Hoek; Wim Veling

BACKGROUND Psychotic disorders are characterized by a deranged immune system, including altered number and function of Natural Killer (NK) and T cells. Psychotic disorders arise from an interaction between genetic vulnerability and exposure to environmental risk factors. Exposure to social adversity during early life is particularly relevant to psychosis risk and is thought to increase reactivity to subsequent minor daily social stressors. Virtual reality allows controlled experimental exposure to virtual social stressors. AIM To investigate the interplay between social adversity during early life, cell numbers of NK cells and T helper subsets and social stress reactivity in relation to psychosis liability. METHODS Circulating numbers of Th1, Th2, Th17, T regulator and NK cells were determined using flow cytometry in 80 participants with low psychosis liability (46 healthy controls and 34 siblings) and 53 participants with high psychosis liability (14 ultra-high risk (UHR) patients and 39 recent-onset psychosis patients), with and without the experience of childhood trauma. We examined if cell numbers predicted subjective stress when participants were exposed to social stressors (crowdedness, hostility and being part of an ethnic minority) in a virtual reality environment. RESULTS There were no significant group differences in Th1, Th2, Th17, T regulator and NK cell numbers between groups with a high or low liability for psychosis. However, in the high psychosis liability group, childhood trauma was associated with increased Th17 cell numbers (p = 0.028). Moreover, in the high psychosis liability group increased T regulator and decreased NK cell numbers predicted stress experience during exposure to virtual social stressors (p = 0.015 and p = 0.009 for T regulator and NK cells, respectively). CONCLUSION A deranged Th17/T regulator balance and a reduced NK cell number are associated intermediate biological factors in the relation childhood trauma, psychosis liability and social stress reactivity.

Collaboration


Dive into the Jacqueline Counotte's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Wim Veling

University Medical Center Groningen

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Chris Geraets

University Medical Center Groningen

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Hemmo A. Drexhage

Erasmus University Rotterdam

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jim van Os

Maastricht University Medical Centre

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Marije van Beilen

University Medical Center Groningen

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Arie M. van Roon

University Medical Center Groningen

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

J. van Os

Maastricht University

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge