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Research

Our research is primarily focused on two questions: Firstly, we are interested in why children, adolescents and young adults maintain dysfunctional behaviour despite the often long-term consequences. Therefore, we investigate short-term mechanisms maintaining dysfunctional behaviour from a functional perspective. Content-related we are primarily concerned with the maintaining factors of maladaptive exercise behaviour in eating disorders.

And secondly, we are interested in how we can improve the psychotherapeutic care of children and adolescents using digital tools. Together with the University Outpatient Psychotherapy Centre for Children and Adolescents we are investigating therapy feedback systems and data-based tools to personalise child and adolescent psychotherapy.

In our methodology we primarily use two approaches: Firstly, we use everyday ambulatory assessment via smartphones and passive sensors, which give us an insight into the experience of children and adolescents in everyday life. Secondly, we use an experimental psychological focus that allows us to investigate mechanisms under randomised controlled conditions. Our movement laboratory is currently under construction.

Current research projects at the department are listed below:


Research Topics

Driven Exercise in Eating Disorders – from Function to Habit

Excessive or driven exercise is a common symptom of eating disorders, the maintaining mechanisms of which are poorly understood. While sport is recommended for almost all mental disorders, it is often taboo in the treatment of eating disorders and even forbidden during inpatient therapy. In chronic eating disorders, the behaviour can also appear highly ritualistic and lose all functionality. In this research field, we are investigating which maintaining mechanisms (e.g. momentary changes in emotion regulation, exercise satiation, social functions) reinforce this behaviour in the short term. In a further project, we will investigate whether short-term functions of these and other maladaptive behaviours change over the course of a mental illness and when the behaviour becomes a dysfunctional habit. For this purpose, we primarily use EMA studies, but also more and more experimental methods.

References:

Kolar, D. R.‡, Kaurin, A.‡, Meule, A., Dittmer, N., Schlegl., S. & Voderholzer, U. 2022.
Interpersonal, Affective and Compulsive Features of Driven Exercise in Anorexia Nervosa.Journal of Affective Disorders. 307:53–61. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jad.2022.03.044

Kolar, D. R., Gorrell, S. 2021. A call to experimentally study acute affect-regulation
mechanisms specific to driven exercise in eating disorders. International Journal of
Eating Disorders. 54(3):280–286. https://doi.org/10.1002/eat.23427

Kolar, D. R., Neumayr, C., Roth, M.*, Voderholzer, U., Perthes, K.* & Schlegl, S. 2020.
Testing an emotion regulation model of physical activity in adolescents with anorexia
nervosa: A pilot ecological momentary assessment study. European Eating Disorders
Review. 28(2):170–183. https://doi.org/10.1002/erv.2706


Exercise Satiation – a new concept to classify maladaptive exercise behaviour

At what point do we consider a sports session satisfactory and "good"? And do adolescents with eating disorders differ from healthy adolescents in this assessment? This question is addressed by the concept of Exercise Satiation. Exercise Satiation refers to the state or point in time when we are subjectively satisfied enough with our physical activity during a sports session that we voluntarily end it. This may be related to previously set goals or physical changes during exercise. In our movement laboratory, we are experimentally investigating this question.

References:

Barker, J., Kolar, D. R., Spotts-deLazzer, A., & Keel, P. K. 2022. Exercise Satiation:
A Novel Theoretical Conceptualization for Problematic Exercise Observed in Eating
Disorders. International Journal of Eating Disorders. 55(2):176–179. https://doi.org/10.1002/eat.23635


Personalised Psychotherapy for Children and Adolescents

Each patient is unique in his/her experience, however, we still know very little about how to ideally adapt psychotherapy to each child or adolescent, which is why we still do not provide all children and adolescents with the optimal intervention. In practice, individualisation often happens through clinical decisions made by practitioners. We are investigating the extent to which data-driven algorithms, which make data-driven recommendations based on a multitude of measurements in the everyday life of the patient or over the course of psychotherapy, can optimally adapt the treatment for the patient. For this, we will use EMA, passive sensing through wearables and digital therapy feedback systems in the University Outpatient Psychotherapy Clinic for Children and Adolescents.

References:

Kaurin, A. & Kolar, D. R. 2022. Ambulantes Assessment in der Klinischen Kinderund
Jugendpsychologie. Psychotherapie. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00278-022-00605-x

Kolar, D. R., Huss, M., Jenetzky, E. & Hammerle, F. 2017. A smartphone-enhanced
low-threshold intervention for adolescents with anorexia nervosa (SELTIAN): Study
protocol of a randomized controlled trial. BMJopen 7:e018049. doi.org/10.
1136/bmjopen-2017-018049


Publications

‡ shared authorship

Under Review

Kolar, D.R., Haynos, A.F., Wang, S.B., Lask, T., Murray, S.B., Voderholzer, U. & Gorrell, S. Identification of affective and social reinforcement functions of driven exercise: Evidence from three samples. https://psyarxiv.com/ad3mq/

Kolar, D. R., Monteleone, A. M., Cascino, G., Meule, A., Naab, S., & Voderholzer, U. (2022, September 21). Pathways between child maltreatment, psychological symptoms, and life satisfaction: a network analysis in adolescent inpatients. https://doi.org/10.31234/osf.io/enpk6

In Journals

2023

Monteleone, A. M., Cascino, G., Meule, A., Barone, E., Voderholzer, U., & Kolar, D. R. (2023). Pathways between childhood maltreatment and life satisfaction in adolescents with eating disorders: A network analysis. European Eating Disorders Review, 1– 10. https://doi.org/10.1002/erv.3000​​​​​​​

Meule, A., Kolar, D. R., Gaertner, T., Osen, B., Rauh, E., Naab, S. & Voderholzer,
U. Depressive symptoms and weight change in inpatients with anorexia nervosa: a
cross-lagged panel model.

2022

Meule, A., Kolar, D. R., Schlegl, S., Rauh, E. & Voderholzer, U. Illness Duration and
Treatment Outcome of Anorexia Nervosa. Eating Disorders: The Journal of Treatment & Prevention. https://doi.org/10.1080/10640266.2022.2114586

Kolar, D. R. & Mebarak, M. 2022. An update on the epidemiology of eating disorders
in Latin America: Current state and future challenges. Current Opinion in Psychiatry.
https://doi.org/10.1097/YCO.0000000000000813

Kaurin, A. & Kolar, D. R. 2022. Ambulantes Assessment in der Klinischen Kinderund
Jugendpsychologie. Psychotherapie. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00278-022-00605-x



Clinical Child and Adolescent Psychology and Psychotherapy


Universitätsstr. 31
93053 Regensburg

Phone: +49 941 943 7601

E-Mail: sekretariat.kolar@uni-regensburg.de