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Dive into the research topics where Hiroki C. Tanabe is active.

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Featured researches published by Hiroki C. Tanabe.


NeuroImage | 2001

Cortical mapping of gait in humans: a near-infrared spectroscopic topography study.

Ichiro Miyai; Hiroki C. Tanabe; Ichiro Sase; Hideo Eda; Ichiro Oda; Ikuo Konishi; Yoshio Tsunazawa; Tsunehiko Suzuki; Toshio Yanagida; Kisou Kubota

While we have a fair understanding of how and where forelimb-hand manipulative movements are controlled by the neocortex, due to functional imaging studies, we know little about the control of bipedal movements such as walking because of technical difficulties. We succeeded in visualizing cortical activation patterns of human gait by measuring relative changes in local hemoglobin oxygenation using a recently developed near-infrared spectroscopic (NIRS) topography technique. Walking activities were bilaterally associated with increased levels of oxygenated and total hemoglobin in the medial primary sensorimotor cortices and the supplementary motor areas. Alternating foot movements activated similar but less broad regions. Gait imagery increased activities caudally located in the supplementary motor areas. These findings provide new insight into cortical control of human locomotion. NIRS topography might be also useful for evaluating cerebral activation patterns during pathological gait and rehabilitative intervention.


Neuron | 2008

Visual Image Reconstruction from Human Brain Activity using a Combination of Multiscale Local Image Decoders

Yoichi Miyawaki; Hajime Uchida; Okito Yamashita; Masa-aki Sato; Yusuke Morito; Hiroki C. Tanabe; Norihiro Sadato; Yukiyasu Kamitani

Perceptual experience consists of an enormous number of possible states. Previous fMRI studies have predicted a perceptual state by classifying brain activity into prespecified categories. Constraint-free visual image reconstruction is more challenging, as it is impractical to specify brain activity for all possible images. In this study, we reconstructed visual images by combining local image bases of multiple scales, whose contrasts were independently decoded from fMRI activity by automatically selecting relevant voxels and exploiting their correlated patterns. Binary-contrast, 10 x 10-patch images (2(100) possible states) were accurately reconstructed without any image prior on a single trial or volume basis by measuring brain activity only for several hundred random images. Reconstruction was also used to identify the presented image among millions of candidates. The results suggest that our approach provides an effective means to read out complex perceptual states from brain activity while discovering information representation in multivoxel patterns.


Stroke | 1998

Amelioration of Hippocampal Neuronal Damage After Global Ischemia by Neuronal Overexpression of BCL-2 in Transgenic Mice

Kazuo Kitagawa; Masayasu Matsumoto; Yoshihide Tsujimoto; Toshiho Ohtsuki; Keisuke Kuwabara; Kohji Matsushita; Gongming Yang; Hiroki C. Tanabe; Jean-Claude Martinou; Masatsugu Hori; Takehiko Yanagihara

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE Reports suggesting the involvement of apoptosis in ischemic neuronal damage have been accumulating, and protection against apoptotic death by BCL-2 has been shown in many types of cells. Overexpression of BCL-2 has been shown to reduce infarct size after focal ischemia. The purpose of the present study was to assess whether BCL-2 exerted its effect on selective neuronal vulnerability after transient global ischemia. METHODS Transgenic mice overexpressing BCL-2 in neurons and their littermates were subjected to transient forebrain ischemia for 12 minutes, and the hippocampus was examined 7 days later with conventional histology, immunohistochemistry, and in situ terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated dUTP-biotin nick end-labeling of fragmented DNA. RESULTS Although both types of mice showed a similar degree of ischemic insult, transgenic mice showed a lesser degree of neuronal death together with DNA fragmentation in the hippocampus than their littermates. CONCLUSIONS Overexpression of BCL-2 in neurons mitigates selective neuronal vulnerability in the hippocampus of transgenic mice after transient global ischemia.


Current Biology | 2007

Neural substrates of intermanual transfer of a newly acquired motor skill

Monica A. Perez; S. Tanaka; Steven P. Wise; Norihiro Sadato; Hiroki C. Tanabe; Daniel T. Willingham; Leonardo G. Cohen

In healthy humans, the two cerebral hemispheres show functional specialization to a degree unmatched in other animals, and such strong hemispheric specialization contributes to unimanual skill acquisition [1, 2]. When most humans learn a new motor skill with one hand, this process results in performance improvements in the opposite hand as well [3-6]. Despite the obvious adaptive advantage of such intermanual transfer, there is no direct evidence identifying the neural substrates of this form of skill acquisition [7-9]. Here, we used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to study brain regions activated during intermanual transfer of a learned sequence of finger movements. First, we found that the supplementary motor area (SMA) has more activity when a skill has transferred well than when it has transferred poorly. Second, we found that fMRI activity in the ventrolateral posterior thalamic nucleus correlated with successful future intermanual transfer, whereas activity in the ventrolateral anterior thalamic nucleus correlated with past intermanual transfer. Third, we found that repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation applied over the SMA blocked intermanual transfer without affecting skill acquisition. These findings provide direct evidence for an SMA-based mechanism that supports intermanual transfer of motor-skill learning.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2005

Functionally Segregated Neural Substrates for Arbitrary Audiovisual Paired-Association Learning

Hiroki C. Tanabe; Manabu Honda; Norihiro Sadato

To clarify the neural substrates and their dynamics during crossmodal association learning, we conducted functional magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) during audiovisual paired-association learning of delayed matching-to-sample tasks. Thirty subjects were involved in the study; 15 performed an audiovisual paired-association learning task, and the remainder completed a control visuo-visual task. Each trial consisted of the successive presentation of a pair of stimuli. Subjects were asked to identify predefined audiovisual or visuo-visual pairs by trial and error. Feedback for each trial was given regardless of whether the response was correct or incorrect. During the delay period, several areas showed an increase in the MRI signal as learning proceeded: crossmodal activity increased in unimodal areas corresponding to visual or auditory areas, and polymodal responses increased in the occipitotemporal junction and parahippocampal gyrus. This pattern was not observed in the visuo-visual intramodal paired-association learning task, suggesting that crossmodal associations might be formed by binding unimodal sensory areas via polymodal regions. In both the audiovisual and visuo-visual tasks, the MRI signal in the superior temporal sulcus (STS) in response to the second stimulus and feedback peaked during the early phase of learning and then decreased, indicating that the STS might be key to the creation of paired associations, regardless of stimulus type. In contrast to the activity changes in the regions discussed above, there was constant activity in the frontoparietal circuit during the delay period in both tasks, implying that the neural substrates for the formation and storage of paired associates are distinct from working memory circuits.


Frontiers in Integrative Neuroscience | 2010

“Stay Tuned”: Inter-Individual Neural Synchronization During Mutual Gaze and Joint Attention

Daisuke N. Saito; Hiroki C. Tanabe; Keise Izuma; Masamichi J. Hayashi; Yusuke Morito; Hidetsugu Komeda; Hitoshi Uchiyama; Hirotaka Kosaka; Hidehiko Okazawa; Yasuhisa Fujibayashi; Norihiro Sadato

Eye contact provides a communicative link between humans, prompting joint attention. As spontaneous brain activity might have an important role in the coordination of neuronal processing within the brain, their inter-subject synchronization might occur during eye contact. To test this, we conducted simultaneous functional MRI in pairs of adults. Eye contact was maintained at baseline while the subjects engaged in real-time gaze exchange in a joint attention task. Averted gaze activated the bilateral occipital pole extending to the right posterior superior temporal sulcus, the dorso-medial prefrontal cortex, and the bilateral inferior frontal gyrus. Following a partners gaze toward an object activated the left intraparietal sulcus. After all the task-related effects were modeled out, inter-individual correlation analysis of residual time-courses was performed. Paired subjects showed more prominent correlations than non-paired subjects in the right inferior frontal gyrus, suggesting that this region is involved in sharing intention during eye contact that provides the context for joint attention.


NeuroImage | 2012

A NIRS-fMRI study of resting state network

Shuntaro Sasai; Fumitaka Homae; Hama Watanabe; Akihiro T. Sasaki; Hiroki C. Tanabe; Norihiro Sadato; Gentaro Taga

Resting state functional connectivity, which is defined as temporal correlation of spontaneous activity between diverse brain regions, has been reported to form resting state networks (RSNs), consisting of a specific set of brain regions, based on functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). Recently, studies using near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) reported that NIRS signals also show temporal correlation between different brain regions. The local relationship between NIRS and fMRI signals has been examined by simultaneously recording these signals when participants perform tasks or respond to stimuli. However, the NIRS-fMRI signal relationship during the resting state has been reported only between NIRS signals obtained within limited regions and whole brain fMRI signals. Therefore, it remains unclear whether NIRS signals obtained at diverse regions correlate with regional fMRI signals close to the NIRS measurement channels, especially in relation to the RSNs. In this study, we tested whether the signals measured by these different modalities during the resting state have the consistent characteristics of the RSNs. Specifically, NIRS signals during the resting state were acquired over the frontal, temporal, and occipital cortices while whole brain fMRI data was simultaneously recorded. First, by projecting the NIRS channel positions over the cerebral cortical surface, we identified the most likely anatomical locations of all NIRS channels used in the study. Next, to investigate the regional signal relationship between NIRS and fMRI, we calculated the cross-correlation between NIRS signals and fMRI signals in the brain regions adjacent to each NIRS channel. For each NIRS channel, we observed the local maxima of correlation coefficients between NIRS and fMRI signals within a radius of 2 voxels from the projection point. Furthermore, we also found that highly correlated voxels with the NIRS signal were mainly localized within brain tissues for all NIRS channels, with the exception of 2 frontal channels. Finally, by calculating the correlation between NIRS signals at a channel and whole brain fMRI signals, we observed that NIRS signals correlate with fMRI signals not only within brain regions adjacent to NIRS channels but also within distant brain regions constituting RSNs, such as the dorsal attention, fronto-parietal control, and default mode networks. These results support the idea that NIRS signals obtained at several cortical regions during the resting state mainly reflect regional spontaneous hemodynamic fluctuations that originate from spontaneous cortical activity, and include information that characterizes the RSNs. Because NIRS is relatively easy to use and a less physically demanding neuroimaging technique, our findings should facilitate a broad application of this technique to examine RSNs, especially for clinical populations and conditions unsuitable for fMRI.


NeuroImage | 2004

Circulatory basis of fMRI signals: relationship between changes in the hemodynamic parameters and BOLD signal intensity.

Akitoshi Seiyama; Junji Seki; Hiroki C. Tanabe; Ichiro Sase; Akira Takatsuki; Satoru Miyauchi; Hideo Eda; Shigeru Hayashi; Toshihide Imaruoka; Takeo Iwakura; Toshio Yanagida

Blood oxygenation level-dependent functional magnetic resonance imaging (BOLD-fMRI) is widely used as a tool for functional brain mapping. During brain activation, increases in the regional blood flow lead to an increase in blood oxygenation and a decrease in paramagnetic deoxygenated hemoglobin (deoxy-Hb), causing an increase in the MR signal intensity at the site of brain activation. However, not a few studies using fMRI have failed to detect activation of areas that ought to have been activated. We assigned BOLD-positive (an increase in the signal intensity), BOLD-negative (a decrease in the signal intensity), and BOLD-silent (no change) brain activation to respective circulatory conditions through a description of fMRI signals as a function of the concentration of oxygenated Hb (oxy-Hb) and deoxy-Hb obtained with near-infrared optical imaging (NIOI). Using this model, we explain the sensory motor paradox in terms of BOLD-positive, BOLD-negative, and BOLD-silent brain activation.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2013

Interaction of Numerosity and Time in Prefrontal and Parietal Cortex

Masamichi J. Hayashi; Ryota Kanai; Hiroki C. Tanabe; Yumiko Yoshida; Synnöve Carlson; Vincent Walsh; Norihiro Sadato

It has been proposed that numerical and temporal information are processed by partially overlapping magnitude systems. Interactions across different magnitude domains could occur both at the level of perception and decision-making. However, their neural correlates have been elusive. Here, using functional magnetic resonance imaging in humans, we show that the right intraparietal cortex (IPC) and inferior frontal gyrus (IFG) are jointly activated by duration and numerosity discrimination tasks, with a congruency effect in the right IFG. To determine whether the IPC and the IFG are involved in response conflict (or facilitation) or modulation of subjective passage of time by numerical information, we examined their functional roles using transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) and two different numerosity–time interaction tasks: duration discrimination and time reproduction tasks. Our results show that TMS of the right IFG impairs categorical duration discrimination, whereas that of the right IPC modulates the degree of influence of numerosity on time perception and impairs precise time estimation. These results indicate that the right IFG is specifically involved at the categorical decision stage, whereas bleeding of numerosity information on perception of time occurs within the IPC. Together, our findings suggest a two-stage model of numerosity–time interactions whereby the interaction at the perceptual level occurs within the parietal region and the interaction at categorical decisions takes place in the prefrontal cortex.


NeuroImage | 2008

The neural basis of academic achievement motivation

Kei Mizuno; Masaaki Tanaka; Akira Ishii; Hiroki C. Tanabe; Hirotaka Onoe; Norihiro Sadato; Yasuyoshi Watanabe

We have used functional magnetic resonance imaging to study the neural correlates of motivation, concentrating on the motivation to learn and gain monetary rewards. We compared the activation in the brain obtained during reported high states of motivation for learning, with the ones observed when the motivation was based on monetary reward. Our results show that motivation to learn correlates with bilateral activity in the putamen, and that the higher the reported motivation, as derived from a questionnaire that each subject filled prior to scanning, the greater the change in the BOLD signals within the putamen. Monetary motivation also activated the putamen bilaterally, though the intensity of activity was not related to the monetary reward. We conclude that the putamen is critical for motivation in different domains and the extent of activity of the putamen may be pivotal to the motivation that drives academic achievement and thus academic successes.

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Norihiro Sadato

Graduate University for Advanced Studies

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Masamichi J. Hayashi

Graduate University for Advanced Studies

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Yusuke Morito

Graduate University for Advanced Studies

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