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Dive into the research topics where Takuya Yoshiike is active.

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Featured researches published by Takuya Yoshiike.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Sleep dissolves illusion: sleep withstands learning of visuo-tactile-proprioceptive integration induced by repeated days of rubber hand illusion training.

Motoyasu Honma; Takuya Yoshiike; Hiroki Ikeda; Yoshiharu Kim; Kenichi Kuriyama

Multisensory integration is a key factor in establishing bodily self-consciousness and in adapting humans to novel environments. The rubber hand illusion paradigm, in which humans can immediately perceive illusory ownership to an artificial hand, is a traditional technique for investigating multisensory integration and the feeling of illusory ownership. However, the long-term learning properties of the rubber hand illusion have not been previously investigated. Moreover, although sleep contributes to various aspects of cognition, including learning and memory, its influence on illusory learning of the artificial hand has not yet been assessed. We determined the effects of daily repetitive training and sleep on learning visuo-tactile-proprioceptive sensory integration and illusory ownership in healthy adult participants by using the traditional rubber hand illusion paradigm. Subjective ownership of the rubber hand, proprioceptive drift, and galvanic skin response were measured to assess learning indexes. Subjective ownership was maintained and proprioceptive drift increased with daily training. Proprioceptive drift, but not subjective ownership, was significantly attenuated after sleep. A significantly greater reduction in galvanic skin response was observed after wakefulness compared to after sleep. Our results suggest that although repetitive rubber hand illusion training facilitates multisensory integration and physiological habituation of a multisensory incongruent environment, sleep corrects illusional integration and habituation based on experiences in a multisensory incongruent environment. These findings may increase our understanding of adaptive neural processes to novel environments, specifically, bodily self-consciousness and sleep-dependent neuroplasticity.


Scientific Reports | 2011

An N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor agonist facilitates sleep-independent synaptic plasticity associated with working memory capacity enhancement.

Kenichi Kuriyama; Motoyasu Honma; Miyuki Shimazaki; Michiko Horie; Takuya Yoshiike; Sayori Koyama; Yoshiharu Kim

Working memory (WM) capacity improvement is impacted by sleep, and possibly by N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) agonists such as D-cycloserine (DCS), which also affects procedural skill performance. However, the mechanisms behind these relationships are not well understood. In order to investigate the neural basis underlying relationships between WM skill learning and sleep, DCS, and both sleep and DCS together, we evaluated training-retest performances in the n-back task among healthy subjects who were given either a placebo or DCS before the task training, and then followed task training sessions either with wakefulness or sleep. DCS facilitated WM capacity enhancement only occurring after a period of wakefulness, rather than sleep, indicating that WM capacity enhancement is affected by a cellular heterogeneity in synaptic plasticity between time spent awake and time spent asleep. These findings may contribute to development, anti-aging processes, and rehabilitation of higher cognition.


Psychophysiology | 2014

Neuroticism relates to daytime wakefulness and sleep devaluation via high neurophysiological efficiency in the bilateral prefrontal cortex: a preliminary study.

Takuya Yoshiike; Kenichi Kuriyama; Motoyasu Honma; Hiroki Ikeda; Yoshiharu Kim

Higher wake promotion against sleep drive boosts cognitive processing, but it also seems to increase the risk of insomnia by reinforcing an obsession with sleep in neurotic patients. To explore whether a personality trait of neuroticism simultaneously facilitates wake-promoting ability and sleep devaluation via a common regional prefrontal function under a sleep-restricted condition, working memory tasks were administered to 49 healthy humans after a 2-h sleep restriction. Higher wake-promoting ability demonstrated in a high-load task was correlated with lower bilateral prefrontal activation, as measured by near-infrared spectroscopy. Structural equation modeling revealed that neuroticism predicts sleep devaluation and wake-promoting ability via left and right regional prefrontal efficiency, respectively. Our results indicate that neuroticism-related neural efficiency increases resilience to sleepiness, but decreases sleep satisfaction.


Scientific Reports | 2013

Memory suppression trades prolonged fear and sleep-dependent fear plasticity for the avoidance of current fear

Kenichi Kuriyama; Motoyasu Honma; Takuya Yoshiike; Yoshiharu Kim

Sleep deprivation immediately following an aversive event reduces fear by preventing memory consolidation during homeostatic sleep. This suggests that acute insomnia might act prophylactically against the development of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) even though it is also a possible risk factor for PTSD. We examined total sleep deprivation and memory suppression to evaluate the effects of these interventions on subsequent aversive memory formation and fear conditioning. Active suppression of aversive memory impaired retention of event memory. However, although the remembered fear was more reduced in sleep-deprived than sleep-control subjects, suppressed fear increased, and seemed to abandon the sleep-dependent plasticity of fear. Active memory suppression, which provides a psychological model for Freuds ego defense mechanism, enhances fear and casts doubt on the potential of acute insomnia as a prophylactic measure against PTSD. Our findings bring into question the role of sleep in aversive-memory consolidation in clinical PTSD pathophysiology.


Journal of Clinical Sleep Medicine | 2016

Altered Sleep Spindles in Delayed Encephalopathy after Acute Carbon Monoxide Poisoning.

Takuya Yoshiike; Masaki Nishida; Kazuyoshi Yagishita; Tadashi Nariai; Kenji Ishii; Toru Nishikawa

ABSTRACT Delayed encephalopathy (DE) affects not only the cerebral white matter and globus pallidus but also the cortex and thalamus. However, it remains unknown whether these brain lesions alter sleep along with clinical manifestations of DE. A 46-year-old man with DE underwent repetitive hyperbaric oxygen therapy. The patient was evaluated by not only neuropsychological and neuroimaging testing but polysomnography over the clinical course. Neurological symptoms improved markedly; however, profound frontal cognitive deficits continued. The polysomnography revealed prolonged absence and delayed recovery of sleep spindles across recordings. Alterations in spindle oscillations in DE could provide further insight into sleep regulatory networks.


Journal of sleep disorders and therapy | 2013

Multiple Causality in the Impairment of Daytime Functioning Associated with Insomnia: Is it Time to Reconsider Insomnia Subtypes?

Kenichi Kuriyama; Takuya Yoshiike

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Psychological Research-psychologische Forschung | 2018

COMT genotype is associated with plasticity in sense of body ownership: a pilot study

Motoyasu Honma; Takuya Yoshiike; Hiroki Ikeda; Kenichi Kuriyama

The sense of body ownership constantly adapts to new environments, and awareness of a distinction between oneself and others is a fundamental ability. However, it remains unclear whether plasticity in the sense of body ownership is dependent on genetic factors. The present study investigated the influence of the catechol-O-methyltransferase (COMT) Val158Met genotype on illusory learning of a sense of body ownership and dissociation. 76 healthy Japanese participants experienced the rubber hand illusion (RHI), which is produced by sensory integration of conflicting modalities, with the intent to experimentally alter objective perceived locations and subjective ownership ratings. We found that Val/Val homozygous participants had more intense RHI experiences than Val/Met heterozygous and Met homozygous participants. Furthermore, RHI sensation was correlated with a dissociative personality trait in Val/Val homozygous participants. Our findings indicate an interaction between COMT genotype, RHI sensation, and dissociative personality traits: Val/Val genotypes were associated with RHI induction and greater vulnerability to dissociation. The findings suggest that Val/Val homozygous individuals may be more flexible regarding self-attribution/body ownership and that biological factors may contribute to reduced awareness regarding the distinction between self and others.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Sleep-independent offline consolidation of response inhibition during the daytime post-training period

Motoyasu Honma; Takuya Yoshiike; Hiroki Ikeda; Kenichi Kuriyama

Appropriate inhibitory response control is associated with goal-directed behavior. Sleep accelerates the offline consolidation of acquired motor skills that are explicitly predictable; however, the effect of sleep on implicit (unpredictable) motor skills remains controversial. We speculated that a key component of response inhibition skill differentiates between these skill consolidation properties because explicit prediction can minimize the inhibitory efforts in a motor skill. We explored the offline skill learning properties of response inhibition during sleep and wakefulness using auditory Go and Go/Nogo tasks. We attempted to discriminate the possible effects of time elapsed after training (12 or 24 h), post-training sleep/wake state (sleep or wakefulness), and time of day (nighttime or daytime) in 79 healthy human subjects divided into 6 groups that underwent various sleep regimens prior to training and retesting. We found that delayed response inhibition skill improvement was achieved via a simple passage of daytime, regardless of the participants’ alertness level. Our results suggest that sleep-independent neuroplasticity occurs during the daytime and facilitates a delayed learning of response inhibition skill.


Neuropharmacology | 2013

Valproic acid but not d-cycloserine facilitates sleep-dependent offline learning of extinction and habituation of conditioned fear in humans

Kenichi Kuriyama; Motoyasu Honma; Takuya Yoshiike; Yoshiharu Kim


American Journal of Psychiatry | 2018

Evidence for the Efficacy of Bright Light Therapy for Bipolar Depression

Francesco Benedetti; David H. Avery; Michael Bauer; William E. Bunney; Okan Çaliyurt; Giovanni Camardese; Cristina Colombo; Sara Dallaspezia; Tone Elise Henriksen; Siegfried Kasper; Kenichi Kuriyama; Raymond W. Lam; Klaus Martiny; Ybe Meesters; Kazuo Mishima; Raphael Schulte; Masahiro Suzuki; Łukasz Święcicki; Makoto Uchiyama; David Veale; Dietmar Winkler; Joseph C. Wu; Nese Yorguner Kupeli; Takuya Yoshiike; Xin Yu

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Kenichi Kuriyama

Shiga University of Medical Science

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Hiroki Ikeda

St. Marianna University School of Medicine

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Kazuyoshi Yagishita

Tokyo Medical and Dental University

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Kenji Ishii

Japan Atomic Energy Agency

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Masaki Nishida

Tokyo Medical and Dental University

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