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Dive into the research topics where Motonobu Itoh is active.

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Featured researches published by Motonobu Itoh.


Brain and Language | 1979

Velar movements during speech in a patient with apraxia of speech.

Motonobu Itoh; Sumiko Sasanuma; Tatsujiro Ushijima

Abstract A fiberscopic observation of velar movements during speech was made of a patient diagnosed as having apraxia of speech. Repeated utterances of the same word showed a marked variability in terms of the pattern of velar movements accompanied at times by a phonetic change. In spite of such a variability, the general successional pattern of velar gestures for a given phonetic context approximated the normal pattern. During the production of nasal and nonnasal consonants the velum tended to take “neutral” positions. Anticipatory coarticulation was present, but some deviation from normal patterns was occasionally observed. Based on these observations, possible mechanisms responsible for the syndrome called apraxia of speech were discussed.


Brain and Language | 1982

Voice onset time characteristics in apraxia of speech

Motonobu Itoh; Sumiko Sasanuma; Itaru F. Tatsumi; Shuko Murakami; Yoko Fukusako; Tsutomu Suzuki

Abstract In order to examine the timing control of laryngeal and supralaryngeal articulatory adjustments in apraxia of speech, voice onset time (VOT) data for stop consonants in monosyllables /de/, /te/, /ge/ and /ke/ were obtained from four apraxic subjects and compared with those of fluent aphasic and normal (both young and aged) speakers (Experiment 1). The results indicated that the VOT distribution patterns of the apraxic patients differed markedly from those of the other speakers. A second experiment was conducted to determine whether the VOT distribution patterns of these four apraxic patients and of two normal controls would change with a lapse of time (Experiment 2). The results of the second experiment demonstrated marked changes in the VOT distribution patterns over time in half of the apraxic patients examined, but essentially no change in the normal controls.


Brain and Language | 1980

Abnormal articulatory dynamics in a patient with apraxia of speech: X-ray microbeam observation☆

Motonobu Itoh; Sumiko Sasanuma; Hajime Hirose; Hirohide Yoshioka; Tatsujiro Ushijima

Abstract The temporal organization of articulatory movements in a patient diagnosed as having apraxia of speech was explored by means of pellet tracking techniques using an X-ray microbeam system. The results indicated that the temporal organization among different articulators of the patient was sometimes disturbed in his production of a meaningful Japanese word /deenee/. It was also observed that the pattern and velocity of the articulatory movements of the patient in repetitions of monosyllables were different from those of typical dysarthric patients.


Brain and Language | 1980

The nature of the task-stimulus interaction in the tachistoscopic recognition of kana and kanji words

Sumiko Sasanuma; Motonobu Itoh; Yo Kobayashi; Kazuko Mori

Abstract To investigate the nature of the task-stimulus interaction in tachistoscopic recognition of kana and kanji, right-handed normal subjects performed two phonological tasks and two visual tasks. In the phonological tasks, the subjects compared the members of a pair of kana or kanji appearing in the right or left visual field on the basis of phonological identity; while in the visual tasks, they compared the members of a pair of kana or kanji on the basis of visual identity. The results showed a significant Visual Field × Task interaction as well as a significant Task × Stimulus interaction, indicating that both the type of stimuli and the nature of task demands contribute importantly to the determination of visual field asymmetry and hence the relative participation of each hemisphere.


Brain and Language | 1983

Speech sound errors in patients with conduction and Broca's aphasia ☆

Hisako Monoi; Yoko Fukusako; Motonobu Itoh; Sumiko Sasanuma

Speech sound errors exhibited by three conduction and three Brocas aphasic patients on naming and word-repetition tasks were subjected to phonemic and subphonemic analyses. In the conduction aphasic patients, errors occurred equally often on consonants and vowels in both the naming and word-repetition tasks, while in the Brocas aphasic patients errors occurred selectively on consonants. Transposition errors occurred almost as often as substitution errors in the conduction aphasic patients, while substitution errors constituted the majority of errors in the Brocas aphasic patients. The Brocas aphasic patients, as compared to the conduction aphasic patients, exhibited a markedly higher number of substitution errors occurring between phonemes separated by a single subphonemic feature on the naming task. On the basis of these findings, it was hypothesized that the differences in the error patterns of the two types of aphasia reflected differences in the underlying mechanisms of the impairment in each type.


Brain and Language | 1986

Voice onset time perception in Japanese aphasic patients.

Motonobu Itoh; Itaru F. Tatsumi; Sumiko Sasanuma; Yoko Fukusako

This study examines identification of the synthetic speech stimuli [ga] and [ka] of varying voice onset times (VOTs) in 17 Japanese aphasic subjects. Approximately two-thirds of the aphasic subjects showed deterioration in performance of VOT identification of the stimuli. A quantitative analysis of the results indicates that the problems of the majority of these subjects may be attributable not only to difficulty in labeling the stimuli but also to difficulty in processing the acoustic and/or phonetic information of the stimuli.


Brain and Language | 1983

Velar movements during speech in two Wernicke aphasic patients

Motonobu Itoh; Sumiko Sasanuma; Hajime Hirose; Hirohide Yoshioka; Masayuki Sawashima

The articulatory gestures of the velum in two Wernicke aphasic patients were examined to compare their performances with those of an apraxic patient by means of the fiberoptic technique. In contrast to the marked variability in the apraxic performance in terms of velum height and segmental duration, the two fluent aphasic subjects showed a relatively high degree of consistency in velar movements throughout several repetitions of nonsense syllables and meaningful words. In addition, both patients exhibited a normal pattern of anticipatory coarticulation. Analyses of the velar movement patterns during the speech-sound error processes of both patients suggested that these errors were not due to an impairment at the level of articulatory programming but to an error in the selection of a target phoneme.


The Japanese Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine | 1987

DEVELOPMENT AND STANDARDIZATION OF COMMUNICATION ADL (CADL) TEST FOR JAPANESE APHASIC PATIENTS

Toshiko S. Watamori; Aiko Takeuchi; Yohko Fukusako; Motonobu Itoh; Tsutomu Suzuki; Kyoko Endo; Machiko Takahashi; Sumiko Sasanuma


The Japan Journal of Logopedics and Phoniatrics | 1993

The Sensitivity of Single-Word Intelligibility Test

Motonobu Itoh


The Japanese Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine | 1989

FUNCTIONAL COMMUNICATION IN DEMENTIA PATIENTS

Toshiko S. Watamori; Aiko Takeuchi; Yoko Fukusako; Takashi Miyamori; Tsutomu Suzuki; Kyoko Endo; Motonobu Itoh; Sumiko Sasanuma

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Naomi Iizuka

International University of Health and Welfare

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