Yuko Tamaki
Niigata University of Health and Welfare
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Featured researches published by Yuko Tamaki.
Journal of Oral Rehabilitation | 2010
Yozo Miyaoka; Ichiro Ashida; Shin-ya Kawakami; Yuko Tamaki; Satomi Miyaoka
Influences of bolus volumes on activity patterns of the suprahyoid muscles during swallowing were examined using the T(P) technique (which quantitatively evaluates muscle activity patterns and indicates a negatively skewed pattern at lower T(P) values) in healthy young adults (eight men and four women). One of six volumes of tea ranging from 10 to 32 mL was delivered randomly to each subject while recording an electromyogram of the suprahyoid muscles and a laryngeal mechanogram with a piezoelectric sensor. Each subject was asked to swallow the full volume of liquid in a gulp if possible. T(P) values were calculated as deciles from T(0) to T(100) during intervals that were defined by the trajectory of the laryngeal mechanogram recorded during swallowing. Seven significant differences were detected in the average T(P) values from T(30) to T(60): between 16 mL (e.g., 0.448 in T(30)) and 25 mL (0.408 in T(30)) and between 20 mL (0.453 in T(30)) and 25 mL. There were significant differences among the 12 subjects for all of the nine average T(P) values (Ps < 0.001), suggesting a notable intersubject variation in the suprahyoid (SH) activity patterns. The average peak amplitudes of the integrated suprahyoid activity differed significantly among the six volumes (P < 0.001), while the average durations measured by the laryngeal mechanogram did not. The present results suggest that the swallowing volume mainly affects SH activity patterns, which were evaluated by the T(P) technique, during the early period of each swallow.
Journal of Oral Biosciences | 2011
Yozo Miyaoka; Ichiro Ashida; Shin-ya Kawakami; Yuko Tamaki; Satomi Miyaoka
To generalise the effect of bolus (tea) volume on the piezoelectric sensor (PES) signals during pharyngeal swallowing by general linear models (GLMs), laryngeal movement PES data were recorded from eleven healthy adults while they swallowed one of a wide range of volumes. A PES was attached to the front of the neck to record a laryngeal mechanogram, and then each subject was asked to swallow one of six volumes (10 to 32 mL) of tea after a command. For each swallow, four characteristic points on each PES record were defined and four intervals that spanned these points were measured. GLM-ANOVA analysis revealed statistically significant linear regression coefficients for two ‘volume’ effects and four main ‘subject’ effects. The two linear coefficients of the ‘volume’ effect were 2.5 and 2.7, which suggests that a 10-mL increase in tea volume lengthens these intervals by 25 and 27 ms, respectively.
Journal of Medical Engineering & Technology | 2013
Yozo Miyaoka; Ichiro Ashida; Yuko Tamaki; Shin-ya Kawakami; Hajime Iwamori; Takako Yamazaki; Naoko Ito
Abstract The present study examined sequential changes in masseter activity patterns observed during chewing of four different agar samples in eight healthy young males. Two parameters, T50 and D50, were specifically used for evaluation of the activity patterns of individual bursts. Statistical significances were detected in regression coefficients (21.9% of 32 trials) and Spearman’s rank correlation coefficients (28.1%) between the calculated T50 values and chewing cycles, whereas no significant differences among the four agar samples were found. Three (I–III) types of activity patterns of masseter bursts during chewing sequences were classified by the D50 values, which were derived from the T50 values. The three types physiologically corresponded to incrementing (Type I), decrementing (Type III) and mixed discharge patterns (Type II). The classification of activity patterns suggested the usefulness of D50 values in the sequential analysis of masseter activity patterns.
Postharvest Biology and Technology | 2009
Kaoru Kohyama; Ai Nagata; Yuko Tamaki; Naoki Sakurai
Journal of Texture Studies | 2013
Yozo Miyaoka; Ichiro Ashida; Yuko Tamaki; Shin-ya Kawakami; Hajime Iwamori; Takako Yamazaki; Naoko Ito
Journal of Behavioral and Brain Science | 2013
Ichiro Ashida; Yuko Tamaki; Yozo Miyaoka
Journal of Behavioral and Brain Science | 2013
Yozo Miyaoka; Ichiro Ashida; Takako Yamazaki; Naoko Ito; Yuko Tamaki; Shin-ya Kawakami; Hajime Iwamori
Food and Nutrition Sciences | 2013
Yozo Miyaoka; Ichiro Ashida; Yuko Tamaki; Shin-ya Kawakami; Hajime Iwamori; Takako Yamazaki; Naoko Ito
Journal of applied glycoscience | 2012
Sayuri Akuzawa; Naomi Okada; Yuko Tamaki; Akira Ikegami; Naoko Fujita; Olivier François Vilpoux; Marney Pascoli Cereda; Jay-line Jane
The Japanese journal of taste and smell research | 2004
Shizuko Yamaguchi; Yuko Tamaki