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Dive into the research topics where Tomiharu Hiruma is active.

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Featured researches published by Tomiharu Hiruma.


Brain Research | 2001

Organizing sound sequences in the human brain: the interplay of auditory streaming and temporal integration

Hirooki Yabe; István Winkler; István Czigler; Sachiko Koyama; Ryusuke Kakigi; Takeyuki Sutoh; Tomiharu Hiruma; Sunao Kaneko

The present study examined the relationship between two of the early brain processes of sound organization: auditory streaming and the temporal window of integration (TWI). Presented at a fast stimulus delivery rate, two tones alternating in frequency are perceived as separate streams of high and low sounds. However, when two sounds are presented within a ca. 200 ms temporal window, they are often processed as a single auditory event. Both stream segregation and temporal integration occur even in the absence of focused attention as was shown by their effect on the mismatch negativity (MMN) event-related potential. The goal of the present study was to determine the precedence between these two sound organization processes by using the stimulus-omission MMN paradigm. Infrequently omitting one stimulus from a homogeneous tone sequence only elicits an MMN when the stimulus onset asynchrony separating successive tones is shorter than 170 ms. This demonstrates the effect of the TWI. Magnetic brain responses elicited by infrequent stimulus omissions appearing in a sequence of two alternating tones were recorded. The magnetic MMN was elicited by tone omission when the alternating tones formed a single stream (with no or only small frequency separation between the two tones) but not when separate high and low streams emerged in perception (large frequency separation between the two alternating tones). This result shows that auditory streaming takes precedence over the processes of temporal integration.


Biological Psychology | 2003

Impairment in activation of a frontal attention-switch mechanism in schizophrenic patients.

Yasuharu Sato; Hirooki Yabe; Juanita Todd; Patricia T. Michie; Naoko Shinozaki; Takeyuki Sutoh; Tomiharu Hiruma; Tadayoshi Nashida; Takashi Matsuoka; Sunao Kaneko

The present study addresses the difference in activities of frontal and temporal mismatch negativity (MMN) generators between healthy controls and schizophrenic patients. Auditory MMNs were measured from 13 medicated schizophrenic patients in a post-acute phase and 12 healthy controls. The probabilities of the standard stimuli were, in different experimental blocks, 95, 90, 80 or 70%. The mean amplitude of the MMN recorded at Fz was significantly smaller in schizophrenic patients than healthy controls only in the conditions with high probability of standard stimuli, while that recorded at mastoid sites was not different in any condition. The present study suggested that schizophrenic patients might fail to cause involuntary attention switch to stimulus change reflected in the lowered MMN amplitude recorded at Fz; whereas the patients might index an adequate detection of the deviant event reflected by the similar amplitude of MMN recorded at mastoid sites.


Cognitive Brain Research | 1998

Somatosensory automatic responses to deviant stimuli

Naoko Shinozaki; Hirooki Yabe; Takeyuki Sutoh; Tomiharu Hiruma; Sunao Kaneko

We studied event-related potentials (ERPs) produced in response to deviant stimuli in a sequence of somatosensory stimuli which were measured under stimulus-ignoring conditions. A change in the repetitive somatosensory input elicited not only a frontal negativity which was similar to the somatosensory mismatch negativity very recently reported by Kekoni et al. [J. Kekoni, H. Hämäläinen, M. Saarinen, J. Gröhn, K. Reinikainen, A. Lehtokoski, R. Näätänen, Rate effect and mismatch responses in the somatosensory system: ERP-recordings in humans, Biol. Psychol. 46 (1997) 125-142] but also a positive deflection ranging in latency from 100 to 200 ms. This somatosensory change-related positivity was reduced with prolongation of the interstimulus interval (ISI) and was different from the responses to the deviant stimuli when they were presented alone. These findings suggest that the somatosensory change-related positivity is probably generated not by activation of new afferent elements but by a detection of change in a process of comparison with sensory memory.


Neuroreport | 2000

The effect of deviant stimulus probability on the human mismatch process

Yasuharu Sato; Hirooki Yabe; Tomiharu Hiruma; Takeyuki Sutoh; Naoko Shinozaki; Tadayoshi Nashida; Sunao Kaneko

The present study addresses the separate activities of frontal and temporal MMN generators which might be differentially affected by a change in the probability of standard stimuli. As the probability of standard stimuli was increased, the frontal MMN component significantly increased in amplitude, while the temporal one was not affected. Correspondingly, the scalp current density (SCD) maps showed that the temporal MMN generator was activated even at low probability of standard stimuli, suggesting that even the weak memory trace could start the automatic mismatch process, whereas the frontal MMN generator was activated only with increased probabilities of standard stimuli, suggesting that the stronger the memory trace is, the easier it might trigger the involuntary switching of attention to stimulus change.


Biological Psychology | 2002

The difference in Mismatch negativity between the acute and post-acute phase of schizophrenia

Naoko Shinozaki; Hirooki Yabe; Yasuharu Sato; Tomiharu Hiruma; Takeyuki Sutoh; Tadayoshi Nashida; Takashi Matsuoka; Sunao Kaneko

In order to investigate the trait and state aspects of Mismatch negativity (MMN) amplitude reduction in schizophrenia, auditory MMNs were measured from 13 schizophrenic patients on two occasions, initially when they showed acute exacerbation and later when their symptoms improved. Patients exhibited reduced mean amplitude of the MMN recorded at Fz. There were no significant changes in the amplitude of MMN at Fz between the acute patients and the post-acute patients, despite significant improvement in symptomatology. However, the acute patients showed a significant attenuation of MMN recorded at both mastoids as compared with the post-acute patients. Although the findings of the MMN at Fz support the overall longitudinal stability of MMN deficits in schizophrenia, the acute phase patients showed a modestly altered MMN activity compared with the post-acute phase patients, suggesting that there is some state-dependent modulation of these deficits.


Neuroreport | 2000

Mismatch negativity (mmn) reveals sound grouping in the human brain

Naoko Shinozaki; Hirooki Yabe; Yasuharu Sato; Takeyuki Sutoh; Tomiharu Hiruma; Tadayoshi Nashida; Sunao Kaneko

To investigate a part of the structure of the memory trace, auditory event-related potentials (ERPs) were recorded from reading subjects while they were presented with two different stimulus-series simultaneously. A clear mismatch negativity (MMN) was obtained from each series, when the stimulus sequence consisted of a high-frequency series and a low-frequency series. Moreover, the MMN showed independent elicitation within each series. However, if the frequency range of one series overlapped with that of the other series, the amplitude of the MMN was prominently reduced, suggesting that the two processing functions indexed by MMN coexisted simultaneously in the preattentive acoustic system and were produced by the respective grouping of high-frequency tones and low-frequency tones.


Clinical Neurophysiology | 2000

Event-related desynchronization during an auditory oddball task.

Takeyuki Sutoh; Hirooki Yabe; Yasuharu Sato; Tomiharu Hiruma; Sunao Kaneko

OBJECTIVE The present study addressed what kind of mental processes would be presented by the event-related desynchronization (ERD) relevant to the stimuli of an auditory oddball count task. METHODS Electroencephalogram (EEG) was recorded from nine healthy subjects while target tones (2000 Hz, P = 0.2) and non-target tones (1000 Hz, P = 0.8) were presented randomly with constant stimulus onset asynchrony (SOA) of 3.3 s. To improve time resolution of ERD analysis, obtained EEG epochs were digitally convoluted by Gabor wavelet and averaged respectively. RESULTS For target stimulus, prominent ERD was observed in left parieto-occipital areas (peak latency: 400-600 ms), but there were no significant ERD for non-target stimulus. CONCLUSION Our result suggests that magnitude of ERD would reflect amount of mental effort which was associated with intentional and voluntary processes rather than automatically sensory process.


Cognitive Brain Research | 2003

Spectrotemporal window of integration of auditory information in the human brain.

Naoko Shinozaki; Hirooki Yabe; Yasuharu Sato; Tomiharu Hiruma; Takeyuki Sutoh; Takashi Matsuoka; Sunao Kaneko

The human auditory system is adapted to integrate temporally successive sounds into meaningful entities, that is, acoustic information units. Hence, sound sequences falling within the temporal window of integration should be coded holistically as unitary representations in the human auditory cortex. Although it is well established that the auditory system operates in the frequency-temporal domain, many previous studies only focused on the temporal domain of the window of integration. Therefore, in the current study we investigated the relationship between the short-term temporal integration and the frequency integration. Event-related magnetic fields in response to infrequent omission of the second tone in repetitive tone pairs composed of two closely spaced tones of different frequencies were recorded. This omission elicited the magnetic counterpart (MMNm) of the electric mismatch negativity (MMN), a change-specific component mainly generated in the auditory cortex, when the interval between the two successive tones was extremely short or when the frequency difference between the two tones was small. These findings suggest that two stimuli presented in close succession might be represented in the auditory system as a unitary integrated event. In addition, as the distance between the two successive tones decreased in the spectrotemporal dimensions, the magnitude of the MMNm increased. Behavioral data also supported these neurophysiological phenomena. This work shows the first neurophysiological evidence that the two-dimensional (spectrotemporal) window of integration, which provides important constraints for the neural processing of the acoustic environment, exists in the human brain.


Biological Psychology | 2002

Differential effects of the hiba odor on CNV and MMN

Tomiharu Hiruma; Hirooki Yabe; Yasuharu Sato; Takeyuki Sutoh; Sunao Kaneko

The aim of this study was to objectively measure some psychophysiological effects of odors, particularly the effects of odors on the contingent negative variation (CNV) and the mismatch negativity (MMN). It is generally believed that CNV reflects arousal processes and MMN reflects activity in an automatic detection system. Sixteen females were exposed to the odor of Thujopsis dolabrata (hiba), a conifer. CNV was obtained with a foreperiod of 2 s in a traditional click-flash reaction-time (RT) paradigm. Auditory MMN was measured while the subject was reading a book with SOA fixed at 500 ms. The amplitude of the early and late CNV components were significantly larger and RT to the imperative stimulus (IS) was shorter in the aroma condition than in the absence-of-odor condition, but there was no significant difference in the amplitude of MMN obtained in the two conditions. Our results indicate that the odor generates a high level of arousal within the nervous system but does not have a significant effect on automatic information processing.


Psychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences | 2007

Personality types and coping style in hemodialysis patients.

Ruriko Kidachi; Atsuhiro Kikuchi; Yoshiko Nishizawa; Tomiharu Hiruma; Sunao Kaneko

Abstract  The aim of this study was to obtain information that would enable caregivers to provide the necessary psychological care for hemodialysis patients. A total of 608 hemodialysis patients completed the questionnaire of the Neuroticism, Extroversion, Openness–Five Factor Inventory and were subsequently classified by personality types using cluster analysis. In comparison to the norms for the general Japanese adult population, the four‐dimensional average of extroversion, openness, agreeableness, and conscientiousness among hemodialysis patients was significantly lower (P < 0.001), especially for openness. The openness score correlated with each of the following: age (P < 0.001), employment (P < 0.01), and diabetes (P < 0.001). Four personality types were defined based on these dimensions. High scores for agreeableness, extroversion and conscientiousness characterized the agreeable type (22.6%). The patients in this type will likely accept their own experiences in a positive manner. Submissive types (22.0%) received the lowest scores for conscientiousness, though extroversion, openness, and agreeableness were also low. It is necessary to enhance a sense of independence and responsibility in patients with submissive type personalities. Sensitive types (21.5%) were characterized by the highest neuroticism scores and low scores for the other four dimensions. The patients in this type were likely to be persistent with changes in conditions. The last type was the balanced type (33.9%), which was defined by scores within mean range. In clinical practice, it is particularly important that the submissive and sensitive types should receive appropriate mental health care.

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Hirooki Yabe

Fukushima Medical University

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Ryusuke Kakigi

Graduate University for Advanced Studies

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