Semmlinger, V., Takano, K., Wolkenstein, L., Krüger-Gottschalk, Kuck, S., Dyer, A., Pittig, A., Alpers, G., & Ehring, T. (2025). Dropout from trauma-focused treatment for PTSD in a naturalistic setting. Clinical Psychology in Europe, 7: e14491. https://doi.org/10.32872/cpe.14491
Seelig, E., Joormann, J., & Wolkenstein, L. (2024). Cognitive–emotional impairments in euthymic bipolar disorder—New insights into emotion regulation and cognitive control deficits. Emotion. Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10.1037/emo0001479
Aleksic, M., Reineck, A., Ehring, T. & Wolkenstein, L. (2024). When does imagery rescripting become a double-edged sword? Investigating the risk of memory distortion through imagery rescripting in an online trauma film study. Behaviour Research and Therapy, 174, 104495.
Ganslmeier, M., Ehring, T. & Wolkenstein, L. (2023). Effects of imagery rescripting and imaginal exposure on voluntary memory. Behaviour Research and Therapy, 170, 104409
Ganslmeier, M., Kunze, A. E., Ehring, T. & Wolkenstein, L. (2022). The dilemma of trauma-focused therapy: effects of imagery rescripting on voluntary memory. Psychological Research.
Ehring, T., Limburg, K., Kunze, A. E., Wittekind, C. E., Werner, G. G., Wolkenstein, L., Guzey, M. & Cludius, B. (2022). (When and how) Does basic research in clinical psychology lead to more effective psychological treatment for mental disorders? Clinical Psychology Review, 95, 102163.
Ehring, T., Herzog, E., Wittekind, C. E. & Wolkenstein, L. (2022). Imagery Rescripting in der Behandlung der Posttraumatischen Belastungsstörung. Verhaltenstherapie, 32, 128-138. Wolkenstein, L., Sommerhoff, A. & Voss, M. (2022). Positive emotion dysregulation in posttraumatic stress disorder. Journal of Anxiety Disorders, 86, 102534.
Wolkenstein, L., Rombold-Bruehl, F., Bingmann, T., Sommer, A., Kanske, P & Plewnia, C. (2021). Challenging control over emotions in Borderline Personality Disorder – a tDCS study. Neuropsychologia, 18, 156.
Voss, M., Ehring, T., Timpano, K., Joormann, J. & Wolkenstein, L. (2019). A Psychometric Evaluation of the German Version of the Responses to Positive Affect Questionnaire. Journal of Psychopathology and Behavioral Assessment 41 (3), 425-435.
Goldbeck, F., Hautzinger, M. & Wolkenstein, L. (2019). Validation of the German version of the Subjective Vitality Scale - A cross-sectional study and a randomized controlled trial. Journal of Well-Being Assessment, 3, 17-37.
Voss, M., Ehring, T. & Wolkenstein, L. (2019). Does transcranial direct current stimulation affect post-stressor intrusive memories and rumination? An experimental analogue study. Cognitive Therapy and Research, 43, 535-549.
Feyerabend, J., Lüttke, S., Grosse-Wentrup, F., Wolter, S., Hautzinger, M. & Wolkenstein, L. (2018). Theory of mind in remitted bipolar disorder: Younger patients struggle in tasks of higher ecological validity. Journal of Affective Disorders, 231, 32-40.
Wolkenstein, L., Kanske, P., Bailer, J., Wessa, M., Hautzinger, M. & Joormann, J. (2017). Impaired cognitive control over emotional material in euthymic bipolar disorder. Journal of Affective Disorder, 214, 108-114.
Zwick, J. & Wolkenstein, L. (2017). Facial emotion recognition, theory of mind and the role of facial mimicry in depression. Journal of Affective Disorders, 210, 90-99.
Laib, M., & Wolkenstein, L. (2016). Does the Use of Body Scanners Discriminate Overweight Flight Passengers? The Effect of Body Scanners on Body Image. International Journal of Business and Social Research, 6, 1-16.
Laib, M., & Wolkenstein, L. (2016). Factors Predicting the Explicit and Implicit Attitude Towards Body Scanners. Review of Social Sciences, 1, 18-33.
Plewnia, C., Schroeder, P.A., Kunze, R., Faehling, F. & Wolkenstein, L. (2015). Keep Calm and Carry On: Improved Frustration Tolerance and Processing Speed by Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation (tDCS). PLoS One, 10, e0122578.
Schroeder, P.A., Ehlis, A.C., Wolkenstein, L., Fallgatter, A. J. & Plewnia, C. (2015). Emotional distraction and bodily reaction: Modulation of autonomous responses by anodal tDCS to the prefrontal cortex. Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience, 9, 482.
Plewnia, C., Schroeder, P.A. & Wolkenstein, L. (2015). Targeting the biased brain: noninvasive brain stimulation to ameliorate cognitive control. Lancet Psychiatry, 2, 351-356.
Wolkenstein, L., Zeiller, M., Kanske, P. & Plewnia, C. (2014) Induction of a depression-like negativity bias by cathodal transcranial direct current stimulation. Cortex, 59, 103-112.
Wolkenstein, L., Zwick, J., Hautzinger, M. & Joormann, J. (2014). Cognitive emotion regulation in euthymic bipolar disorder. Journal of Affective Disorders, 160, 92-97.
Wolkenstein, L., Püschel, S., Schuster, A. & Hautzinger, M. (2014). Emotionsregulationstraining bei bipolaren Patienten – Erste Befunde einer Pilotstudie. Zeitschrift für Psychiatrie, Psychologie und Psychotherapie, 62, 255-263.
Wolkenstein, L. & Plewnia, C. (2013). Amelioration of cognitive control in depression by transcranial direct current stimulation. Biological Psychiatry, 73, 646-651.
Giel, K.E., Wittorf, A., Wolkenstein, L., Klingberg, S.,, Drimmer, E., Schönenberg, M., Rapp, A.M., Fallgatter, A.J., Hautzinger, M. & Zipfel, S. (2012). Is impaired set-shifting a feature of “pure“ anorexia nervosa? Investigating the role of depression in set-shifting ability in anorexia nervosa and unipolar depression. Psychiatry Research, 200, 538-543.
Wittorf, A., Giel, K., Hautzinger, M., Rapp, A., Schönenberg, M., Wolkenstein, L., Zipfel, S., Fallgatter, A.J., Klingberg, S. (2012). Specifity of cognitive biases in schizophrenia – jumping to conclusions and attributional style. Cognitive Neuropsychiatry, 17, 262-286.
Wolkenstein, L., Schönenberg, M., Schirm, E. & Hautzinger, M. (2011). I can see what you feel but I can’t deal with it: Impaired theory of mind in depression. Journal of Affective Disorders, 132, 104-111.
Wolkenstein, L., Bruchmüller, K., Schmid, P. & Meyer, T.D. (2011). Misdiagnosing bipolar disorder – do clinicians show heuristic biases? Journal of Affective Disorders, 130, 405-412.
Meyer, T.D., Bernhard, B., Born, C., Fuhr, K., Gerber, S., Schaerer, L., Langosch, J.M., Pfennig, A., Sasse, J., Scheiter, S., Schöttle, D., van Calker, D., Wolkenstein, L. & Bauer, M. (2011). The Hypomania Checklist-32 and the Mood Disorder Questionnaire as screening tools – going beyond samples of purely mood-disordered patients. Journal of Affective Disorders, 128, 291-298.
Meyer, T.D. & Wolkenstein, L. (2010). Current alcohol use and risk for hypomania in male students: Generally more or more binging? Comprehensive Psychiatry, 51, 171-176.
Wolkenstein, L. & Meyer, T.D. (2010). Is one's mood affected when interacting with people putatively at risk for affective disorders? The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, 198, 576-579.
Wolkenstein, L. & Meyer, T.D. (2009). What factors influence attitudes towards people with current depression and current mania? International Journal of Social Psychiatry, 55, 124-140.
Wolkenstein, L. & Meyer, T.D. (2008). Attitudes of young people towards depression and mania. Psychology and Psychotherapy: Theory, Research and Practice, 81, 15-31.