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Masato Matsuura

Researcher at Tokyo Medical and Dental University

Publications -  167
Citations -  4430

Masato Matsuura is an academic researcher from Tokyo Medical and Dental University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Epilepsy & Psychosis. The author has an hindex of 35, co-authored 163 publications receiving 4112 citations. Previous affiliations of Masato Matsuura include Nihon University.

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When Your Gain Is My Pain and Your Pain Is My Gain: Neural Correlates of Envy and Schadenfreude

TL;DR: The findings document mechanisms of painful emotion, envy, and a rewarding reaction, schadenfreude, which were induced when misfortunes happened to envied persons.
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An fMRI study of differential neural response to affective pictures in schizophrenia.

TL;DR: Functional abnormalities in the neural circuit of emotional processing in schizophrenia appears to be an important finding related to dysfunctional emotional behavior in schizophrenia.
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Functional MRI mapping of brain activation during visually guided saccades and antisaccades: cortical and subcortical networks.

TL;DR: It is speculated that the abnormalities in spatial attention and eye movement control observed in schizophrenia stem from dysfunctions in the fronto-parietal and front-striato-thalamo-cortical circuits.
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A cross-national EEG study of children with emotional and behavioral problems: A WHO collaborative study in the Western Pacific region

TL;DR: The results suggest that the deviant behavior of children in the general population had no biological background, but presumably stemmed from psychosocial disadvantages, and the symptoms of hyperactive children seemed to be related to a biological dysfunction such as brain immaturity.
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Epileptic Seizure Prediction Based on Multivariate Statistical Process Control of Heart Rate Variability Features

TL;DR: The application results of the proposed method demonstrated that seizures in ten out of eleven awakening preictal episodes could be predicted prior to the seizure onset, that is, its sensitivity was 91%, and its false positive rate was about 0.7 times per hour.