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Johannes Beck

Researcher at University of Basel

Publications -  78
Citations -  3620

Johannes Beck is an academic researcher from University of Basel. The author has contributed to research in topics: Aerobic exercise & Randomized controlled trial. The author has an hindex of 23, co-authored 73 publications receiving 3075 citations. Previous affiliations of Johannes Beck include University of Zurich & University Hospital of Basel.

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Evidence of favorable sleep-EEG patterns in adolescent male vigorous football players compared to controls

TL;DR: In this article, the authors compare sleep-EEG patterns of vigorous exercisers and controls and find that the football players showed greater sleep efficiency, shortened sleep onset latency, less awakenings after sleep onset, more stage 4, and less REM sleep.
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Fast BDNF serum level increase and diurnal BDNF oscillations are associated with therapeutic response after partial sleep deprivation.

TL;DR: A normalized BDNF serum profile which oscillates in a circadian fashion seems to precede, rather than follow a favourable treatment outcome in depressed patients, which is comparable to effects seen with ketamine infusion.
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High baseline BDNF serum levels and early psychopathological improvement are predictive of treatment outcome in major depression

TL;DR: Even though higher baseline sBDNF levels are associated with more severe depression, they may reflect an increased capacity to respond to treatment, and changes in sBD NF over the full course of treatment are not associated with psychopathological improvement.
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Dream recall and its relationship to sleep, perceived stress, and creativity among adolescents.

TL;DR: Dream recall was also associated with female gender in a large sample of adolescents and it seemed that several different factors such as good mood, increased sleep quality, and creativity influenced dream recall.
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Executive function performance is reduced during occupational burnout but can recover to the level of healthy controls.

TL;DR: Data suggest that executive function performance is impaired during acute burnout but can recover to the level of healthy controls, at odds with the finding of persistent deficits in the same tests found in major depression even after remission of depressive mood.