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Dive into the research topics where Masato Yumoto is active.

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Featured researches published by Masato Yumoto.


Neuroreport | 2001

Brain lateralization for mismatch response to across- and within-category change of vowels

Kiyoto Kasai; Haruyasu Yamada; Satoru Kamio; Kazuyuki Nakagome; Akira Iwanami; Masato Fukuda; Kenji Itoh; Ichiro Koshida; Masato Yumoto; Keiji Iramina; Nobumasa Kato; Shoogo Ueno

Differences in hemispheric predominance between across- and within-category change perception of vowels were assessed using a whole-head magnetoencephalography. The magnetic mismatch responses (MMNm) to pure-tone and vowel within-category changes were significantly predominant in the right hemisphere; on the other hand, vowel across-category MMNm did not differ in power between hemispheres. The results suggest that both hemispheres are symmetrically activated in the preattentive across-category change perception of vowels, while the within-category change of a vowel is analyzed as the change in physical features of the stimuli, thus predominantly activating the right hemisphere. Thus, the relative contribution of the left auditory cortex in the preattentive speech processing may occur only at the level of perception of the vowel across-category change.


Clinical Neurophysiology | 2005

Delayed automatic detection of change in speech sounds in adults with autism: A magnetoencephalographic study

Kiyoto Kasai; Ohiko Hashimoto; Yuki Kawakubo; Masato Yumoto; Satoru Kamio; Kenji Itoh; Ichiro Koshida; Akira Iwanami; Kazuyuki Nakagome; Masato Fukuda; Hidenori Yamasue; Haruyasu Yamada; Osamu Abe; Shigeki Aoki; Nobumasa Kato

OBJECTIVE Autism is a form of pervasive developmental disorder in which dysfunction in interpersonal relationships and communication is fundamental. This study evaluated neurophysiological abnormalities at the basic level of language processing, i.e. automatic change detection of speech and non-speech sounds, using magnetoencephalographic recording of mismatch response elicited by change in vowels and tones. METHODS The auditory magnetic mismatch field (MMF) was evaluated in 9 adults with autism and 19 control subjects using whole-head magnetoencephalography. The MMF in response to the duration change of a pure tone or vowel /a/ and that in response to across-phoneme change between vowels /a/ and /o/, were recorded. RESULTS The groups were not significantly different in MMF power under any conditions. However, the autism group showed a left-biased latency prolongation of the MMF particularly under the across-phoneme change condition, and this latency delay was significantly associated with greater symptom severity. CONCLUSIONS These results suggest that adults with autism are associated with delayed processing for automatic change detection of speech sounds. These electrophysiological abnormalities at the earliest level of information processing may contribute to the basis for language deficits observed in autism. SIGNIFICANCE These results provide the first evidence for delayed latency of phonetic MMF in adults with autism.


Clinical Neurophysiology | 2002

Do high or low doses of anxiolytics and hypnotics affect mismatch negativity in schizophrenic subjects? An EEG and MEG study

Kiyoto Kasai; Haruyasu Yamada; Satoru Kamio; Kazuyuki Nakagome; Akira Iwanami; Masato Fukuda; Masato Yumoto; Kenji Itoh; Ichiro Koshida; Osamu Abe; Nobumasa Kato

OBJECTIVE Many studies have demonstrated mismatch negativity (MMN) attenuation in schizophrenia. Recently, investigators have shown that GABAergic inhibitory neurons may regulate MMN generation. Considering that a substantial proportion of schizophrenic patients receive anxiolytics and hypnotics that have affinity to GABA(A) receptors to reduce their comorbid symptoms of anxiety and sleep disturbances, we need to assess whether anxiolytics/hypnotics might affect their MMN generation. The aim of this study is to assess the possibility that high or low doses of anxiolytics/hypnotics received by schizophrenic subjects affect their mismatch negativity (MMN), using event-related potentials (ERPs) and magnetoencephalography (MEG). METHODS Twenty-three and 16 patients with schizophrenia participated in the ERP and MEG studies, respectively. Three types of MMN (MMN in response to a duration change of pure-tone stimuli, within-category vowel change (Japanese vowel /a/ with short versus long duration), and across-category vowel change (vowel /a/ versus /o/)) were recorded. RESULTS High or low doses of benzodiazepine had no significant effects on MMN amplitude/magnetic MMN power, topography/laterality, or latency under any conditions of the ERP or MEG study. CONCLUSIONS These results suggest that chronic administration of anxiolytics/hypnotics does not significantly affect MMN in schizophrenia.


The Lancet | 1999

Evidence for functional abnormality in the right auditory cortex during musical hallucinations

Kiyoto Kasai; Takashi Asada; Masato Yumoto; Jun Takeya; Hiroshi Matsuda

Right auditory cortex dysfunction during musical hallucinations occurred in an 88-year-old woman, who was otherwise cognitively intact. We assessed this phenomenon with a combination of neuromagnetic and cerebral blood-flow measurements.


Schizophrenia Research | 2003

Neuromagnetic correlates of impaired automatic categorical perception of speech sounds in schizophrenia

Kiyoto Kasai; Haruyasu Yamada; Satoru Kamio; Kazuyuki Nakagome; Akira Iwanami; Masato Fukuda; Masato Yumoto; Kenji Itoh; Ichiro Koshida; Osamu Abe; Nobumasa Kato

Schizophrenia is associated with dysfunction in language processing. At the earliest stage of language processing, dysfunction of categorical perception of speech sounds in schizophrenia has been demonstrated in a behavioral task. The aim of this study was to assess automatic categorical perception of speech sounds as reflected by event-related changes in magnetic field power in schizophrenia. Using a whole-head magnetoencephalographic recording, the magnetic counterpart of mismatch negativity (MMNm) elicited by a phonetic change was evaluated in 16 right-handed patients with chronic schizophrenia and in 19 age-, sex-, and parental socioeconomic status-matched normal control subjects. Three types of MMNm (MMNm in response to a duration decrement of pure-tone stimuli; a vowel within-category change [duration decrement of Japanese vowel /a/]; vowel across-category change [Japanese vowel /a/ versus /o/]) were recorded. While the schizophrenia group showed an overall reduction in magnetic field power of MMNm, a trend was found toward more distinct abnormalities under the condition of vowel across-category change than under that of duration decrement of a vowel or tone. The patient group did not show abnormal asymmetries of MMNm power under any of the conditions. This study provides physiological evidence for impaired categorical perception of speech sounds in the bilateral auditory cortex in schizophrenia. The language-related dysfunction in schizophrenic patients may be present at the early stage of auditory processing of relatively simple stimuli such as phonemes, and not just at stages involving higher order semantic processes.


Electroencephalography and Clinical Neurophysiology | 1996

Magnetoencephalographic analysis of cortical myoclonic jerks

Yoshikazu Uesaka; Yasuo Terao; Yoshikazu Ugawa; Masato Yumoto; Ritsuko Hanajima; Ichiro Kanazawa

We studied the pre-myoclonus spike using magnetoencephalography in patients with cortical myoclonus (6 with cortical reflex myoclonus and one with epilepsia partialis continua). The spike was estimated as a single current dipole on the pre-central gyrus in one patient with epilepsia partialis continua. In contrast, it was estimated as a single dipole on the post-central gyrus in 5 of 6 patients with cortical reflex myoclonus, and as two dipoles on the pre- and post-central gyrus in the remaining patient. We conclude that there are 3 physiological types of cortical myoclonus: (1) abnormal discharges in the motor cortex produce the myoclonus; (2) the source of the myoclonus is mainly the sensory cortex; (3) both the motor and sensory cortices play important roles in the production of myoclonus.


Atherosclerosis | 2002

Apolipoprotein A-I deficiency with accumulated risk for CHD but no symptoms of CHD

Hiromitsu Yokota; Yoshiaki Hashimoto; Shigeo Okubo; Masato Yumoto; Fumiko Mashige; Mitsunobu Kawamura; Kazuo Kotani; Yasuteru Usuki; Sachiyo Shimada; Kiyoshi Kitamura; Kazuhiko Nakahara

We evaluated a 69-year-old Japanese woman with apolipoprotein (apo) A-I deficiency, high levels of low-density lipoprotein (LDL)-cholesterol, hypertension and impaired glucose tolerance. The patient had corneal opacity, but neither xanthomas, xanthelasma, nor tonsillar hypertrophy. She was not symptomatic for coronary heart disease (CHD), and had normal electrocardiograms at rest and exercise using a cycle ergometer. She had severely reduced levels of high-density lipoprotein (HDL)-cholesterol (0.10-0.18 mmol/l) and no apo A-I (<0.6 mg/dl). LDL-cholesterol and apo B as well as apo E were increased even under treatment with 10 mg pravastatin per day. Gel filtration chromatography revealed that in addition to VLDL and LDL fractions, she had apo A-II rich and apo E rich fractions, which were present in the HDL fraction separated by ultracentrifugation. A cytosine deletion was identified by genomic DNA sequencing of the apo A-I gene of the patient at the third base of codon 184 in the fourth exon, which led to a frame shift mutation and early termination at codon 200. This patient is the oldest among those with apo A-I deficiency reported in the literature, and she had no symptoms of CHD despite the accumulated risk for the disease.


NeuroImage | 2004

Abnormal association between reduced magnetic mismatch field to speech sounds and smaller left planum temporale volume in schizophrenia

Hidenori Yamasue; Haruyasu Yamada; Masato Yumoto; Satoru Kamio; Noriko Kudo; Miki Uetsuki; Osamu Abe; Rin Fukuda; Shigeki Aoki; Kuni Ohtomo; Akira Iwanami; Nobumasa Kato; Kiyoto Kasai

Schizophrenia is associated with language-related dysfunction. A previous study [Schizophr. Res. 59 (2003c) 159] has shown that this abnormality is present at the level of automatic discrimination of change in speech sounds, as revealed by magnetoencephalographic recording of auditory mismatch field in response to across-category change in vowels. Here, we investigated the neuroanatomical substrate for this physiological abnormality. Thirteen patients with schizophrenia and 19 matched control subjects were examined using magnetoencephalography (MEG) and high-resolution magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to evaluate both mismatch field strengths in response to change between vowel /a/ and /o/, and gray matter volumes of Heschls gyrus (HG) and planum temporale (PT). The magnetic global field power of mismatch response to change in phonemes showed a bilateral reduction in patients with schizophrenia. The gray matter volume of left planum temporale, but not right planum temporale or bilateral Heschls gyrus, was significantly smaller in patients with schizophrenia compared with that in control subjects. Furthermore, the phonetic mismatch strength in the left hemisphere was significantly correlated with left planum temporale gray matter volume in patients with schizophrenia only. These results suggest that structural abnormalities of the planum temporale may underlie the functional abnormalities of fundamental language-related processing in schizophrenia.


Neuroreport | 2005

Auditory imagery mismatch negativity elicited in musicians

Masato Yumoto; Ca Maki Matsuda; Kenji Itoh; Akira Uno; Shotaro Karino; Osamu Saitoh; Yuu Kaneko; Yutaka Yatomi; Kimitaka Kaga

A mismatch between auditory sensation and expectant imagery of syllables elicited a possible equivalent of mismatch negativity in a previous study. The purpose of this study was to verify whether auditory imagery from musical notation could also mediate such imagery-based mismatch negativity. Neuromagnetic recording was obtained from eight musicians, who were instructed to identify unpredictably occurring pitch mismatches between a random tone sequence and a visually presented musical score. The difference between incongruent and congruent responses showed a magnetic distribution consistent with two frontal-negative current dipoles bilaterally located in the vicinity of Heschls gyrus, peaking at approximately 150 ms in latency. This imagery-based mismatch negativity may represent an early neural process of deviance detection between the sensory input and expectant imagery.


Brain Research | 2008

The influence of gender and personality traits on individual difference in auditory mismatch: A magnetoencephalographic (MMNm) study

Junko Matsubayashi; Yuki Kawakubo; Motomu Suga; Yuichi Takei; Sumie Kumano; Masato Fukuda; Kenji Itoh; Masato Yumoto; Kiyoto Kasai

The mismatch negativity (MMN; and its magnetic counterpart, MMNm) is widely used to assess early-stage auditory cortical function in humans and its impairment in various neuropsychiatric disorders. To establish MMN as a useful clinical tool for objective monitoring of auditory cortical function in an individual, we investigated the effect of gender and personality traits on individual difference in MMNm in healthy subjects. Participants were 88 healthy adults (31 women and 57 men). The MMNm in response to the duration or frequency change of tones and those in response to across-phoneme change between vowels /a/ and /o/ were recorded using 204-channel whole-head magnetoencephalography. The temperament and character inventory (TCI) was used to assess individual personality traits. Women were associated with significantly delayed peak latency of phonetic MMNm for the right hemisphere compared with men. Men had greater strength of tonal duration MMNm for the left hemisphere than women. Additionally, the persistence score predicted the strength of phonetic MMNm for the left hemisphere in the combined sample and the tonal duration MMNm for the left hemisphere in men; reward dependence predicted the latency of the tonal duration MMNm for the left hemisphere in men; and cooperativeness predicted the strength of the tonal frequency MMNm for the right hemisphere in women. These results suggest that gender and personality traits have an effect on individual variability of the MMNm. Our observation may provide useful information to establish MMN/MMNm as a clinical tool for monitoring auditory cortical function on an individual basis.

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Kimitaka Kaga

International University of Health and Welfare

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Yoshikazu Ugawa

Fukushima Medical University

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