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Dive into the research topics where Yasuhiro Nageishi is active.

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Featured researches published by Yasuhiro Nageishi.


Electroencephalography and Clinical Neurophysiology | 1991

The N400 component of event-related potentials in schizophrenic patients: a preliminary study.

Sachiko Koyama; Yasuhiro Nageishi; Minoru Shimokochi; Hiroto Hokama; Yoshikazu Miyazato; Makoto Miyatani; Chikara Ogura

ERPs were recorded during a word recognition task to investigate cognitive dysfunction in schizophrenia. Thirteen medicated schizophrenics and 26 normal controls were tested. In each trial a pair of stimuli, S1 (a word) and S2 (a word or a non-word), were presented. The subjects were required to discriminate between a word and a non-word for S2 (lexical decision task). In a related (R) condition, S2 was the antonym of S1 (e.g., brother-sister); in an unrelated (U) condition, S1 and S2 were semantically unrelated (e.g., brother-drive); in the non-word (N) condition, S2 was a non-word (e.g., brother-grofe). The ERPs for S2 were analyzed, and the contextual effects on the ERPs for S2 observed for both the patients and controls. For both groups, in the U and N conditions S2 elicited a large negative-trending deflection (N370). In contrast, in the R condition it elicited only a small negative-trending notch. There was no difference in the amplitude of N370 between the groups, but its latency was more prolonged or its wave shape more extended for the schizophrenics than for the controls. The N400 amplitude is concluded to remain unchanged in schizophrenics.


Psychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences | 1991

Abnormalities in Event‐Related Potentials, N100, P200, P300 and Slow Wave in Schizophrenia

Chikara Ogura; Yasuhiro Nageishi; Minora Matsubayashi; Fumiaki Omura; Akira Kishimoto; Minora Shimokochi

Abstract: Event‐related potentials were recorded in 54 schizophrenics and 88 age‐matched controls during a two‐tone discrimination (odd ball) task. All the subjects were free from medication. In the schizophrenics, the mean amplitudes of the N100, P300 and Slow Wave latency ranges were decreased, and the amplitude of the P200 latency range was greater than that for the controls. These reductions and the increase were found both for the ERPs elicited by rare target stimuli and for those elicited by frequent nontarget stimuli. The peak latency of N200 to rare stimuli was more prolonged in the schizophrenics than in the controls. This finding confirms the prolongation of N200 latency that Brecher et al. (1987) found for a different visual stimuli task. Neither the N100 nor P300 latency differed between the two groups.


Biological Psychiatry | 1993

N200 component of event-related potentials in depression

Chikara Ogura; Yasuhiro Nageishi; Fumiaki Omura; Kozo Fukao; Hirokazu Ohta; Akira Kishimoto; Minoru Matsubayashi

Event-related potentials (ERPs) recorded during a two-tone discrimination (oddball) task were examined in 36 drug-free depressed patients and 36 control subjects. At remission, the ERPs of 12 of the depressed patients were reexamined. In the depressed patients, although a group difference was not detected in the peak latency and amplitude of N200 to rare stimuli, the mean amplitude for the N200 latency range in the difference waves was smaller than in the control subjects. Mismatch negativity (N2a), which was elicited by rare stimuli, was reduced in amplitude; but N2b may have been evoked to frequent stimuli more in the patients than in the control subjects. Depressed subjects may have a deviance in the fully automatic cerebral mismatch process that is assumed to be related to mismatch negativity and provoke the controlled mismatch detection process (presumed to be associated with N2b) even to nontarget frequent stimuli. These findings were observed during remission; however, there was a tendency for the N2b amplitude to decrease and recover toward the level of the control subjects.


Electroencephalography and Clinical Neurophysiology | 1994

ERPs in schizophrenic patients during word recognition task and reaction times

Sachiko Koyama; Hiroto Hokama; Makoto Miyatani; Chikara Ogura; Yasuhiro Nageishi; Minoru Shimokochi

Event-related brain potentials (ERPs) were recorded in 28 schizophrenic patients and 26 healthy controls during a word recognition task. In each trial, stimuli consisting of S1 (word) and S2 (word or non-word) were presented. The subjects were required to indicate whether S2 was a word or a non-word by pressing buttons. For both groups, a clear N370 was elicited by S2 which were non-word or semantically unrelated to its S1. The N370 amplitude did not differ between the groups. The schizophrenics responded more slowly than the controls, and the latencies of P200 and N370 were longer for patients than for controls. However, these latencies did not differ between the groups when their reaction times were matched.


Brain and Language | 1992

Effects of semantic context and event-related potentials: N400 correlates with inhibition effect

Sachiko Koyama; Yasuhiro Nageishi; Minoru Shimokochi

Two experiments investigated the modulation of event-related brain potentials (ERPs) by semantic context. A prime-target pair was visually presented in each trial of a lexical decision task. For word targets, three types of relatedness conditions were employed: (1) Related word condition (e.g., school-teacher); (2) Neutral word condition (e.g., [symbol: see text] - number); (3) Unrelated word c((e.g., hospital-potato). In Experiment 1, the reaction time for unrelated targets was longer than that for neutral targets (inhibition effect) which was longer than that for related targets (facilitation effect). The N400 amplitude in the unrelated targets was larger compared to those in the related and neutral targets, which did not differ. In Experiment 2, where only the facilitation effect was obtained, the N400 amplitude did not differ among conditions.


Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery | 1999

Effects of discrimination difficulty on cognitive event-related brain potentials in patients with cochlear implants☆☆☆★

Masako Okusa; Takayuki Shiraishi; Takeshi Kubo; Yasuhiro Nageishi

Cognitive event-related brain potentials (ERPs) recorded during a 2-tone discrimination (oddball) task were examined in 8 patients with cochlear implants. The aim of this study is to investigate the effects of discrimination difficulty formed by 4 conditions of stimulus contrast: the target stimuli were set at 2000, 1500, 1200, or 1100 Hz, and nontarget stimuli were set at 1000 Hz throughout. The averaged ERPs recorded after the target stimuli revealed N100, P200, N200, and P300 peaks, whereas those after the nontarget stimuli showed only N100 and P200 peaks. The peak latencies of the ERP components of early information processings (N100 and P200) were not significantly increased among the 4 conditions. In contrast, the latencies of late cognitive components (N2b and P300, whose peak latencies were longer than 250 msec) and reaction times were significantly increased as target discriminability decreased. In conclusion, early information processings were not delayed by the discrimination difficulty, but cognitive processings were delayed in patients with cochlear implants. Because the N2b amplitude, which is considered to be associated with controlled processings, was much larger than that previously reported from subjects with normal hearing, it is suggested that patients with cochlear implants make a considerable effort to process their poor auditory information.


Psychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences | 1991

Deviate N200 Component of Event‐Related Potentials in Shuchaku‐Seikaku, a Premorbid Personality of Depression

Chikara Ogura; Yasuhiro Nageishi; Kozo Fukao; Yoshie Shimoji; Kiyoshi Hirano; Hiroto Hokama; Norifumi Kunimoto; Minoru Shimokochi

Abstract: Twenty‐one healthy subjects with Shuchaku‐Seikaku (SS), a premorbid personality of depression, and 44 control subjects were tested for event‐related potentials using the auditory odd ball paradigm. A higher percent of the N200 component was evoked by frequent task‐irrelevant stimuli in the Shuchaku‐Seikaku (81.0%) subjects than in the controls (45.5%). The mean amplitudes in the 50–100 ms latency range for task‐relevant rare stimuli were smaller; whereas, the amplitudes in the 100–200 ms range for task‐irrelevant frequent stimuli and the amplitudes in the 200–260 ms range for both stimuli were larger (shifted to negative direction) in the SS subjects than in the controls. The evidence suggests that the fully automatic detection process, which is assumed to be correlated with mismatch negativity, is hypoactivated and that a contrarily controlled or conscious mismatch process, which may be N2b, is hyperactivated in SS.


International Journal of Psychophysiology | 1994

Deviate P200 and P300 in non-patient college students with high scores on the schizophrenia scale of the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI)

Chikara Ogura; Kiyoshi Hirano; Yasuhiro Nageishi; Sayoko Takeshita; Kozo Fukao; Hiroto Hokama; Hirokazu Ohta; Hajime Arakaki

Event-related potentials (ERPs) were examined in 16 college students who had high scores on the Schizophrenia Scale of the MMPI (HSS) but were without a hereditary disposition for major psychiatric disorders. 32 sex- and age-matched college students were used as controls. Subjects whose T scores were higher than 70 were designated the HSS subjects. ERPs were recorded during an auditory oddball task. Although neither the P300 latencies nor the P200 latencies differed between the two subject groups, the amplitudes of P300 to rare stimuli and P200 to frequent stimuli were lower in the HSS subjects than in the controls. These results suggest that deficits, both in the P300-related cognitive function to rare relevant stimuli, as well as matching and/or the comparison process for irrelevant frequent stimuli, may be present in HSS subjects. The HSS subjects, especially those with a combination of P300 and P200 deficits, even though without a hereditary diathesis for schizophrenia, may constitute one type of high-risk group.


Psychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences | 1993

Endogenous event-related potentials in obsessive character.

Kimihike Asahi; Chikara Ogura; Kiyoshi Hirano; Yasuhiro Nageishi

Abstract: Fifteen healthy subjects with obsessive character (OC) and 15 control subjects were tested for endogenous event‐related potentials using the auditory odd ball paradigm. A difference was found in the peak amplitude of the P200 component in response to both stimuli; the subjects with OC had smaller amplitudes than the controls, and the mean amplitude for the 120 to 200 ms latency range was smaller (negative shift) for the OC subjects. In the OC subjects, NA appears to be markedly induced to both rare and frequent stimuli; moreover, the OC subjects may show excessive reactions to selective attention as well as to the process of pattern recognition.


Electroencephalography and Clinical Neurophysiology\/electromyography and Motor Control | 1995

PS-46-3 Visual mismatch negativity (MMN) in normal aging and dementing illness

Mutsumi Iijima; Mikio Osawa; Yasuhiro Nageishi; Ryosuke Ushijima; Makoto Iwata

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Chikara Ogura

University of the Ryukyus

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Hiroto Hokama

University of the Ryukyus

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Kiyoshi Hirano

University of the Ryukyus

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Koichi Ushiro

Kansai Medical University

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Kozo Fukao

University of the Ryukyus

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