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Alexa Negele
Researcher at Goethe University Frankfurt
Publications - 18
Citations - 377
Alexa Negele is an academic researcher from Goethe University Frankfurt. The author has contributed to research in topics: Randomized controlled trial & Depression (differential diagnoses). The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 18 publications receiving 293 citations.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Childhood Trauma and Its Relation to Chronic Depression in Adulthood.
TL;DR: Clinical implications suggest a precise assessment of childhood trauma in chronically depressed patients with a focus on emotional abuse, sexual abuse, and multiple exposures to childhood trauma.
Journal ArticleDOI
“Honey, you’re jumping about”—Mothers’ scaffolding of their children's and adolescents’ life narration
TL;DR: The authors explored whether the development of the life story in adolescence depends on qualities of the narrator or on the brevity of narrated life, and whether mothers adapt their scaffolding strategies in co-narrations of a child's life to the child's zone of proximal development.
Journal ArticleDOI
Outcome of Psychoanalytic and Cognitive-Behavioural Long-Term Therapy with Chronically Depressed Patients: A Controlled Trial with Preferential and Randomized Allocation:
Marianne Leuzinger-Bohleber,Martin Hautzinger,Georg Fiedler,Wolfram Keller,Ulrich Bahrke,Lisa Kallenbach,Johannes Kaufhold,Mareike Ernst,Alexa Negele,Margerete Schoett,Helmut Küchenhoff,Felix Günther,Bernhard Rüger,Manfred E. Beutel +13 more
TL;DR: Psychoanalytic as well as cognitive-behavioural long-term treatments lead to significant and sustained improvements of depressive symptoms of chronically depressed patients exceeding effect sizes of other international outcome studies.
Journal ArticleDOI
Psychoanalytic and cognitive-behavior therapy of chronic depression: study protocol for a randomized controlled trial
Manfred E. Beutel,Marianne Leuzinger-Bohleber,Bernhard Rüger,Ulrich Bahrke,Alexa Negele,Antje Haselbacher,Georg Fiedler,Wolfram Keller,Martin Hautzinger +8 more
TL;DR: This study is the first to determine the effectiveness of controlled long-term psychodynamic and cognitive-behavioral (CBT) treatments and to assess the effects of preferential vs. randomization in chronic depression patients within the German healthcare system.
Book ChapterDOI
Self-Continuity Across Developmental Change in and of Repeated Life Narratives
Alexa Negele,Tilmann Habermas +1 more
TL;DR: In this paper, a longitudinal study of 8-, 12-, 16-, and 20-year olds narrated and re-narrated 4 years later their life stories in a free-standing monologue.