Publication:

Amygdala-related electrical fingerprint is modulated with neurofeedback training and correlates with deep-brain activation: proof-of-concept in borderline personality disorder

Date

Date

Date
2024
Journal Article
Published version

Citations

Citation copied

Zopfs, M., Jindrová, M., Gurevitch, G., Keynan, J. N., Hendler, T., Baumeister, S., Aggensteiner, P.-M., Cornelisse, S., Brandeis, D., Schmahl, C., & Paret, C. (2024). Amygdala-related electrical fingerprint is modulated with neurofeedback training and correlates with deep-brain activation: proof-of-concept in borderline personality disorder. Psychological Medicine, 54(8), 1651–1660. https://doi.org/10.1017/s0033291723003549

Abstract

Abstract

Abstract

Background: The modulation of brain circuits of emotion is a promising pathway to treat borderline personality disorder (BPD). Precise and scalable approaches have yet to be established. Two studies investigating the amygdala-related electrical fingerprint (Amyg-EFP) in BPD are presented: one study addressing the deep-brain correlates of Amyg-EFP, and a second study investigating neurofeedback (NF) as a means to improve brain self-regulation.

Methods: Study 1 combined electroencephalography (EEG) and simultaneous functional magnetic

Metrics

Downloads

11 since deposited on 2024-01-30
Acq. date: 2025-11-12

Views

75 since deposited on 2024-01-30
Acq. date: 2025-11-12

Citations

4 in Web of Science Acq. date: 2025-12-03

Additional indexing

Creators (Authors)

  • Zopfs, Malte
    affiliation.icon.alt
  • Jindrová, Miroslava
    affiliation.icon.alt
  • Gurevitch, Guy
    affiliation.icon.alt
  • Keynan, Jackob N
    affiliation.icon.alt
  • Hendler, Talma
    affiliation.icon.alt
  • Baumeister, Sarah
    affiliation.icon.alt
  • Aggensteiner, Pascal-M
    affiliation.icon.alt
  • Cornelisse, Sven
    affiliation.icon.alt
  • Brandeis, Daniel
    affiliation.icon.alt
  • Schmahl, Christian
    affiliation.icon.alt
  • Paret, Christian
    affiliation.icon.alt

Journal/Series Title

Journal/Series Title

Journal/Series Title

Volume

Volume

Volume
54

Number

Number

Number
8

Page range/Item number

Page range/Item number

Page range/Item number
1651

Page end

Page end

Page end
1660

Item Type

Item Type

Item Type
Journal Article

Dewey Decimal Classifikation

Dewey Decimal Classifikation

Dewey Decimal Classifikation

Keywords

EEG, amygdala, borderline personality disorder, emotion regulation, fMRI, neurofeedback, neuroimaging, post-traumatic stress disorder, psychopathology

Language

Language

Language
English

Publication date

Publication date

Publication date
2024-06-01

Date available

Date available

Date available
2024-01-30

Publisher

Publisher

Publisher

ISSN or e-ISSN

ISSN or e-ISSN

ISSN or e-ISSN
0033-2917

OA Status

OA Status

OA Status
Hybrid

Free Access at

Free Access at

Free Access at
DOI

PubMed ID

PubMed ID

PubMed ID

Metrics

Downloads

11 since deposited on 2024-01-30
Acq. date: 2025-11-12

Views

75 since deposited on 2024-01-30
Acq. date: 2025-11-12

Citations

4 in Web of Science Acq. date: 2025-12-03

Citations

Citation copied

Zopfs, M., Jindrová, M., Gurevitch, G., Keynan, J. N., Hendler, T., Baumeister, S., Aggensteiner, P.-M., Cornelisse, S., Brandeis, D., Schmahl, C., & Paret, C. (2024). Amygdala-related electrical fingerprint is modulated with neurofeedback training and correlates with deep-brain activation: proof-of-concept in borderline personality disorder. Psychological Medicine, 54(8), 1651–1660. https://doi.org/10.1017/s0033291723003549

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