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Lars Schulze

Researcher at Free University of Berlin

Publications -  46
Citations -  2587

Lars Schulze is an academic researcher from Free University of Berlin. The author has contributed to research in topics: Borderline personality disorder & Social anxiety. The author has an hindex of 22, co-authored 34 publications receiving 2231 citations. Previous affiliations of Lars Schulze include Leipzig University & University of Rostock.

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Emotion recognition in borderline personality disorder - a review of the literature

TL;DR: In this article, it has been suggested that emotional hyperreactivity interferes with the cognitive processes of facial emotion recognition, thereby contributing to the specific pattern of altered emotion recognition in BPD.
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The Neural Correlates of Sex Differences in Emotional Reactivity and Emotion Regulation

TL;DR: Compared to women, men showed an increased recruitment of regulatory cortical areas during cognitively increasing initial emotional reactions, which was associated with an increase in amygdala activity, and women showed enhanced amygdala responding to aversive stimuli in the initial viewing phase.
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Neural Correlates of Disturbed Emotion Processing in Borderline Personality Disorder: A Multimodal Meta-Analysis

TL;DR: Results strengthen the assumption that dysfunctional dorsolateral prefrontal and limbic brain regions are a hallmark feature of BPD and therefore are consistent with the conceptualization of B PD as an emotion dysregulation disorder.
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Neuronal Correlates of Cognitive Reappraisal in Borderline Patients with Affective Instability

TL;DR: The results point to the role of two distinguishable processes of emotional difficulties in borderline personality disorder: enhanced emotional reactivity as well as deficits of voluntarily decreasing aversive emotions by means of cognitive reappraisal.
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Affect Regulation and Pain in Borderline Personality Disorder: A Possible Link to the Understanding of Self-Injury

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the role of self-inflicted pain as a means of affect regulation in patients with borderline personality disorder (BPD) and found that negative and neutral pictures led to stronger activation of the amygdala, insula, and anterior cingulate cortex than in healthy control subjects.