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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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Addiction Research Consortium: Losing and regaining control over drug intake (ReCoDe)-From trajectories to mechanisms and interventions.

TL;DR: The main goals of the research consortium are to identify triggers and modifying factors that longitudinally modulate the trajectories of losing and regaining control over drug consumption in real life, and to study underlying behavioral, cognitive, and neurobiological mechanisms to implicate mechanism‐based interventions.
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Effects of the menstrual cycle on auditory event-related potentials

TL;DR: Future ERP studies need to be more attentive to the issue of menstrual phase when studying female subjects or female patients, as changes in auditory ERPs across the menstrual cycle with the most prominent changes occurring during the luteal phase are documents.
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Cortisol and behavior: 2. Application of a latent state-trait model to salivary cortisol.

TL;DR: Salivary cortisol levels were found to be mainly influenced by situational and/or interactional effects, which determined approximately 75% of the total variance of the hormone data, while only approximately 21% were determined by the latent trait.
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Life-time socio-economic position and cortisol patterns in mid-life

TL;DR: The results suggest that the impact of less advantaged SEP over a lifetime would lead to an approximate doubling of the proportion of extreme post-waking cortisol levels for both sexes and an 8% and 10% increase, respectively for females and males in AUC, and an increased risk of having an abnormal cortisol pattern.
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A naturalistic evaluation of cortisol secretion in persons with fibromyalgia and rheumatoid arthritis.

TL;DR: The results provide additional evidence of hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis disturbance in FM and RA patients and statistically accounting for psychosocial- and lifestyle-related differences between the groups did not change the cortisol findings.