C
Clemens Kirschbaum
Researcher at Dresden University of Technology
Publications - 519
Citations - 67877
Clemens Kirschbaum is an academic researcher from Dresden University of Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Trier social stress test & Cortisol secretion. The author has an hindex of 117, co-authored 488 publications receiving 61570 citations. Previous affiliations of Clemens Kirschbaum include University of Düsseldorf & University of Trier.
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The relationship between alcohol consumption and cortisol secretion in an aging cohort.
TL;DR: This study suggests that alcohol consumption is associated with activation of the HPA axis, and this results are not due to alcohol consumption on the day, suggesting chronic changes of theHPA axis in heavy drinking groups.
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Opposing effects of dhea replacement in elderly subjects on declarative memory and attention after exposure to a laboratory stressor
Oliver T. Wolf,Oliver T. Wolf,Brigitte M. Kudielka,Dirk H. Hellhammer,Juliane Hellhammer,Clemens Kirschbaum +5 more
TL;DR: The results do not support the idea of a direct antiglucocorticoid or anti-stress effect of DHEA on hippocampal mediated memory functions.
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The stressed prefrontal cortex and goal-directed behaviour: acute psychosocial stress impairs the flexible implementation of task goals
TL;DR: Results indicate that acute psychosocial stress impairs cognitive control processes of flexible task-goal implementation essential for voluntary goal-directed behaviour.
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Excellence in performance and stress reduction during two different full scale simulator training courses: A pilot study
Michael Müller,Mike Hänsel,Andreas Fichtner,Florian Hardt,Sören Weber,Clemens Kirschbaum,Sebastian Rüder,Felix Walcher,Thea Koch,Christoph Eich +9 more
TL;DR: Clinical performance and non-technical skills improved after 1 day of simulator training, and stress response measured by salivary alpha-amylase was reduced.
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The scanner as a stressor: evidence from subjective and neuroendocrine stress parameters in the time course of a functional magnetic resonance imaging session.
TL;DR: Results indicate that an fMRI experiment may elicit subjective and neuroendocrine stress reactions that can influence functional activation patterns and lead to impaired data quality and premature termination of scans.