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Dive into the research topics where Toshihiro Wakebe is active.

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Featured researches published by Toshihiro Wakebe.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Dissociated Roles of the Inferior Frontal Gyrus and Superior Temporal Sulcus in Audiovisual Processing: Top-Down and Bottom-Up Mismatch Detection

Takeshi Uno; Kensuke Kawai; Katsuyuki Sakai; Toshihiro Wakebe; Takuya Ibaraki; Naoto Kunii; Takeshi Matsuo; Nobuhito Saito

Visual inputs can distort auditory perception, and accurate auditory processing requires the ability to detect and ignore visual input that is simultaneous and incongruent with auditory information. However, the neural basis of this auditory selection from audiovisual information is unknown, whereas integration process of audiovisual inputs is intensively researched. Here, we tested the hypothesis that the inferior frontal gyrus (IFG) and superior temporal sulcus (STS) are involved in top-down and bottom-up processing, respectively, of target auditory information from audiovisual inputs. We recorded high gamma activity (HGA), which is associated with neuronal firing in local brain regions, using electrocorticography while patients with epilepsy judged the syllable spoken by a voice while looking at a voice-congruent or -incongruent lip movement from the speaker. The STS exhibited stronger HGA if the patient was presented with information of large audiovisual incongruence than of small incongruence, especially if the auditory information was correctly identified. On the other hand, the IFG exhibited stronger HGA in trials with small audiovisual incongruence when patients correctly perceived the auditory information than when patients incorrectly perceived the auditory information due to the mismatched visual information. These results indicate that the IFG and STS have dissociated roles in selective auditory processing, and suggest that the neural basis of selective auditory processing changes dynamically in accordance with the degree of incongruity between auditory and visual information.


Journal of cognitive psychology | 2012

Risk aversion in information seeking

Toshihiro Wakebe; Tomomi Sato; Eiichiro Watamura; Yohtaro Takano

The information gain model argues that participants select alternatives with a larger expected value of information gain. The present study investigated risk aversion in information seeking to examine whether the expected value always determines information-seeking behaviour. For this investigation, we used a scale method selection task in which participants were required to select one of two scales for weighing coins in order to find an underweight coin. Two experiments showed that participants more frequently selected the alternative that provided information gain without risk, although its expected information gain was smaller. This finding indicates the presence of risk aversion in information seeking, suggesting that information-seeking behaviour is affected by risk associated with obtaining information gain.


Psychological Reports | 2015

Resource-independent negative effects of foreign language on analogical problem solving.

Toshihiro Wakebe; Sho Hidaka; Eiichiro Watamura

It has been shown that analogical problem solving is more difficult when a target problem is written in a foreign language than in ones native language. Possible resource-independence of this negative effect of a foreign language was investigated. After reading an analog or a filler story, participants solved a target problem written in their native or a foreign language. Those who read the problem in their native language performed a concurrent task to reduce their available processing resources. Nevertheless, they were better able to solve it than those who read the problem in a foreign language after reading the analog. This indicates that reading the problem in a foreign language decreases analogical problem-solving ability in a resource-independent manner.


Journal of Experimental Child Psychology | 2014

How do young children judge intentions of an agent affecting a patient? Outcome-based judgment and positivity bias

Tomomi Sato; Toshihiro Wakebe


Psychological Studies | 2014

The Automatic Activation of Retributive Motive When Determining Punishment

Eiichiro Watamura; Toshihiro Wakebe; Miyuki Fujio; Yuji Itoh; Kaori Karasawa


Psychological Studies | 2012

Selecting a Relevant Mental State in Young Children’s Persuasion

Tomomi Sato; Toshihiro Wakebe


Psychological Studies | 2011

Can Jurors Free Themselves from Retributive Objectives

Eiichiro Watamura; Toshihiro Wakebe; Takahisa Maeda


Japanse journal of law and psychology | 2010

Lay judges' strategy for determining appropriate sentence : Is it retribution, prevention against a subsequent crime by the offender, or warning for future crimes?

Eiichiro Watamura; Toshihiro Wakebe; Yohtaro Takano


Advances in Applied Sociology | 2016

How Is the Death Penalty System Seen by Young People in Japan? —An Analysis of a Survey of University Students

Eiichiro Watamura; Masahiko Saeki; Niioka Kiyomitsu; Toshihiro Wakebe


The Japanese journal of cognitive psychology | 2015

Changes induced in the representation of learned sequences due to memory consolidation

Akira Watanabe; Toshihiro Wakebe; Eiichiro Watamura; Yohtaro Takano

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Kensuke Kawai

Jichi Medical University

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