Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Unknown

UnknownNCT00830752

Neurobiological, Neuropsychological,Linguistic and Gestural Processes and Phenomena in Individuals With Alexithymia

Understanding Alexithymia

Status
Unknown
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
70 (estimated)
Sponsor
Charite University, Berlin, Germany · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 60 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

The syndrome of extremely restricted emotional competence, alexithymia, was originally conceptualized in psychoanalytic research and is now empirically and experimentally studied in clinical psychology and psychological medicine within the context of emotion regulation using neuroscientific techniques. Alexithymia refers to an individual's inability or impaired ability to name or express feelings and to distinguish them from the physical consequences of an acute or chronic stress reaction. Modern "brain-body-interface" research suggests that alexithymia represents a complex deficiency in cognitive processing and emotional regulatory processes. The neurobiological basis is assumed to be a preconscious, automatic and involuntary information transfer to the amygdalae of acquired representations of emotional contents stored in ventromedial prefrontal cortical areas. Alexithymia is not just "emotional coldness", i.e. a limited emotionality, but essentially the detachment of feelings from language. In alexithymia the link between affective phenomena and language, understood as media-supported sign practices, is insufficient or even absent. The purpose of our observational study is to better understand the neurobiological and neuropsychological as well as linguistic and gestural processes and determinants of this phenomenon

Conditions

Timeline

Start date
2009-02-01
Primary completion
2009-08-01
Completion
2009-12-01
First posted
2009-01-28
Last updated
2009-01-28

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Germany

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT00830752. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.