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Dive into the research topics where Nicole Frommann is active.

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Featured researches published by Nicole Frommann.


Schizophrenia Research | 2005

Remediation of impairments in facial affect recognition in schizophrenia: Efficacy and specificity of a new training program

Wolfgang Wölwer; Nicole Frommann; Sabine Halfmann; Anja Piaszek; Marcus Streit; Wolfgang Gaebel

OBJECTIVE Schizophrenia patients often exhibit impairments in facial affect recognition which contribute to their poor social functioning. These impairments are stable in the course of the disorder and seem not to be affected by conventional treatment. The present study investigates the efficacy and specificity of a new training program for the remediation of such impairments. METHOD A newly developed training program tackling affect recognition (TAR) was compared with a cognitive remediation training program (CRT) and treatment as usual (TAU) within a randomized three group pre-post design in n=77 post-acute schizophrenia patients. The TAR is a computer-aided 12-session program focussing on facial affect recognition, whereas the CRT aims to improve attention, memory and executive functioning. Facial affect recognition, face recognition, and neurocognitive performance were assessed before (T0) and after (T1) the six week training phase. During the training period all patients received antipsychotic medication. RESULTS Patients under TAR significantly improved in facial affect recognition, with recognition performance after training approaching the level of healthy controls from former studies. Patients under CRT and those without special training (TAU) did not improve in affect recognition, though patients under CRT improved in verbal memory functions. CONCLUSION According to these results, remediation of disturbed facial affect recognition in schizophrenia patients is possible, but not achievable with a traditional cognitive rehabilitation program such as the CRT. Instead, functional specialized remediation programs such as the newly developed TAR are a more suitable option.


Psychiatry Research-neuroimaging | 2003

Remediation of facial affect recognition impairments in patients with schizophrenia: a new training program

Nicole Frommann; Marcus Streit; Wolfgang Wölwer

Impairments in facial affect recognition are trait-like characteristics in schizophrenia and might contribute to poor social functioning. A special Training of Affect Recognition program was developed, which shows a good feasibility and promising treatment effects. The specificity of these effects can now be demonstrated in a control group design.


Schizophrenia Research | 2002

First vs multiple episode schizophrenia: Two-year outcome of intermittent and maintenance medication strategies

Wolfgang Gaebel; Michaela Jänner; Nicole Frommann; Adolf Pietzcker; Wolfgang Köpcke; Michael Linden; Peter Müller; Franz Müller-Spahn; Joachim Tegeler

Results of studies on intermittent neuroleptic treatment strategies in first episode (FE) schizophrenia have not been published. Aims of the present study were to elucidate the comparative efficacy of prodrome-based neuroleptic intervention in first vs multiple episode (ME) schizophrenia. As to the methods, three randomly assigned open neuroleptic treatment strategies were compared over 2 years in 363 schizophrenic outpatients (115 FE, 248 ME; ICD-9, RDC): maintenance medication vs two intermittent medication strategies (prodrome-based intervention and crisis intervention). Concerning relapse prevention, the results demonstrate that ME patients seemed to profit most from maintenance medication compared to both intermittent treatments, whereas FE patients did equally well under maintenance medication and prodrome-based intervention treatment. Psychopathology, social adjustment, subjective well-being, and side-effects after two years did not differ significantly between the FE and ME patients irrespective of treatment strategy. Concerning treatment adherence, FE patients complied better with prodrome-based intervention than with maintenance medication. Cumulative neuroleptic dosage was lowest in FE patients under intermittent treatment. In conclusion, maintenance medication is the best strategy for relapse prevention in ME patients. In FE patients, prodrome-based intermittent intervention seems to be equivalent or even better with respect to compliance and dosage applied.


Schizophrenia Bulletin | 2011

Social-Cognitive Remediation in Schizophrenia: Generalization of Effects of the Training of Affect Recognition (TAR)

Wolfgang Wölwer; Nicole Frommann

In the last decade, several social cognitive remediation programs have been developed for use in schizophrenia. Though existing evidence indicates that such programs can improve social cognition, which is essential for successful social functioning, it remains unclear whether the improvements generalize to social cognitive domains not primarily addressed by the intervention and whether the improved test performance transfers into everyday social functioning. The present study investigated whether, beyond its known effects on facial affect recognition, the Training of Affect Recognition (TAR) has effects on prosodic affect recognition, theory of mind (ToM) performance, social competence in a role-play task, and more general social and occupational functioning. Thirty-eight inpatients with a diagnosis of schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder were randomly assigned to 6 weeks of treatment with the TAR--primarily targeted at facial affect recognition-or Cognitive Remediation Training (CRT)--primarily targeted at neurocognition. Intention-to-treat analyses found significantly larger pre-post improvements with TAR than with CRT in prosodic affect recognition, ToM, and social competence and a trend effect in global social functioning. However, the effects on ToM and social competence were no longer significant in the smaller group of patients who completed treatment according to protocol. Results suggest that TAR effects generalize to other social cognitive domains not primarily addressed. TAR may also enhance social skills and social functioning, although this has to be confirmed. Results are discussed with regard to the need to improve functional outcome in schizophrenia against the background of current evidence from other social cognitive remediation approaches.


Social Neuroscience | 2010

Training of affect recognition in schizophrenia: Neurobiological correlates

Ute Habel; Kathrin Koch; Thilo Kellermann; Martina Reske; Nicole Frommann; Wolfgang Wölwer; Karl Zilles; N. Jon Shah; Frank Schneider

Abstract Recently, a standardized program for training of affect recognition (TAR) was developed which has demonstrated efficacy and specificity with respect to behavioral performance. The effects of the TAR on the cerebral correlates were evaluated using repeated fMRI event-related measurements in a group of schizophrenia patients (n=10) before and after TAR treatment six weeks apart. A second patient group without training (n=10, treatment as usual, TAU) as well as healthy subjects (n=10) were investigated at equivalent time points. Schizophrenia patients were shown to be differentially impaired in the identification of the emotional aspects of facial expressions (but not age discrimination) when compared with healthy participants. A specific improvement in the increased number of correct identifications was observed in trained patients only. In parallel, an increase in activation was noted in the left middle and superior occipital lobe, the right inferior and superior parietal cortex, and the inferior frontal cortex bilaterally in TAR patients compared to the TAU group. These activation changes in TAR patients correlated with their behavioral improvement, further corroborating the positive effect of training. Specific training effects are seen to correspond with cerebral effects, probably reflecting a more efficient use of attentional, perceptual, or cognitive strategies.


Comprehensive Psychiatry | 2000

Prodromal States in Schizophrenia

Wolfgang Gaebel; Michaela Jänner; Nicole Frommann; Adolf Pietzcker; Wolfgang Köpcke; Michael Linden; Peter Müller; Franz Müller-Spahn; Joachim Tegeler

The vulnerability-stress-coping (VSC) model is the most influential heuristic concept in understanding the course of schizophrenia, whose prodromal status still offers unsolved conceptual and methodological issues. Improved knowledge about the prodromal phase would provide a better understanding of the developing psychopathology and psychophysiology of schizophrenia and could also be of predictive value to attune therapeutic actions to the course of the illness more precisely. To shed more light on the characteristics of prodromal states, data from a German multicenter study on intermittent versus maintenance neuroleptic long-term treatment in schizophrenia (ANI study) were reanalyzed with respect to the prevalence and profile, nature, time course, and predictive value of prodromal symptoms in impending relapse. The results demonstrate that prodromes are a category of symptoms on their own, but they share variance with other symptom domains. Treatment side effects, psychotic symptoms, dysphoric mood, and social dysfunction are all associated with prodromal states--the direction of this association, however, is still to be clarified. Prodromal symptoms are also related to the neuroleptic treatment strategy and its relapse-preventive efficacy--findings that underscore neuroleptic maintenance medication in preventing both overt and subthreshold psychotic morbidity in schizophrenia.


Archive | 2010

Treatment Approaches with a Special Focus on Social Cognition: Overview and Empirical Results

Wolfgang Wölwer; Dennis R. Combs; Nicole Frommann; David L. Penn

Impairments in social cognition have become an increasingly important area to target for intervention studies, mainly because (a) such impairments are closely associated with poor social and community


Social Neuroscience | 2013

Training of affect recognition in schizophrenia patients with violent offences: Behavioral treatment effects and electrophysiological correlates

Christian Luckhaus; Nicole Frommann; Sanna Stroth; Jürgen Brinkmeyer; Wolfgang Wölwer

Violent offenders with schizophrenia have a particularly poor performance level in facial affect recognition. Nineteen male schizophrenia patients, who had been committed to psychiatric hospital detention because of violent offences and lack of criminal responsibility, were recruited to receive the Training of Affect Recognition (TAR). Performance in the Pictures of Facial Affect (PFA)-test and event-related potentials (ERPs) were registered in a pre–post-treatment design. TAR was feasible with a very high treatment effect (Cohen’s d = 1.88), which persisted for 2 months post-treatment. ERPs remained unchanged post- vs. pre-treatment, while low resolution brain electromagnetic tomography (LORETA) revealed activation decreases in left-hemispheric parietal–temporal–occipital regions at 172 msec and activation increases in right dorsolateral prefrontal cortex and anterior cingulate at 250 msec. Possibly, violent offenders with schizophrenia are particularly amenable to TAR because of a high level of dysfunction at baseline. Post- vs. pre-treatment changes of neural activity (LORETA) may mirror a gain of efficiency in structural face decoding and a shift towards a more reflective mode of emotional face decoding, relying on increased frontal brain activity. Functional magnetic resonance imaging (BOLD-fMRI) -data from another study further supports this notion. TAR treatment might enable subjects with schizophrenia and a disposition to violence to reach a higher degree of deliberation of their reactive behavior to facial affect stimuli.


Neuropsychobiology | 2013

Facial Affect Recognition Performance and Event-Related Potentials in Violent and Non-Violent Schizophrenia Patients

Nicole Frommann; Sanna Stroth; Jürgen Brinkmeyer; Wolfgang Wölwer; Christian Luckhaus

We investigated whether male inpatients with schizophrenia and a history of hands-on violent offences (forensic schizophrenic, FOS) are more impaired in emotion recognition than matched schizophrenia patients without any history of violence (general psychiatric schizophrenic, GPS). This should become apparent in performance in psychometry and in scalp event-related brain potentials (ERPs) evoked by pictures of facial affect. FOS and GPS (each n = 19) were matched concerning age, intelligence, comorbid addiction, medication and illness duration. FOS revealed significantly poorer affect recognition (AR) performance, especially of neutral and fear stimuli. Analysis of ERPs revealed a significant interaction of hemisphere, electrode position and group of the N250 component. Post hoc analysis of group effect showed significantly larger amplitudes in FOS at FC3. These results support the hypothesis that in FOS emotional faces are more salient and evoke higher arousal. Larger impairment in AR performance combined with higher salience and arousal may contribute to the occurrence of violent acts in schizophrenia patients.


Fortschritte Der Neurologie Psychiatrie | 2014

Pilot-Anwendung eines modularen ambulanten Therapieprogramms im Anschluss an PsychKG-Unterbringungen wegen Fremdgefährdung bei Patienten mit Psychose-Erkrankungen

Christian Luckhaus; N. Kampka; Nicole Frommann; U. Dönisch-Seidel; Wolfgang Gaebel; Birgit Janssen

Patients with psychotic disorders who were detained by public order because of endangerment, can be regarded as a population at risk of further endangerment, public order placements and a forensic course. Concepts of specific aftercare for this subgroup are lacking thus far. The present pilot study explores the feasibility of a modular therapeutic outpatient programme that is tailored to specific subgroup needs and is applied over six months. Readmission rates during the intervention period are regarded exploratively.Consecutive screening of all patients placed in general psychiatry by public order during 05 to 11/2012. Included patients received baseline measurements followed by six-month intervention. Individual utilisation of treatment modules and number of readmissions, differentiated according to legal bases were assessed.Inclusion rate: 17.4 % of all screened subjects (115) and 57 % of all potentially includable subjects, dropout rate: 15 %. Mean utilisation rate: 23.5 therapeutic contacts per 6 months. Readmission rate: 50 %, of these 60 % on voluntary legal basis.Study inclusion, mean utilisation and dropout rates attest the feasibility and acceptance of the intervention in the population under study. A preponderance of voluntary vs. compulsory readmissions to hospital during the intervention indicates that in the majority of patients a higher degree of therapeutic cooperativeness can be reached. Further study on reduction of compulsory readmissions and on avoidance of a forensic course by application of the here introduced intervention in combination with methods of risk assessment in a consecutive main project seems justified.

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Wolfgang Gaebel

University of Düsseldorf

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Sanna Stroth

University of Düsseldorf

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Thomas Wobrock

University of Göttingen

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Bernadette Winklbaur

Medical University of Vienna

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Marcus Streit

University of Düsseldorf

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G. Sachs

Medical University of Vienna

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