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Emotion and Cognition - The Zurich Depression Studies
Prof. Dr. med. H. Böker Clinic of Affective Disorders and General Psychiatry Zurich East
SFI International Symposium 2011 Chronic Depression - Clinical, Conceptual and Empirical Research
University Frankfurt, Campus Bockenheim, 28. - 30.10.2011

1. Introduction: The empirical basis for neuro-psychodynamic hypotheses
2. The Problem of depressive inhibition
2.1 Negative affective bias
2.2 Psychomotoric disorders
3. Single-case research in depressed patients
4. Results from combined fMRI/MRS and neuropsychological studies
Emotion and Cognition - The Zurich Depression Studies

5. A neuro-psychodynamic model for the disturbed emotional self-reference in depressed patients
6. Future steps in anhedonia research
7. The Zurich Neuroimaging Study on Psychodynamic Psychotherapy in Depressed Patients
8. Conclusion: Scientific implications
Emotion and Cognition - The Zurich Depression Studies

Emotion, Cognition and Actions in Depressed Patients
- Clinical Observations -
Ø Why do negative thoughts get locked into place in depression?
Ø Neurophysiological correlates of inhibition/blockade: „My right foot is on the accelerator, my left one on the brakes“

Negative affective Bias
• Cognitive triad (Beck 1974) • Network models for depression (Segle et al. 1996)
• Negative emotions are over-represented in semantic networks • Basic shift of the emotional assessment of new und early experiences
• Mood congruent recall • Memories from the respective emotional situation are recalled more easily
(Blaney 1986) • The cognitive-affective spiral of depression promotes negative thoughts
and negative associations (Teasdale 1988, Ackermann-Engel, De Rubeis 1993)
• Therapeutic implications!

Experiencing extremely intensive and uncontrollable emotions: “Numb with fear”
Depressive Stupor as a Psychomotoric Syndrome
Böker et al. Psychiat. Prax. 2000 Northoff, Böker et al. Neuro-Psychoanalysis 2003
- Single-case approach: (Landfield categories)
• Lack of social contact • „Low“ self-esteem • „Low“ emotional arousal

Self-image and Object Relationships in Depressed Patients
Ø Qualitative personality studies (depressed subjects in remission)
- Negative self-image
- Idealising significant others
- Significance of the inter-personal dimension
Boeker 1999 Boeker et al., J. Affect. Disord., 2000

Emotional Experience and Decision-Making
2.Step: Decision-making
1. Step: Experience and judgement of emotions
Aristoteles
Result: Catatonics and depressed subjects unable to take action (blockade)

Healthy Subjects Catatonics
Catatonia/Stupor: VMPFC and Emotional Experience
Northoff et al. 2004 Northoff u. Böker 2005 Böker u. Northoff 2005
0
500
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750/1800/2300 1216/1750/2100
catatonics (n=6)psychiatric controls (n=5)healthy controls (n=11) a*,b*
a*,b*
Right Left
2500 2000 1500 1000 500
0
Signal
Catatonics Psychiat. Cont. Healthy Cont.
• Healthy subjects: Activation in VMPFC
• Subjects previously with depression and stupor: Low activation (particularly after negative stimuli)

Emotional Experience: Correlation with Actions/IGT
Connection between emotional experience, the VMPFC and decision-making
Northoff und Böker 2003 Böker und Northoff 2005 Northoff et al. 2005
The more activity in the VMPFC, the better the decision-making
→ Healthy subjects: In the long-term more successful low-risk cards → Previous stupor: No change in decision-making despite negative consequenses

Subjective Emotional Experience
Journal of Consciousness Studies, 1014-48, 2003
Correlation between experience data and fMRI data concerning emotions
Emotional stimulation in the fMRT with pictures
Visual analogue scales for emotional experience

International Affective Picture System (IAPS, Lang 1999)

Expectancy: Emotional judgement: 8 - 11.5 sec
Emotional judgement: 4 sec
Fixation cross: 6 - 8 sec
Expectancy: Emotional perception: 8-11.5 sec -
Emotional perception: 4 sec
Fixation cross: 6 - 8 se c
A Emotional judgement:
4 sec Fixation cross:
6 - 8 sec
Emotional perception: 4 sec
Fixation cross: 6 - 8 sec
A/A
A/A E
C
0 8 12 18 22 28 s
A/A
Emotionale perception Fixation cross Emotional
perception Fixation cross
B
J J P/N
P/N
Emotional judgemeng Fixation cross Emotional
judgement
0 8 12 18 22 28 s
Fixation cross Expectancy period
Expectancy period

Brain activation during “Experience” and “Judgement”
(in Healthy Subjects)
Grimm et al. 2006, 2007
Neural activity in the VMPFC is correlated with negative emotional experience
VMPFC: Ventromedial prefrontal Cortex
Neural activity in the DLPFC is correlated with positive emotional judgement
DLPFC: Dorsolateral prefrontal Cortex

VMPFC: Depressed > Healthy
Hyperactivity in the VMPFC = Abnormal negative experience
DLPFC: Healthy > Depressed
Hypoactivity in the DLPFC = Abnormal negative judgement
Brain activity during “Experience” and “Judgement”
Comparison between Depressed and Healthy Subjects

Left DLPFC Hypofunction: Negative cognitions
VMPFC Hyperactivity: Negative emotional perception Right DLPFC
Hyperfunction: Attention/expectation of negative emotions
Severity of depression (BDI, HAMD) correlates with activation in the right amygdala and in the VMPFC
Northoff et al. 2004 Böker u. Northoff 2005 Northoff und Böker 2007
Psychiatry Research, 141(1):1-13, 2006
Depression: Abnormal reciprocal Modulation between the VMPFC/ACC and left and right DLPFC

0
0,05
0,1
0,15
0,2
0,25
0,3
0,35
0,4
0
0,05
0,1
0,15
0,2
0,25
0,3
0,35
0,4
-0,35
-0,3
-0,25
-0,2
-0,15
-0,1
-0,05
0
VMPFC left DLPFC right DLPFC
In patients with no symptoms brain activity unchanged in medial and right forehead region, but pattern of activity normalised in left forehead area. Activity in left forehead region normalised following successful treatment of depression. Lasting changes in brain activity in right and medial forehead region despite improvement of depression: Sustained attention, executive function and working memory
Ventromedial hyperactivation and dorsolateral hypoactivation connected to neuropsychological deficits
Cognitive and psychopathological symptoms become dissociated in the course of the illness!
controls
acute patients remitted patients
Inhibition phenomena and disruption of emotional self-reference in depressed patients:
Brain activity after improvement of depression
Boeker and Grimm, submitted

0
0,05
0,1
0,15
0,2
0,25
0,3
0,35
0,4
% S
igna
l Cha
nge
Controls Patients
PV EJ
0
0,05
0,1
0,15
0,2
0,25
0,3
0,35
0,4
% S
igna
l Cha
nge
Controls Patients
PV EJ
Time (sec)
24181260
% S
igna
l Cha
nge
,20
,15
,10
,05
0,00
-,05
-,10
Time (sec)
24181260
% S
igna
l Cha
nge
,10
,08
,06
,04
,02
0,00
-,02
EJ_Controls EJ_MDD
Grimm et al. 2008, Biological Psychiatry
BDI
40 35 30 25 20
,2 ,1 ,0 - ,1 - ,2 - ,3 r= 0.66**
In emotional processing healthy subjetcts show more activation in the left DLPFC, depressed subjects in the right DLPFC

9,08,07,06,0
,3
,2
,1
0,0
-,1
-,2
4,03,02,01,0
,4
,3
,2
,1
-,0
-,1
-,2
-,3
9,08,07,06,0
,2
,1
0,0
-,1
-,2
-,3
-,4
-,5
r = -0.58**
r = 0.43*
r = 0.58*
Controls MDD patients
Controls
% S
igna
l Cha
nge
% S
igna
l Cha
nge
% S
igna
l Cha
nge
% S
igna
l Cha
nge
IAPS- Valence Rating IAPS- Valence Rating
IAPS- Valence Rating IAPS- Valence Rating
L
L
4,03,02,01,0
,2
,1
0,0
-,1
-,2r =- 0.08
L
Grimm et al. 2008, Biological Psychiatry
Depressed subjects: Signal changes in the left DLPFC show an opposite or no correlation when judging positive / negative pictures
MDD patients

Pathophysiology of the Negative Affective Bias
• Depression: Reduced activity in the left DLPFC, increased activity in the right DLPFC
• Activity in the left DLPFC not or contrarily modulated by emotional valence Activity can not be modulated according to the degree of negative emotions Negativer Bias
• Activity in the right DLPFC correlated to severity of depression
Grimm et al. Biol. Psychiatry, 2008

Depressive Hopelessness and reduced Deactivation (PACC, PCC)
• MDD: Reduced deactivation in the PACC and PCC (Default Mode Network)
• Deactivation only in medial regions, other regions show activation (specific to region!)
• Activation in the case of inwardly-directed attention
• Depressed subjects: No connection between deactivation and negative emotional content
• The less deactivation, the more pronounced the hopelessness and depressive symptoms
Grimm et al. 2008, Neuropsychopharmacology

Relationship between reduced Deactivation and emotional Valence
Conclusion:
Ø Severity of depression is correlated with reduced deactivation, depressive experience (BDI) and hopelessness

Northoff et al. 2007, Nature Neuroscience
Physiology and Neurochemistry of Emotional Processing
The more GABA in the ACC, the more pronounced the deactivation in this Region during emotional stimulation
Ø Healthy subjects: GABA-induced deactivation during emotional stimulation

Walter, Grimm et al. 2009, Arch. Gen. Psychiat.
Pathophysiology and Neurochemistry of Emotionalen Processing in Depression
Deficits in glutamatergic metabolism: Neurotoxic factor in depression?

Mayberg, 2003
Model of Limbic-Cortical Disregulation in Depression

(a) Induced sadness in HC (b) Cg25 during Fluoxetine (MDD) (c) Cg25 during Fluoxetine (Depression/ M. Parkinson) (d) Cg25 during placebo (MDD) (e) Cg25 as a predictor for therapy
response (f) Cg25 during citalopram and CBT
Ressler & Mayberg, 2007
Cg25 as the Key Region for Therapy Response and Prediction
Ø Neurophysiological adaptation in ACC region after treatment with antidepressants, placebo and CBT

Goldapple, K. et al. Arch Gen Psychiatry 2004;61:34-41.
Top-Down und Bottom-Up Effects: Changes in the Regional Glucose Metabolism (PET) after Successful
Treatment with CBT and Paroxetine
Treatement reaction after CBT: Increase in metabolism in the hippocampus and dorsal cingulum (BA 24), reduction in the dorsal (BA 9/46), ventral (BA 47/11) and medial (BA 9/10/11) frontal Cortex
Treatment recation after Paroxetine: Prefrontal increase, reduction in the hippocampus and subgenual cingulum
Conclusion: Therapy-specific, opposite effects (CBT: Increase in the hippocampus, reduction in the frontal cortex; Paroxetine: hippocampal reduction, frontal increase)
CBT → Top-down effects Paroxetine → Bottom-up effects
Increase in metabolism: orange Reduction: blue

Limbic-Cortical Networks in Major Depression: Group Characteristics as a Therapy Indicator
(Seminowicz et al. 2004)
• Antidepressive Responders: - Activation of limbic-cortical networks (LPFC - subgenual
cingulum - OMPFC - hippocampus), in contrast to non-responders
• Antidepressiva Non-Responders: - More disfunction in limbic-cortical networks
(ant. thalamus – AC – subgenual cingulum – OMPFC – hippocampus)
• CBT Responders: - Activation of surrounding limbic-cortical (Hippocampus – LPFC) and
cortical-cortical (OMPFC, OF 11 - mF 10) networks
→ Characterisation of depressive phenotypes on a neuronal system level
→ Neuronal-based algorhythms for the individual treatment of depression?

Ø Response Ø Not simply a „correction“ of „pre-treatment abnormalities“, but a more complex
adaptation process incl. normalization of the cortical hypometabolism and changes in specific subcortical and paralimbic regions, in which there were previously no metabolic abnormalities
Ø Limbic-striatal reduction of glucose metabolism: Subgenual cingulum, hippocampus, insula, pallidum
Ø Dorsal cortical increase (PFC, parietal, anterior/posterior cingulum
Ø Increase in glucose metabolism in the brain stem
Ø Delayed Effect Ø Lack of changes in the cerebral glucose metabolismus in the region of the subgenual
cingulum and PFC
Ø Persistence of the 1-week pattern (subcortical reduction, increase in the brain stem and limbic-paralimbic regions)
Ø Lack of modification and adaptation of previous metabolic changes in the further course (week 6)
Functional Cerebral Correlations of Response and Delayed Effectiveness after Antidepressivants (Mayberg et al. 2000)

Changes in midbrain serotonin transporter availability in atypically depressed subjects after one year of
Psychotherapy (Lehto et al., 2008)
• Sample: 19 patients (8 with atypical depression and 11 with „non-atypical“ depression)
• Treatment: Psychodynamic Psychotherapy for 1 year
• Reduction of symptoms in all patients
• SPECT - No change in dopamine transporter density (striatum) - Change in serotonine transporter density (mid-brain) in
patients with atypical depression, but not in those with „non-atypical“ depression

Desymbolisation in Severe Depression and the Inhibition Problem
(Böker, Northoff 2005)
Ø Depression = Psychic pain indicating a loss of the self which can not be overcome
(A. Miller)

A Neuro-Psychodynamic Model for the Disturbed Emotional Self-
Reference in Depression
Northoff, Böker (2002) Neuro-Psychoanalysis
Böker, Northoff (2005) Psyche
Northoff, Böker (2007) Psychother Psychosom
CAUTION: ROAD WORKS!

Ø Focus on the psychoanalytical point of view: • Condition of the self • Nature of the experience • How are experiences decoded and symbolised? • Predominant emotions • Defence and coping mechanisms
Ø Requirements: Defence and coping mechanisms are complex emotional-
cognitive interactions and as such require neuronal integration (between different brain regions, functional connectivity)
Ø 4 principles of neuronal integration, which may be associated with specific defence mechanisms 1) Top-down modulation and somatisation 2) Reciprocal modulation and introjection 3) Modulation by functional unit and sensori-motor regression 4) Higher level of processing of internal somatic stimuli/reduction of emotional
stimuli and ego-inhibition
A Neuro-Psychodynamic Model for the Disturbed Emotional Self-Reference in
Depression

Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 98-102, 2004
Definition of the Cortical Midline Regions

Processing of physical stimuli: Bottom-up modulation
Processing of emotional stimuli: Top-down modulation
Bottom-Up and Top-Down Modulation and Somatisation: Reciprocal Adjustment between
Emotional Processing an Processing of Internal Physical Functions
Somatisation: Predominance of internal physical processing over emotional processing

Emotional Task: Experience
Cognitive Task: Judgement
Emotional-Cognitive Interaktion
B. ‘Reciprocal Reduction’
A. ‘Reciprocal Modulation’
Reciprocal Modulation and Reduction: Introjection
Introjection: • Disruption of the emotional- cognitive readjustment • Experiencing the outside world is transformed into experiencing the inner self (internal focus)

Attention
Unexpected emotional judgement Expected emotional judgement
Development of Functional Units Over Time: Modulation by Reversal
• Cortical midline structures (CMS): Continually high level of neuronal activity even in resting state
• Increase in the functional connectivity between anterior and posterior regions in resting state
• Decrease in active cognitive tasks

Modulation by Functional Unit and Sensori-Motor Regression
• Disrupted functional connectivity between orbitofrontal cortex, medial prefrontal and premotor/motor cortex in patients who previously had stupor
• Conversion of emotional into motor symptoms
• Symptomatic overlap of stupor and conversion

Self-Referential Processing and Ego-Inhibition
Ø Self-referential stimuli (sensory, emotional, cognitive): • Reference set to one's own person • Essential to be able to form a concept of one's own self: Mental,
phenomenal self as the subject of experience (Damasio 1999, Panksepp 1998, Northoff, Böker 2004)
Ø Ego-inhibition (in depression): • Greater processing of internal somatic stimuli • Reduced processing of emotional stimuli • Imbalance between internal somatic and emotional stimuli:
• Stronger perception of the body • Emotional inhibition changes into ego-emptiness and ego-
inhibition • Dysfunction of cortical midline structures (CMS): Disruption in the
interaction of the CMS as a functional unit

Subjective Components: What Can We Learn from Imaging?
• Cortical and subcortical midline regions: Related to emotional perception and subjective experience
• Cognitive components should be distinguished
• Abnormal activation in cortical midline regions in depression
• Dissociation between neuronal activity and subjective experience in depression
• Modulation of “high-resting-state-activity” in depressed subjects after psychotherapy

Neurochemistry: Role of DA, GABA and glutamat and their modulation of the NBR
Neuronal function of the reward system: Specification of reward disfunction as a “diagnostic marker” ?
Therapy: Distinction between „state-“ and „trait-“ marker and „therapeutic marker“?
Future Steps in Anhedonia Research

Depression in Humans: Hyperactivity in Resting State in Corcial-Subcortical Midline
Regions

Depression in Humans: Signs of Hypoactivity in Resting State in Lateral
Regions

Pathophysiology of Anhedonia and Depressive Symptoms
Abnormal perception and experience of positive emotions
Reduced deactivation /NBR in the VMPFC
Abnormal judgement and perception of negative emotions
Changed activation in the left and right DLPFC
Anhedonia: Abnormal affective evaluation of positive emotions in the VS and VMPFC
Northoff, J of Affective Disorders, 2007

Increased self-focus, increased body-focus and reduced environmental focus

Zurich Depression Study:
The change of mental structure due to Psychodynamic Psychotherapy
modulates brain activity during aversive stimulation in depression

ZurichDepressionStudy-Aims
• Findingneurobiologicalcorrelatesindepressivepa;entsofs;muliwhichare
- personallyrelatedandpsychodynamicallyrelevantforthepa;ents(e.g.interpersonalrela;onshipthemes)
- relatedtoaversion
• Examiningthepsychologicalandpsychodynamicdimensionsofdepressivepa;ents(symptoms,interpersonalproblems,conflicts,psychicstructure,defensesetc.)
• Comparingthedepressivepa;entswithhealthycontrols
• Measuringneurobiological,psychologicalandpsychodynamicchangesinthedepressivepa;entsduring/aHerpsychodynamicpsychotherapy
• Lookinginhowfarneurobiologicalandpsychological/psychodynamicchangesdocorrelate

ZurichDepressionStudy–Design(1)
1ststep:Inves;ga;onofhealthycontrols(n≥20-30)• Inclusioncr;teria:nodiagnosisaccordingtoICD-10Fx,HAMD<8• Ques;onnaires:BDI,BAI,BHI,FKBS,IIP,IMI• PsychodynamicDiagnos;cs:OPD-2,OPD-SF• Neuroimaging:fMRI àevalua;onof2fMRIparadigms
2ndstep:Inves;ga;onofdepressivepa;ents(n≥40-60)• Inclusioncriteria:diagnosisaccordingtoICD-10:F32,F33,F34,F4,HAMD>8• Ques;onnaires:BDI,BAI,BHI,FKBS,IIP,IMI• PsychodynamicDiagnos;cs:OPD-2(HSCSincl.),OPD-SF• Neuroimaging:fMRI(2fMRIparadigms)• 2therapycondi;ons(n≥20-30pergroup):
o PsychodynamicPsychotherapy(accordingtoTayloretal.2010)o Body-centeredPsychotherapy(accordingtoMaurer2009)
• T1:beforetherapyT2:endoftherapyoratthelatestaHer1yearoftherapy(6-12months)T3:follow-up

HAMD>8ICD-10F3,F4
MRI MRI
recruitment
firstinterview
ZurichDepressionStudy–Design(2)
BDIBAIBHI
FKBSIIPIMI
OPD-2HSCSOPD-SF
BDIBAIBHI
FKBSIIPIMI
OPD-2HSCSOPD-SF
(follow-up)
2.psychodynamicpsychotherapy* (followingTaylor2010)
3.body-centeredpsychotherapy (followingMaurer2009)
T1 T2 T3
*withcon;nuous(peergroup)supervision
(6-7months)
npergroup=20-30
1.healthycontrols(HAMD<8)

Opera;onalizedPsychodynamicDiagnosis
(OPD2)

OPD-2
• Mul;axialsystemwith5axes(3psychodynamicaxes)
• AxisI:Experienceofillnessandprerequisitesfortreatment
• AxisII:Interpersonalrela;ons
• AxisIII:Conflicts
• AxisIV:Structure
• AxisV:Mentaldisorders(accordingICD-10,DSM-IV)
• HeidelbergStructuralChangeScale(HSCS):5focifromAxesII,III,IVàDegreeofpa;ent‘sinsightin,acceptanceofandworkingthroughthefoci

HeidelbergStructuralChangeScale(HSCS)
Integra;on,agreementwithself,experienceconformstoreality,newforma;ons
7-77+
7.Dissolu;onofthefocus
Conciliatoryapproachtotheproblemarea,spontaneousemergenceofnewwaysofexperiencingandbehaving
6-66+
6.Reorganiza;oninthefocusarea
Defensebecomesfragile,sadness,feelingexposed,confusion,possiblyhopelessness
5-55+
5.Dissolu;onofoldstructuresinthefocusarea
Interestedinunderstandingtheproblem,workingrela;onship,ac;ve„coping“andpreoccupa;on
4-44+
4.Acceptanceandawarenessoffocus
Passivepreoccupa;onwithfocus,partlyacknowledgingtheproblem,no;onofresponsibility
3-33+
3.Vagueawarenessoffocus
Symptompressure,interpersonalproblems,unreasonabledemandsexperiencedasexternal
2-22+
2.Unwantedpreoccupa;onwiththefocus
Completedenial/defense,avoidingfocus,„There‘snoproblem“
11+
1.Focusproblemwardedoff
Coping
StructuralChange

Neuroimagingparadigms

fMRI-Aversionparadigm
• Punishment:Anyaversiveeventahumantriestoavoidorminimize(Seymouretal.2007)
• Someevidencethatcommonbrainareasareinvolvedinaversion-relatedprocessing:Amygdala,anteriorInsula,ACC,PFCandStriatum(Borsooketal.2007,Costafredaetal.2008,Delgado2008,Seymouretal.2007)
• Altera;onsinaversion-relatedprocessingmaybeinvolvedinthepathophysiologyofmanyneuropsychiatricdisordersincludingdepression(Hooleyetal.2009,Strigoetal.2008)
• Aimofparadigm:Usingaversivesoundstoac;vateaversion-relatedcircuityandexploringtherela;onshipbetweensubjec;veexpecta;onandobjec;veexperienceandresponding
• fMRIscanningwhileperformingareac;on;metask(RTT)underfivecondi;ons

fMRI-Aversionparadigm
passivelistening fixa;oncrossaversivesound1
fixa;oncrossnon-aversivesoundpassivelistening2
fixa;oncrossaversivesoundYoucancontrolthesound3
fixa;oncrossaversivesoundYoucan‘tcontrolthesound4
fixa;oncrossnon-aversivesound
Youcan‘tcontrolthesound5

(6-10s)(8-16s)(6-10s)(6-10s)(8-16s)(6-10s)
Reac;on;metask(RTT)
Exampletrials.Thecondi;on„controlexpectancy“and„non-controlexpectancy“(withsubsequent(non)aversivesoundpercep;on)are:
fMRI-Aversionparadigm
non-controlexpectancy
aversivesoundandRTT
aversivesoundandRTT
fixa;oncross
controlexpectancy
passivelistening

tolera2ngidealizingapologe2charmonizingtakingcareobtrusiveinvasivecontrollingrestric2ngdevaluingaccusinga@ackingneglec2ngignorantisola2ng
Rela;onshipThemeRa;ngParadigm

+ VAS
VAS
+ VAS
Rela;onshipThemeRa;ngParadigm
25min
VAS
trials8,12,16sblock180-240s

Hypotheses1
• Depressivepa;entswilldiffersignificantlyfromthehealthycontrolswithrespecttopsychopathology,resultsintheOPDandotherpsychodynamicmeasures
• Exposi;ontoaversives;muliands;muliinconnec;onwithnega;veinterpersonalexperienceswillshowincreasedhemodynamicac;va;oninmidlinestructuresandsubcor;calregionsofdepressivepa;ents(comparedtohealthycontrols)
• Exposi;ontos;muliconnectedwithposi;veandnega;veinterpersonalexperienceswillproducedifferenthemodynamicac;va;onparernsinthebrain

Hypotheses2
• Aversives;mulidon‘tmodulatetheres;ngstateac;vityintheCMSindepressivepa;entsastheydoinhealthycontrols
• Depressivepa;entswillshowsignificantimprovementsoftheir
symptoms,interpersonalproblemsandintrapsychicdisturbancesaHer/inthecourseofpsychodynamicpsychotherapy
• AHerpsychodynamicpsychotherapytheincreasedregionalbrainac;va;onwillnormalizeinthedepressivepa;entsandthedifferencestothecontrolswilldiminish

Personality, Empathy
Structure, Defence Style
Psychotherapist Client/Patient
Brain and neuronal Activity
Researcher
Behavioral Task: Activation Paradigm
Therapeutic Relationship
Scientific Implications I: Input and Design Problem

Personality
Neuronal
Psychodynamic
Processal
First-Person Perspective
Third-Person Perspective
Brain: Neuronal Organisation
Scientific Implications II: The Different Levels and the Translation Problem

Scientific Implications III
• Depression as psychosomatoses of the emotional regulation • Prospective long-term therapy studies with high-risk groups • Prospective controlled therapy studies and naturalistic studies • Instead of „horse race“ studies: Combination of therapy research and
fundamental research • Development of functional subtypes • Non-response: To what extent treatment specific?
Neuronal characteristics? • Consideration of self-referential aspects • Scope of psychoanalytic theories of depression (personality theory,
questions about the connection between personality and depression, but not depression theory as such)
• Multiple factor approach (E. Jacobson 1971) • Development of multi-dimensional therapeutic conzepts • Investigation of patients in remission: Distinguishing state and trait
markers

Dr. rer. nat. Simone Grimm Dr. med. Holger Himmighoffen Dr. med. André Richter Dr. rer. nat. Milan Scheidegger Dipl. Psych. Silke Braun lic. phil. Martina Trafoier med. pract. Jan Schulze Dr. med. Dipl. Psych. Markus Rezk cand. rer. nat. Jutta Ernst Dr. rer. nat. Anke Henning cand. lic. Jeannette Zahner Dr. phil. Elena Hofmann med. pract. Miriam Straub
Therapy and Process Research (TPR) Head: Prof. Dr. med. Heinz Böker
In cooperation with: - Abteilung für Biomedizinische Technik der ETH und Universität Zürich
(Prof. Dr. rer. nat. Peter Bösiger) - University of Ottawa, Institute of Mental Health Research
(Prof. Dr. med. Dr. med. habil. Georg Northoff) - Molekulargenetische Forschungsgruppe der Psychiatrischen Universitätsklinik Zürich
(Prof. Dr. rer. nat. Hans Stassen) - Sigmund-Freud-Institut Frankfurt/M. (Prof. Dr. phil. Marianne Leuzinger-Bohleber) - Universität Tübingen, Abt. für Klinische und Physiologische Psychologie, Psychologisches Institut
(Prof. Dr. phil. Martin Hautzinger) - Max-Delbruck-Institut, Charité, Berlin - Psychiatrische Universitätsklinik Heidelberg

Thank you very much for your attention!