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Dive into the research topics where Motomi Toichi is active.

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Featured researches published by Motomi Toichi.


Cognitive Brain Research | 2001

Frontal midline theta rhythm is correlated with cardiac autonomic activities during the performance of an attention demanding meditation procedure

Yasutaka Kubota; Wataru Sato; Motomi Toichi; Toshiya Murai; Takashi Okada; Akiko Hayashi; Akira Sengoku

Frontal midline theta rhythm (Fm theta), recognized as distinct theta activity on EEG in the frontal midline area, reflects mental concentration as well as meditative state or relief from anxiety. Attentional network in anterior frontal lobes including anterior cingulate cortex is suspected to be the generator of this activity, and the regulative function of the frontal neural network over autonomic nervous system (ANS) during cognitive process is suggested. However no studies have examined peripheral autonomic activities during Fm theta induction, and interaction of central and peripheral mechanism associated with Fm theta remains unclear. In the present study, a standard procedure of Zen meditation requiring sustained attention and breath control was employed as the task to provoke Fm theta, and simultaneous EEG and ECG recordings were performed. For the subjects in which Fm theta activities were provoked (six men, six women, 48% of the total subjects), peripheral autonomic activities were evaluated during the appearance of Fm theta as well as during control periods. Successive inter-beat intervals were measured from the ECG, and a recently developed method of analysis by Toichi et al. (J. Auton. Nerv. Syst. 62 (1997) 79-84) based on heart rate variability was used to assess cardiac sympathetic and parasympathetic functions separately. Both sympathetic and parasympathetic indices were increased during the appearance of Fm theta compared with control periods. Theta band activities in the frontal area were correlated negatively with sympathetic activation. The results suggest a close relationship between cardiac autonomic function and activity of medial frontal neural circuitry.


Journal of The Autonomic Nervous System | 1997

A new method of assessing cardiac autonomic function and its comparison with spectral analysis and coefficient of variation of R–R interval

Motomi Toichi; Takeshi Sugiura; Toshiya Murai; Akira Sengoku

A new non-linear method of assessing cardiac autonomic function was examined in a pharmacological experiment in ten healthy volunteers. The R-R interval data obtained under a control condition and in autonomic blockade by atropine and by propranolol were analyzed by each of the new methods employing Lorenz plot, spectral analysis and the coefficient of variation. With our method we derived two measures, the cardiac vagal index and the cardiac sympathetic index, which indicate vagal and sympathetic function separately. These two indices were found to be more reliable than those obtained by the other two methods. We anticipate that the non-invasive assessment of short-term cardiac autonomic function will come to be performed more reliably and conveniently by this method.


International Journal of Psychophysiology | 1998

The influence of psychotic states on the autonomic nervous system in schizophrenia

Motomi Toichi; Yasutaka Kubota; Toshiya Murai; Yoko Kamio; Morimitsu Sakihama; Tsutomu Toriuchi; Toshihiro Inakuma; Akira Sengoku; Koho Miyoshi

Abnormal autonomic activity in patients with schizophrenia has been reported, but how psychotic states influence the autonomic nervous system (ANS) has remained unclear due to methodological limitations. The influence of psychotic states on ANS activity in patients with schizophrenia was investigated using a recently developed method of analysis based on heart rate variability which assesses cardiac sympathetic and parasympathetic function separately. Cardiac autonomic function (CAF), together with psychotic states, was assessed at the beginning and the end of an 8-week study period in 53 patients with chronic schizophrenia. The CAF in age- and sex-matched control subjects was also examined. There were no significant differences between the patients and the control subjects in the mean R-R interval (RRI) or in the indices of the sympathetic and the parasympathetic function. In the patients who changed in psychotic states, the parasympathetic index was significantly decreased without significant changes in the sympathetic index when their psychotic states were more pronounced, suggesting psychotic states suppressed the parasympathetic function without affecting the sympathetic function. In these patients, the mean RRI was smaller when their psychotic states were more pronounced. Our results demonstrate that psychotic states affect the ANS, suggesting a relationship between cerebral cognitive and peripheral ANS activities, and that this is presumably mediated through the parasympathetic nervous system. These findings are discussed in comparison with previous reports on the CAF in schizophrenia.


Schizophrenia Research | 2005

Prefrontal activation during verbal fluency tests in schizophrenia—a near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) study

Yasutaka Kubota; Motomi Toichi; Mitsue Shimizu; Richard A. Mason; Christinel M. Coconcea; Robert L. Findling; Kokichi Yamamoto; Joseph R. Calabrese

Letter- or semantically-cued verbal fluency tests (VFT) induce different, but overlapping activities in the prefrontal cortex (PFC) in healthy subjects. Functional differences between letter and semantic VFT may be important in elucidating the nature of language-related problems in schizophrenia since more profound impairment in semantically-cued retrieval may be suggestive of semantic system dysfunction specific to this disorder. However, the functional differences between the letter vs. semantic VFT on prefrontal metabolism in the subjects with schizophrenia have not been described. In the present study, we used near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) to assess hemoglobin concentration changes in the bilateral PFCs in subjects and controls. Sixteen subjects with schizophrenia and 19 healthy controls performed letter and semantic VFTs. Prefrontal hemodynamic changes were simultaneously monitored by NIRS. While healthy subjects performed both tasks equivalently, the subjects with schizophrenia showed more compromised performance in the semantic VFTs compared to the letter VFTs. NIRS measurement revealed that the pattern of PFC activation was greater during the letter VFT when compared to the semantic VFT in the healthy subjects, suggesting more prominent PFC involvement in letter-cued retrieval. In contrast, the subjects with schizophrenia showed the opposite pattern of activation, implying that the semantic mode of lexical access might impose greater cognitive demands on the PFC. The present study is the first to detect abnormal patterns of PFC activation in adults with schizophrenia in response to the distinct cognitive demands associated with letter and semantic VFT.


Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders | 2003

Paradoxical Autonomic Response to Mental Tasks in Autism

Motomi Toichi; Yoko Kamio

Autonomic responses to mental tasks requiring sustained attention were examined in individuals with autism and age- and ability-matched controls. Cardiac autonomic function (CAF) was evaluated based on heart rate variability. While the control group showed a significant decrease in the parasympathetic function during mental tasks, the autistic group showed no significant changes in CAF. When examined individually, parasympathetic function was suppressed in all subjects in the control group. On the other hand, parasympathetic function was activated in half of the autistic subjects. The paradoxical autonomic response suggests that some autistic subjects were more stressed under ‘resting’ conditions than while performing mechanical or repetitive mental tasks. The results seem to support autonomic hyperarousal in some people with autism.


Experimental Brain Research | 2007

Attentional shift by gaze is triggered without awareness

Wataru Sato; Takashi Okada; Motomi Toichi

Reflexive attentional shift in response to another individual’s gaze direction has been reported, but it remains unknown whether this process can occur subliminally. We investigated this issue using facial stimuli consisting of drawings (Experiment 1) and photographs (Experiment 2). The gaze direction was expressed by the eye gaze direction (Experiment 1), and the eye gaze and head direction (Experiment 2). The gaze cue was presented either supraliminally or subliminally in the center of the visual field, before target presentation in the periphery. The task for participants was to localize the target as soon as possible. The reaction time needed to localize the target was consistently shorter for valid than invalid gaze cues for both types of gaze cues in both subliminal and supraliminal conditions. These findings indicate that attentional shift can be triggered even without awareness in response to another individual’s eye gaze or head direction.


Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry | 2000

Dual Access to Semantics in Autism: Is Pictorial Access Superior to Verbal Access?

Yoko Kamio; Motomi Toichi

The main aim of the present study was to compare pictures and words with respect to access to semantic systems in autism using a semantic priming paradigm. A word completion task was conducted using both within-modality (word word, WW) and cross-modality (picture word, PW) conditions on a group of high-functioning adolescents and adults with autism (N = 20) and a control group (N = 20) matched on chronological age, mental age, Verbal IQ and Performance IQ. Both groups showed semantic priming effects in both modality conditions. generating significantly more responses for related prime-target pairs than for unrelated pairs. Although the control group performed similarly on both priming tasks, the autistic group performed significantly better on a PW task than on a WW task. These findings suggest the possible advantage of pictures over words in access to semantics in autism. The theoretical implications are discussed in terms of functional asymmetry between verbal and pictorial semantic operations that may be specific to autism.


Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders | 2003

Long-Term Memory in High-Functioning Autism: Controversy on Episodic Memory in Autism Reconsidered

Motomi Toichi; Yoko Kamio

Two studies were conducted to examine the nature of verbal long-term memory (LTM) in people with autism. In Study 1, undergraduate students showed better LTM and more verbal associations for concrete than abstract nouns. Probability of recall of the nouns strongly correlated with the number of associations with those nouns. In Study 2, unlike controls, autistic subjects did not show superior recall of concrete over abstract nouns despite overall comparable performance. A highly significant correlation between probability of recall and associative value was found only in the controls. Furthermore, there was an unusual correlation between LTM performance and a nonverbal measure in the autistic group. The results were discussed in terms of the relation between episodic memory and semantic memory.


Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders | 2001

Verbal Association for Simple Common Words in High-Functioning Autism.

Motomi Toichi; Yoko Kamio

We investigated conceptual relationships in semantic memory using an indirect priming technique in high-functioning autistic adolescents and their controls who were matched for age, verbal IQ, performance IQ, and nonverbal reasoning ability. The prime was a single word and the target task was completing a word fragment that was semantically related or unrelated to the prime word. The autistic subjects and controls showed similar semantic priming effects, indicating intact conceptual relationships for simple common words in those with autism. Only in the autistic group was a significant correlation found between performance for the related items and two nonverbal cognitive measures, which suggests a possibility that semantic processing in individuals with autism might be qualitatively different from that in controls.


Neuropsychologia | 2011

Rapid amygdala gamma oscillations in response to fearful facial expressions

Wataru Sato; Takanori Kochiyama; Shota Uono; Kazumi Matsuda; Keiko Usui; Yushi Inoue; Motomi Toichi

Neuroimaging studies have reported greater activation of the human amygdala in response to emotional facial expressions, especially for fear. However, little is known about how fast this activation occurs. We investigated this issue by recording the intracranial field potentials of the amygdala in subjects undergoing pre-neurosurgical assessment (n=6). The subjects observed fearful, happy, and neutral facial expressions. Time-frequency statistical parametric mapping analyses revealed that the amygdala showed greater gamma-band activity in response to fearful compared with neutral facial expressions at 50-150 ms, with a peak at 135 ms. These results indicate that the human amygdala is able to rapidly process fearful facial expressions.

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