Publications by authors named "Jan Richter"

Anxiety disorders are the most prevalent mental health problems in childhood and adolescence, highlighting the importance to study their underlying mechanisms. One key process in fear reduction, particularly in exposure-based cognitive behavioral therapy, is extinction learning. While extensively studied in adults, its role in youth remains underexplored.

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Pavlovian fear conditioning is a fundamental process in both health and disease. We investigate its neural correlates and sources of variability using harmonized functional magnetic resonance imaging data from 2199 individuals across nine countries, including 1888 healthy individuals and 311 with anxiety-related or depressive disorders. Using mega-analysis and normative modeling, we show that fear conditioning consistently engages brain regions within the "central autonomic-interoceptive" or "salience" network.

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Nonlinearities in King plots (KP) of isotope shifts (IS) can reveal the existence of beyond-standard-model (BSM) interactions that couple electrons and neutrons. However, it is crucial to distinguish higher-order standard model (SM) effects from BSM physics. We measure the IS of the transitions ^{3}P_{0}→^{3}P_{1} in Ca^{14+} and ^{2}S_{1/2}→^{2}D_{5/2} in Ca^{+} with sub-Hz precision as well as the nuclear mass ratios with relative uncertainties below 4×10^{-11} for the five stable, even isotopes of calcium (^{40,42,44,46,48}Ca).

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Expectancy violation has been proposed as a potential core mechanism of action in psychotherapy, particularly in exposure therapy for anxiety disorders. However, various relevant expectations have been discussed, and empirical studies examining their significance are still scarce. This study aimed to investigate one specific form of expectancy violation, based on Rachman's (1994) match-mismatch model, specifically by comparing expected and experienced fear and examining their relationship to safety behaviour during exposure in vivo in 268 patients meeting DSM-IV criteria for panic disorder with agoraphobia.

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The COVID-19 pandemic has had a profound impact on healthcare systems worldwide, with severe consequences on the global economy and society. The clinical presentation of SARS-CoV-2 infection varies widely, ranging from asymptomatic cases to severe disease and death. Coinfection with other respiratory pathogens in SARS-CoV-2-positive individuals may exacerbate symptom severity and lead to poorer clinical outcomes.

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Epigenetic mechanisms such as DNA methylation are hypothesized to play a pivotal role in the pathogenesis of anxiety disorders and to predict as well as relate to treatment response. An epigenome-wide association study (EWAS) (Illumina MethylationEPIC BeadChip) was performed at baseline (BL), post-treatment (POST) and 6-month follow-up (FU) in the so far largest longitudinal sample of patients with anxiety disorders (N = 415) treated with exposure-based cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), and in 315 healthy controls. Independent of comorbidity with depression, anxiety disorders were significantly (p ≤ 6.

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Introduction: Specific phobia (SPH) is a prevalent anxiety disorder and may involve advanced biological aging. However, brain age research in psychiatry has primarily examined mood and psychotic disorders. This mega-analysis investigated brain aging in SPH participants within the ENIGMA-Anxiety Working Group.

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X-linked Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease (CMT1X) is an inherited demyelinating neuropathy caused by loss-of-function mutations in the GJB1 gene, encoding the gap junction protein connexin32 (Cx32). Cx32 plays a critical role in Schwann cell function and myelin formation in the peripheral nervous system. We have developed a gene replacement therapeutic approach using a humanized AAVrh10 vector construct expressing GJB1 under the control of the Schwann cell-specific human myelin protein zero (MPZ) promoter.

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Intrusions are a hallmark symptom of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). While dysfunctional cognitions are known posttraumatic contributors, peritraumatic processes are less understood. Perceived threat, alongside emotional factors, is theorized as significant, but experimental studies are lacking.

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Background: The Personalized Advantage Index (PAI) shows promise as a method for identifying the most effective treatment for individual patients. Previous studies have demonstrated its utility in retrospective evaluations across various settings. In this study, we explored the effect of different methodological choices in predictive modelling underlying the PAI.

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By exciting a series of 1s^{2} ^{1}S_{0}→1snp^{1}P_{1} transitions in heliumlike nitrogen ions with linearly polarized monochromatic soft x rays at the Elettra facility, we found a change in the angular distribution of the fluorescence sensitive to the principal quantum number n. In particular it is observed that the ratio of emission in directions parallel and perpendicular to the polarization of incident radiation increases with higher n. We find this n dependence to be a manifestation of the Hanle effect, which served as a practical tool for lifetime determinations of optical transitions since its discovery in 1924.

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Article Synopsis
  • Anxiety disorders impact brain connectivity, but how this varies among different types of anxiety disorders (like panic disorder and social anxiety disorder) isn't fully understood due to limited studies.
  • Researchers examined the brain connectivity of 439 anxiety disorder patients and 105 healthy controls using resting-state fMRI, finding notable differences in connectivity patterns, especially in panic disorder and agoraphobia patients.
  • The study revealed that panic disorder patients had increased connectivity in brain regions linked to emotion regulation, unlike those with social anxiety disorder or specific phobia, suggesting the potential for personalized treatment approaches based on these neurological differences.
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The interaction of wood and moisture has to be considered in many industrial sectors. Wood is highly hygroscopic material while the absorbed moisture affects all its technical properties. One of them is a moisture permeability which is further affected by the sorption hysteresis and also differs in the three wood anatomical directions - radial, tangential, and axial.

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Background: Individuals with anxiety disorders (ADs) often display hypervigilance to threat information, although this response may be less pronounced following psychotherapy. This study aims to investigate the unconscious recognition performance of facial expressions in patients with panic disorder (PD) post-treatment, shedding light on alterations in their emotional processing biases.

Methods: Patients with PD (n=34) after (exposure-based) cognitive behavior therapy and healthy controls (n=43) performed a subliminal affective recognition task.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The ENIGMA Anxiety Working Group studied brain structural differences between individuals with specific phobias and healthy participants, focusing on subtypes of phobias like animal and blood-injection-injury (BII) while examining how these differences relate to symptom severity and age.
  • - A total of 1,452 participants with phobias and 2,991 healthy subjects were analyzed, revealing that those with phobias exhibited smaller subcortical volumes and varying cortical thickness, especially noted in adults rather than youths.
  • - The results indicate that brain alterations in specific phobias are more significant than in other anxiety disorders, revealing distinct neural underpinnings linked to fear processing across different phobia types, highlighting a
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Article Synopsis
  • Exposure-based cognitive-behavioral therapy has been shown to effectively treat anxiety disorders, but its impact on daily behaviors like social and physical activity had not been widely researched.
  • In a study involving 126 participants, including individuals with anxiety disorders and healthy controls, researchers tracked activities, social interactions, mood, and physical symptoms before, during, and after therapy using smartphones and motion sensors.
  • The findings revealed that therapy led to improvements in mood, social interactions, and physical activity levels, particularly in patients with initial higher depression scores, suggesting that this treatment could enhance overall daily functioning and reduce the risk of relapse.*
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Type 4C Charcot-Marie-Tooth (CMT4C) demyelinating neuropathy is caused by autosomal recessive SH3TC2 gene mutations. SH3TC2 is highly expressed in myelinating Schwann cells. CMT4C is a childhood-onset progressive disease without effective treatment.

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Community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) remains the leading cause of hospitalization among infectious disease in Europe, and a major cause of morbidity and mortality. In order to determine and characterize the aetiology of CAP in hospitalized adults in Cyprus, respiratory and blood samples were obtained from hospitalized patients with CAP, and analyzed using Multiplex Real-Time PCR/RT-PCR, and ID/AMR enrichment panel (RPIP) analysis. Probe-based allelic discrimination was used to investigate genetic host factors in patients.

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Despite striking empirical support, exposure-based treatments for anxiety disorders are underutilized. This is partially due to clinicians' concerns that patients may reject exposure or experience severe side effects, particularly in intensive forms of exposure. We examined acceptance and side effects of two randomly assigned variants of prediction error-based exposure treatment differing in temporal density (1 vs.

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Background: As psychotherapy involves at least two individuals, it is essential to include the interaction perspective research. During interaction, synchrony, i.e.

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In any infectious disease, understanding the modes of transmission is key to selecting effective public health measures. In the case of COVID-19 spread, the strictness of the imposed measures outlined the lack of understanding on how SARS-CoV-2 transmits, particularly via airborne pathways. With the aim to characterize the transmission dynamics of airborne SARS-CoV-2, 165 and 62 air and environmental samples, respectively, were collected in four COVID-19 wards and ICUs in Cyprus and analyzed by RT-PCR.

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The emergence of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) in December 2019 resulted in the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, which has had devastating repercussions for public health. Over the course of this pandemic, the virus has continuously been evolving, resulting in new, more infectious variants that have frequently led to surges of new SARS-CoV-2 infections. In the present study, we performed detailed genetic, phylogenetic, phylodynamic and phylogeographic analyses to examine the SARS-CoV-2 epidemic in Cyprus using 2352 SARS-CoV-2 sequences from infected individuals in Cyprus during November 2020 to October 2021.

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The aim of this study was to investigate and obtain insights into the appearance, spread and impact of the Omicron variants and their sub-lineages in Cyprus by analyzing 611 high-coverage full-genome sequences for the period from November 2021 until April 2022. All viruses sequenced were identified to belong to either Delta (B.1.

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