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Dive into the research topics where Kristina Barbara Rohde is active.

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Featured researches published by Kristina Barbara Rohde.


Journal of Personality Disorders | 2016

Emotional Processing, Interaction Process, and Outcome in Clarification-Oriented Psychotherapy for Personality Disorders: A Process-Outcome Analysis

Ueli Kramer; Antonio Pascual-Leone; Kristina Barbara Rohde; Rainer Sachse

It is important to understand the change processes involved in psychotherapies for patients with personality disorders (PDs). One patient process that promises to be useful in relation to the outcome of psychotherapy is emotional processing. In the present process-outcome analysis, we examine this question by using a sequential model of emotional processing and by additionally taking into account a therapists appropriate responsiveness to a patients presentation in clarification-oriented psychotherapy (COP), a humanistic-experiential form of therapy. The present study involved 39 patients with a range of PDs undergoing COP. Session 25 was assessed as part of the working phase of each therapy by external raters in terms of emotional processing using the Classification of Affective-Meaning States (CAMS) and in terms of the overall quality of therapist-patient interaction using the Process-Content-Relationship Scale (BIBS). Treatment outcome was assessed pre- and post-therapy using the Global Severity Index (GSI) of the SCL-90-R and the BDI. Results indicate that the good outcome cases showed more self-compassion, more rejecting anger, and a higher quality of therapist-patient interaction compared to poorer outcome cases. For good outcome cases, emotional processing predicted 18% of symptom change at the end of treatment, which was not found for poor outcome cases. These results are discussed within the framework of an integrative understanding of emotional processing as an underlying mechanism of change in COP, and perhaps in other effective therapy approaches for PDs.


Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience | 2012

Controlling conflict from interfering long-term memory representations

Kerstin Jost; Patrick H. Khader; Peter Düsel; Franziska R. Richter; Kristina Barbara Rohde; Siegfried Bien; Frank Rösler

Remembering is more than an activation of a memory trace. As retrieval cues are often not uniquely related to one specific memory, cognitive control should come into play to guide selective memory retrieval by focusing on relevant while ignoring irrelevant information. Here, we investigated, by means of EEG and fMRI, how the memory system deals with retrieval interference arising when retrieval cues are associated with two material types (faces and spatial positions), but only one is task-relevant. The topography of slow EEG potentials and the fMRI BOLD signal in posterior storage areas indicated that in such situations not only the relevant but also the irrelevant material becomes activated. This results in retrieval interference that triggers control processes mediated by the medial and lateral PFC, which are presumably involved in biasing target representations by boosting the task-relevant material. Moreover, memory-based conflict was found to be dissociable from response conflict that arises when the relevant and irrelevant materials imply different responses. The two types of conflict show different activations in the medial frontal cortex, supporting the claim of domain-specific prefrontal control systems.


Psychiatry MMC | 2017

Leaving Distress Behind: A Randomized Controlled Study on Change in Emotional Processing in Borderline Personality Disorder

Laurent Berthoud; Antonio Pascual-Leone; Franz Caspar; Hervé Tissot; Sabine Keller; Kristina Barbara Rohde; Yves de Roten; Jean-Nicolas Despland; Ueli Kramer

Objective: The marked impulsivity and instability of clients suffering from borderline personality disorder (BPD) greatly challenge therapists’ understanding and responsiveness. This may hinder the development of a constructive therapeutic relationship despite it being of particular importance in their treatment. Recent studies have shown that using motive-oriented therapeutic relationship (MOTR), a possible operationalization of appropriate therapist responsiveness, can enhance treatment outcome for BPD. The overall objective of this study is to examine change in emotional processing in BPD clients following the therapist’s use of MOTR. Method: The present paper focuses on N = 50 cases, n = 25 taken from each of two conditions of a randomized controlled add-on effectiveness design. Clients were either allocated to a manual-based psychiatric-psychodynamic 10-session version of general psychiatric management (GPM), a borderline-specific treatment, or to a 10-session version of GPM augmented with MOTR. Emotional states were assessed using the Classification of Affective-Meaning States (Pascual-Leone & Greenberg, 2005) at intake, midtreatment, and in the penultimate session. Results: Across treatment, early expressions of distress, especially the emotion state of global distress, were shown to significantly decrease (p = .00), and adaptive emotions were found to emerge (p < .05). Between-condition differences of change were found, including a significant increase in emotional variability and stronger outcome predictors in the MOTR condition. Conclusions: The findings indicate initial emotional change in BPD clients in a relatively short time frame and suggest the addition of MOTR to psychotherapeutic treatments as promising. Clinical implications are discussed.


International Journal of Methods in Psychiatric Research | 2017

Development of stimulus material for research in alcohol use disorders

Werner Martin Fey; Franz Moggi; Kristina Barbara Rohde; Chantal Michel; Andrea Seitz; Maria Stein

The availability of appropriate stimulus material is a key concern for an experimental approach to research on alcohol use disorders (AUDs). A large number of such stimuli are necessary to evoke relevant alcohol‐related associations. We report the development of a large stimulus database consisting of 457 pictures of alcoholic beverages and 398 pictures of neutral objects. These stimuli were rated by 18 inpatients hospitalized due to severe AUD and 18 healthy controls along four dimensions: arousal, valence, alcohol‐relatedness, and craving. Physical parameters of the pictures were assessed.


Emotion | 2017

Neurophysiological Traces of Interpersonal Pain: How Emotional Autobiographical Memories Affect Event-Related Potentials.

Kristina Barbara Rohde; Franz Caspar; Thomas Koenig; Antonio Pascual-Leone; Maria Stein

The automatic, involuntary reactivation of disturbing emotional memories, for example, of interpersonal pain, causes psychological discomfort and is central to many psychopathologies. This study aimed at elucidating the automatic brain processes underlying emotional autobiographical memories by investigating the neurophysiological dynamics within the first second after memory reactivation. Pictures of different individualized familiar faces served as cues for different specific emotional autobiographical memories, for example, for memories of interpersonal pain and grievances or for memories of appreciation in interpersonal relationships. Nineteen subjects participated in a passive face-viewing task while multichannel electroencephalogram was recorded. Analyses of event-related potentials demonstrated that emotional memories elicited an early posterior negativity and a stronger late positive potential, which tended to be particularly enhanced for painful memories. Source estimations attributed this stronger activation to networks including the posterior cingulate and ventrolateral prefrontal cortices. The findings suggest that the reactivation of emotional autobiographical memories involves privileged automatic attention at perceptual processing stages, and an enhanced recruitment of neural network activity at a postperceptual stage sensitive to emotional-motivational processing.


Behavioral and Brain Sciences | 2015

Focus on emotion as a catalyst of memory updating during reconsolidation

Maria Stein; Kristina Barbara Rohde; Katharina Henke

We share the idea of Lane et al. that successful psychotherapy exerts its effects through memory reconsolidation. To support it, we add further evidence that a behavioral interference may trigger memory update during reconsolidation. Furthermore, we propose that - in addition to replacing maladaptive emotions - new emotions experienced in the therapeutic process catalyze reconsolidation of the updated memory structure.


Clinical Psychology & Psychotherapy | 2018

The role of shame and self-compassion in psychotherapy for narcissistic personality disorder: An exploratory study

Ueli Kramer; Antonio Pascual-Leone; Kristina Barbara Rohde; Rainer Sachse


Cognitive Therapy and Research | 2015

Facilitating Emotional Processing: An Experimental Induction of Psychotherapeutically Relevant Affective States

Kristina Barbara Rohde; Maria Stein; Antonio Pascual-Leone; Franz Caspar


Archive | 2017

Alkoholreize im Gehirn: Neurophysiologische Verarbeitungsschritte und ihr Zusammenhang mit subjektivem Craving

Kristina Barbara Rohde; Werner Martin Fey; Franz Moggi; Thomas König; Jacqueline Oehy; Lea Duppenthaler; Isabel Luedi; Maria Stein


Archive | 2017

Brain signature of emotional change: Altered neurophysiological processing after one session of psychotherapy

Kristina Barbara Rohde; Franz Caspar; Thomas König; Antonio Pascual-Leone; Maria Stein

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Ueli Kramer

University of Lausanne

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