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Dive into the research topics where Manuela Gander is active.

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Featured researches published by Manuela Gander.


Frontiers in Human Neuroscience | 2015

Attachment classification, psychophysiology and frontal EEG asymmetry across the lifespan: a review

Manuela Gander; Anna Buchheim

In recent years research on physiological response and frontal electroencephalographic (EEG) asymmetry in different patterns of infant and adult attachment has increased. We review research findings regarding associations between attachment classifications and frontal EEG asymmetry, the autonomic nervous system (ANS) and the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenocortical axis (HPA). Studies indicate that insecure attachment is related to a heightened adrenocortical activity, heart rate and skin conductance in response to stress, which is consistent with the hypothesis that attachment insecurity leads to impaired emotion regulation. Research on frontal EEG asymmetry also shows a clear difference in the emotional arousal between the attachment groups evidenced by specific frontal asymmetry changes. Furthermore, we discuss neurophysiological evidence of attachment organization and present up-to-date findings of EEG-research with adults. Based on the overall patterns of results presented in this article we identify some major areas of interest and directions for future research.


Frontiers in Psychology | 2015

Eating disorders in adolescence: attachment issues from a developmental perspective

Manuela Gander; Kathrin Sevecke; Anna Buchheim

In the present article we review findings from an emerging body of research on attachment issues in adolescents with eating disorders from a developmental perspective. Articles for inclusion in this review were identified from PsychINFO (1966–2013), Sciencedirect (1970–2013), Psychindex (1980–2013), and Pubmed (1980–2013). First, we will outline the crucial developmental changes in the attachment system and discuss how they might be related to the early onset of the disease. Then we will report on the major results from attachment studies using self-report and narrative instruments in that age group. Studies with a developmental approach on attachment will be analyzed in more detail. The high incidence of the unresolved attachment pattern in eating disorder samples is striking, especially for patients with anorexia nervosa. Interestingly, this predominance of the unresolved category was also found in their mothers. To date, these transgenerational aspects are still poorly understood and therefore represent an exciting research frontier. Future studies that include larger adolescent samples and provide a more detailed description including symptom severity and comorbidity would contribute to a better understanding of this complex and painful condition.


Frontiers in Human Neuroscience | 2016

Lower Oxytocin Plasma Levels in Borderline Patients with Unresolved Attachment Representations

Andrea Jobst; Frank Padberg; Maria-Christine Mauer; Tanja Daltrozzo; C. Bauriedl-Schmidt; Lena Sabass; Nina Sarubin; Peter Falkai; Babette Renneberg; Peter Zill; Manuela Gander; Anna Buchheim

Interpersonal problems and affective dysregulation are core characteristics of borderline personality disorder (BPD). BPD patients predominantly show unresolved attachment representations. The oxytocin (OT) system is associated with human social attachment and affiliative behavior, and OT dysregulation may be related to distinct attachment characteristics. Here, we investigated whether attachment representations are related to peripheral OT levels in BPD patients. Twenty-one female BPD patients and 20 age-, gender-, and education-matched healthy controls (HCs) were assessed with clinical scales and measures of interpersonal and attachment-related characteristics, including the Adult Attachment Projective Picture System (AAP). Plasma OT concentrations were measured prior to and during social exclusion in a virtual ball tossing game (Cyberball). The majority of BPD patients (63.2%) but no HCs showed unresolved (disorganized) attachment representations. In this subgroup of patients, baseline OT plasma levels were significantly lower than in BPD patients with organized attachment representations. This pilot study extends previous findings of altered OT regulation in BPD as a putative key mechanism underlying interpersonal dysregulation. Our results provide first evidence that altered OT plasma levels are related to disorganized attachment representations in BPD patients.


Psychotherapie Forum | 2014

Klinische Bindungsforschung mit dem Adult Attachment Projective Picture System: Methodik, klinische Anwendung und Perspektiven

Anna Buchheim; Manuela Gander; Florian Juen

ZusammenfassungDas Adult Attachment Projective Picture System (AAP) ist ein valides, reliables Instrument zur Erfassung der Bindungsrepräsentation bei Erwachsenen. Es sind bereits vielfältige klinische und neurobiologische Studien mit diesem Instrument durchgeführt worden, die in dieser Übersicht zusammengefasst werden. Wir berichten anhand von Fallbeispielen störungsspezifische Charakteristika anhand von AAP-Narrativen von Patienten. Zusammenfassend ist festzuhalten, dass im klinischen Kontext das AAP bei verschiedenen Störungsbildern auch im Rahmen von Psychotherapieforschung valide einsetzbar ist. Die ökonomische Durchführung des AAP eignet sich sehr gut dazu, das AAP auch in der klinischen Routine einzusetzen. Dieses Instrument kann auch für den Jugendbereich angewandt werden. Noch gibt es wenige Untersuchungen mit diesen Methoden zur Veränderbarkeit von Bindung durch Psychotherapie. Wir berichten über die Ergebnisse einer Psychoanalyse-Studie, bei der erstmals bei chronisch depressiven Patienten neben der symptomatischen Veränderung die signifikante Veränderung von unverarbeiteten Traumata nach 15 Monaten psychoanalytischer Behandlung sowie neuronale Veränderungen in depressionsrelevanten Arealen festgestellt wurden. Dazu wurde ein fMRT-Paradigma mit dem AAP eingesetzt. Die jeweils modifizierte Anwendung des AAP im neurowissenschaftlichen Kontext eröffnet neue Möglichkeiten für die experimentelle Untersuchung neuronaler Korrelate von Bindungsmustern bei Gesunden und Patienten. Befunde zu neuronalen Korrelaten von Bindungstraumata bei Borderline-Patientinnen untermauern einen klinisch relevanten Aspekt des Verlassenwerdens und Alleinseins bei dieser Patientengruppe.AbstractThe Adult Attachment Projective Picture System (AAP) is an established, reliable and valid representational measure of attachment for adults. In this review we report on several studies using the AAP in the clinical and neurobiological context. Moreover we demonstrate some disorder specific characteristics in patients with different disorders in their AAP narratives. In sum the AAP is valid for assessing attachment representations in several clinical disorders in the context of psychotherapy research. The economic administration allows to apply the AAP also in the clinical routine. This measure can also be administered in adolescent participants. There are only a small number of studies examining the change of attachment status during psychotherapy. We report on a study in depressed patients and their significant change from disorganized to organized attachment representations after 15 months of psychoanalytic treatment. This study identified neural changes in patients using an adapted AAP-fMRI paradigm to assess their improvement on a neural level. The feasibility of the AAP in an fMRI environment opens new possibilities to examine neural correlates of attachment. An fMRI study on Borderline patients with attachment trauma revealed clinically relevant results, concerning the patients’ intolerance of aloneness.


Journal of Affective Disorders | 2017

Attachment representations, patterns of emotion regulation, and social exclusion in patients with chronic and episodic depression and healthy controls

C. Bauriedl-Schmidt; Andrea Jobst; Manuela Gander; E. Seidl; L. Sabaß; Nina Sarubin; C. Mauer; Frank Padberg; Anna Buchheim

BACKGROUND The experience of social exclusion (ostracism) is linked to the etiology and maintenance of depression. Most individuals experience emotional stress in states of social exclusion. Insecurely attached individuals, especially with an unresolved trauma, show maladaptive coping in response to social stress. The present study examines (a) the differences with regards to attachment representations in episodic (ED) and chronic depressive (CD) inpatients and (b) how ostracism affects their emotional reactions. METHODS Patients with CD (n=29) and ED (n=23) and healthy control subjects (n=29) were interviewed using the Adult Attachment Projective Picture System (AAP), a valid measure to assess attachment representation; and played a virtual ball tossing game simulating social exclusion (Cyberball). Multiple depression-related risk and protective factors were considered. We hypothesized that CD patients show the most severe attachment disorganization and are emotionally most affected by the social exclusion situation. Moreover, we explored the interaction between ostracism and attachment. RESULTS Contradicting our hypotheses, ED and CD individuals were almost akin with regards to their attachment insecurity/disorganization and reactions to Cyberball. An emotionally altered reaction to social exclusion was identified in the insecure-disorganized depressive subgroup. LIMITATIONS Small sample size hampering further subgroup analyses. The ED sample may include single CD subjects with recent manifestation. CONCLUSIONS The pattern of emotion regulation in the depressive groups matches with findings from clinical studies, including attachment research. The relationship between attachment representations and ostracism should be further investigated in larger samples of depressive individuals.


Psychiatrische Praxis | 2017

Einfluss und Veränderung der Selbstlenkungsfähigkeit in der Dialektisch-Behavioralen Therapie (DBT)

Dorothee Bernheim; Mathias Becker; Manuela Gander; Alexander Lischke; Renate Mentel; Anna Buchheim; Harald J. Freyberger

Objective Investigate influence and change of self-directedness (SD) in Dialectical-Behavior Therapy (DBT) for 26 female outpatients with borderline personality disorder (BPS). Method Variance analyses are used to evaluate psychopathology and interpersonal problems in 2 subgroups (low vs. high SD) with questionnaires at 3 measuring times over the period of 1 year. Results Low SD was associated with higher psychopathology, more interpersonal problems and lower symptomreduction. Over time of intervention the SD of all patients improved significantly. Conclusion DBT strengthens the SD of patients with BPD. A screening of SD before intervention, and systematic support should be considered.


Journal of Trauma & Dissociation | 2018

Use of the Adult Attachment Projective Picture System in the formulation of a case of an adolescent refugee with PTSD

Manuela Gander; Diana Diamond; Anna Buchheim; Kathrin Sevecke

ABSTRACT Forced displacements and their psychosocial consequences in adolescent refugees and their families have received increasing attention in recent years. Although supportive family relations play a key role in buffering the impact of traumatization in adolescents, parental ability to provide such is often subject to extreme pressure. Under conditions of forced dislocation and fear, maladaptive interpersonal strategies in the parent–child relationships may develop, contributing to the onset of psychopathology. We explore new aspects of attachment-related issues for the understanding and treatment of adolescent refugees who have experienced multiple traumas in their childhood. We used a multimethod assessment battery including the Adult Attachment Projective Picture System (AAP), the Structured Clinical Interview, the Youth Self Report and the Wechsler Intelligence Scale in an adolescent boy with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Our subject was an adolescent refugee from the Middle East who demonstrated an unresolved attachment when confronted with loss and fear. His responses on the AAP evoked aspects of insecure-unresolved attachment, including his belief that it is not safe to trust in attachment figures, his limited access to traumatic attachment experiences, his impaired ability to take concrete actions when dealing with threatening attachment situations and the unintentional role-reversal shed new light on our understanding of his traumatic experiences, family functioning and psychopathological symptoms. Our results demonstrate the utility of the AAP in an adolescent refugee with PTSD by expanding our knowledge of a diverse range of experiences across the interpersonal, cognitive, cultural and developmental contexts that formed the basis for an individualized treatment plan.


Clinical Psychology & Psychotherapy | 2018

Disorder-specific attachment characteristics and experiences of childhood abuse and neglect in adolescents with anorexia nervosa and a major depressive episode

Manuela Gander; Kathrin Sevecke; Anna Buchheim

For the first time, the present study investigates disorder‐specific attachment characteristics and childhood trauma in adolescent inpatients with anorexia nervosa (n = 30, girls/boys: 28/2, age: M = 14.84, SD = 1.20), a major depressive episode (n = 30, girls/boys: 27/3, age: M = 15.14, SD = 1.50), and controls (n = 60, girls/boys: 44/16, age: M = 16.10, SD = 1.20). We used the Structured Clinical Interview to diagnose Axis I disorders, the Adult Attachment Projective Picture System to classify attachment representations, and the Childhood Trauma Questionnaire to assess child maltreatment. Our findings demonstrate an overrepresentation of the unresolved attachment status in the patient samples. A one‐way analysis of variance succeeded by Bonferroni post hoc tests indicated that adolescents with anorexia nervosa show more isolation and dissolution of boundaries between life and death when confronted with situations of solitude. Although they report moderate to severe levels of traumatic childhood experiences, they tend to minimize those. Adolescents with a major depressive episode report higher levels of emotional abuse and neglect in their childhood, leaving them in a state of failed protection and danger during attachment distress. Integrating these attachment‐related characteristics into specific psychotherapeutic interventions might be associated with a better outcome in that age group.


Psychiatria Danubina | 2017

NONSUICIDAL SELF-INJURY IN A NATURALISTIC SAMPLE OF ADOLESCENTS UNDERGOING INPATIENT PSYCHIATRIC TREATMENT: PREVALENCE, GENDER DISTRIBUTION AND COMORBIDITIES

Kathrin Sevecke; Astrid Bock; Lucas Fenzel; Martin Fuchs; Manuela Gander

BACKGROUND A growing body of research points toward nonsuicidal self-injury (NSSI) in adolescents as an important and frequent health-related risk factor. In 2013, NSSI was proposed in section 3 of the DSM-5 as a new diagnostic entity warranting further study. In line with that goal, the present study was conducted in order to evaluate prevalence, gender distribution and comorbidities of NSSI in a sample of adolescent psychiatric inpatients. SUBJECTS AND METHODS The study included 130 adolescents (mean age 15.09 years, SD ± 1.47; 71.5% female) undergoing inpatient psychiatric treatment at a specialized facility. The factors assessed were sociodemographic data, the presence of NSSI according to the proposed DSM-5 criteria, clinical psychiatric diagnosis, the presence of suicidality and the presence of personality disorder. RESULTS A large percentage, 38.5%, of the sample fulfilled DSM-5 criteria for NSSI, and more than half (50.8%) of the adolescents indicated having injured themselves at least once in the past. Patients with NSSI were predominantly young women and clustered in a spectrum of diagnostic entities including not only borderline personality disorders but also substance use disorders and affective disorders. A strong association was found between suicidality (suicidal ideation, history of suicide attempt) and NSSI. CONCLUSIONS In line with previous findings, NSSI among adolescent psychiatric inpatients was found to be a frequent phenomenon associated with a broad spectrum of comorbidities. Moreover, while NSSI is conceptualized as an act without suicidal intent, it commonly occurs in patient groups with suicidal ideation or with a history of suicide attempts.


Child Psychiatry & Human Development | 2017

Assessing Attachment Representations in Adolescents: Discriminant Validation of the Adult Attachment Projective Picture System

Manuela Gander; Carol George; Dan Pokorny; Anna Buchheim

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Kathrin Sevecke

Innsbruck Medical University

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Renate Mentel

University of Greifswald

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