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Satoru Saito

Researcher at Kyoto University

Publications -  90
Citations -  1641

Satoru Saito is an academic researcher from Kyoto University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Working memory & Recall. The author has an hindex of 20, co-authored 83 publications receiving 1449 citations. Previous affiliations of Satoru Saito include University of Education, Winneba & Osaka Kyoiku University.

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Lichtheim 2: Synthesizing Aphasia and the Neural Basis of Language in a Neurocomputational Model of the Dual Dorsal-Ventral Language Pathways

TL;DR: The "Lichtheim 2" model was implemented by developing a new variety of computational model which reproduces and explains normal and patient data but also incorporates neuroanatomical information into its architecture, and provides a platform for simulating functional neuroimaging data.
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On the nature of forgetting and the processing–storage relationship in reading span performance ☆

TL;DR: The authors found that the amount of processing activities, not the sheer passage of time, may be the critical factor underlying the sentence order effect, thereby challenging purely time-based explanations of forgetting during reading span performance.
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Visual and phonological similarity effects in verbal immediate serial recall: A test with kanji materials

TL;DR: In a series of three experiments, native speakers of Japanese performed serial ordered written recall of visually presented Japanese kanji characters that varied systematically in visual and phonological similarity as discussed by the authors, which indicated spontaneous use of visual codes in immediate serial recall.
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Different roles of lateral anterior temporal lobe and inferior parietal lobule in coding function and manipulation tool knowledge: evidence from an rTMS study.

TL;DR: Two cortical regions, the anterior temporal lobes and left inferior parietal lobule, have been proposed to make differential contributions to two kinds of knowledge about tools - function vs. manipulation - within hub-and-spoke framework of semantic memory.