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Hiroki C. Tanabe

Researcher at Nagoya University

Publications -  113
Citations -  4065

Hiroki C. Tanabe is an academic researcher from Nagoya University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Functional magnetic resonance imaging & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 27, co-authored 96 publications receiving 3504 citations. Previous affiliations of Hiroki C. Tanabe include Graduate University for Advanced Studies & National Institutes of Natural Sciences, Japan.

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Cortical Mapping of Gait in Humans: A Near-Infrared Spectroscopic Topography Study

TL;DR: Cortical activation patterns of human gait were visualized by measuring relative changes in local hemoglobin oxygenation using a recently developed near-infrared spectroscopic (NIRS) topography technique to provide new insight into cortical control of human locomotion.
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Visual Image Reconstruction from Human Brain Activity using a Combination of Multiscale Local Image Decoders

TL;DR: This study reconstructed visual images by combining local image bases of multiple scales, whose contrasts were independently decoded from fMRI activity by automatically selecting relevant voxels and exploiting their correlated patterns.
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“Stay Tuned”: Inter-Individual Neural Synchronization During Mutual Gaze and Joint Attention

TL;DR: Paired subjects showed more prominent correlations than non-paired subjects in the right inferior frontal gyrus, suggesting that this region is involved in sharing intention during eye contact that provides the context for joint attention.
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Amelioration of Hippocampal Neuronal Damage After Global Ischemia by Neuronal Overexpression of BCL-2 in Transgenic Mice

TL;DR: Overexpression of BCL-2 in neurons mitigates selective neuronal vulnerability in the hippocampus of transgenic mice after transient global ischemia, and shows a lesser degree of neuronal death together with DNA fragmentation inThe hippocampus than their littermates.
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Neural substrates of intermanual transfer of a newly acquired motor skill.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to study brain regions activated during intermanual transfer of a learned sequence of finger movements, and they found that the supplementary motor area (SMA) has more activity when a skill has transferred well than when it has transferred poorly.