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B02: Young offenders’ self-regulation deficit as a common mechanism for aggressive behavior and psychopathology - neural mechanisms and role of adverse childhood experiences

This project aims to identify cognitive and emotion control deficits in the context of negative valence and threat interference and their association with ACE in young offenders. Complementary to other projects, this project will focus on a group of young people defined by their propensity to aggression showing at the same time more severe psychopathologies. In a series of studies using multimodal imaging (EEG-fMRI, EEG-sMRI) in combination with naturalistic longitudinal follow-up (ecological momentary assessment (EMA)) B02 will identify the neural mechanisms and predictors of self-regulation deficits as a putative common developmental pathway for both, aggressive behavior, and psychopathology. Additionally, B02 will seek to causally confirm neural network mechanisms of inhibitory control and emotion regulation deficits as the basis of aggressive behavior and associated psychopathology by real-time EEG-triggered TMS-stimulation in young offenders.

Wolfgang Retz

Dr. Wolfgang Retz is Professor of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy and heads the Forensic Psychiatry and Psychotherapy section at the Mainz University Medical Center as well as the Institute for Forensic Psychology and Psychiatry at the Saarland University in Homburg/Saar.