Stephan Roscher
Max Planck Society
9 Papers
69 Citations
Stephan Roscher is an academic researcher from Max Planck Society. The author has contributed to research in topics: Threshold of pain & Stimulus (physiology). The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 9 publications.
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Papers
Corticotropin-releasing-hormone lacks analgesic properties: an experimental study in humans, using non-inflammatory pain.
Stefan Lautenbacher,Stephan Roscher,Gabi Kohl,Helmut Vedder,Helmut Vedder,Jürgen-Christian Krieg,Jürgen-Christian Krieg +6 more
TL;DR: Failure to find any evidence suggesting an analgesic action of CRH or of the subsequent hormones of the HPA system was obtained despite the fact that CRH produced clear neuroendocrine responses such as increases in the plasma concentration of beta-endorphin and cortisol.
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Body size perception and body satisfaction in restrained and unrestrained eaters
Stefan Lautenbacher,A. Thomas,Stephan Roscher,Friedrich Strian,Karl-Martin Pirke,J.-C. Krieg +5 more
TL;DR: A perceptual uncertainty in regard to body size (either for visual or for somatosensory aspects) has already developed in restrained eaters, which may constitute a predisposition for more overt forms of body size misperception as found in eating disorder patients.
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Theoretical and empirical considerations on the relation between ‘body image’, body scheme and somatosensation
TL;DR: Perhaps interactions between the hitherto neglected neurophysiological and neuropsychological factors and the traditionally accepted cognitive and affective factors in 'body image' formation are discussed and further investigations of the relationship between somatosensory variables and body size perception are stimulated.
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Chemo-somatosensory evoked potentials: A sensitive tool to assess conditioned pain modulation?
Miriam Kunz,Parvaneh Mohammadian,Bertold Renner,Stephan Roscher,Gerd Kobal,Stefan Lautenbacher +5 more
TL;DR: The experimental pain model using CO2 stimuli to elicit CSSEPs proved to be sensitive enough to capture weak CPM effects elicited by a conditioning stimulus of rather low noxious load.
Aufmerksamkeit und Befindlichkeit unter hormonell simuliertem Stress
TL;DR: Die Aufmerksamkeit wurde mit einer Einfachwahl-Reaktionszeitaufgabe wahrend jeder Sitzung mehrfach getestet, Befindlichkeitsanderungen mittels visuellen Analogskalen im gleichen Zeitschema abgefragt.
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