124 research outputs found

    PDDNOSでは見られない、アスペルガー障害における自意識の欠如: 自閉症スペクトラム障害下位分類の臨床的重要性に関する示唆

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    京都大学0048新制・課程博士博士(医学)甲第18642号医博第3941号新制||医||1006(附属図書館)31556京都大学大学院医学研究科医学専攻(主査)教授 古川 壽亮, 教授 髙橋 良輔, 教授 福山 秀直学位規則第4条第1項該当Doctor of Medical ScienceKyoto UniversityDFA

    Japanisch als Fremdsprache?

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    In dieser Arbeit wurde die Geschichte der japanischen Standardsprache in Okinawa behandelt, genauer gesagt ihr Werdegang von einer Fremdsprache zur Landessprache und wie es möglich war, einer fremden Sprache durch Schulerziehung den Status einer Alltagssprache zu verleihen. Hierbei erscheint die Tatsache bedeutsam, dass dabei die lokale Muttersprache der Bevölkerung unterdrückt und nach und nach im Zuge einer Politik der Durchsetzung der Landes- bzw. Staatssprache (kokugo) verdrängt wurde. Wie das Fragezeichen im Titel der Arbeit anzeigen soll, war es trotz der Tatsache, dass die japanische Standardsprache von Ryūkyūanern bzw. Okinawanern bis in die 1930er Jahre hinein wie eine Fremdsprache erlernt wurde, nicht einfach, die Standardsprache in diesem Kontext als „Fremdsprache“ im Sinne des japanischen Begriffs gaikokugo („die Sprache des Auslandes“) zu bezeichnen, zumal Okinawa bereits 1872 eine Präfektur Japans war. Hier erkennt man, dass die komplexen sprachgeschichtlichen Vorgänge in Okinawa, unter der japanischen Herrschaft verzerrt wurden. In dieser Arbeit wurde die Erziehungsgeschichte vom 15. bis zum 20. Jahrhundert behandelt, wobei der Schwerpunkt auf die Zeitspanne zwischen 1880 und 1905 gelegt wurde. Ins Zentrum gestellt wurden die Grundschulen in Okinawa.This dissertation deals with the history of the standard variety of Japanese in Okinawa and seeks to retrace how standard Japanese, first introduced as a foreign language, became Okinawa’s national language. It seeks to shed light on how specific practices of elementary school teaching enabled standard Japanese to acquire its status as the language of everyday life. This work focuses on school textbooks and didactic methods and the numerous changes they underwent during the Meiji era. Based on extensive research in scholarly works and documentary sources, the following key observations could be made: The introduction of standard Japanese to Okinawan schools took place prior to the „invention“ and definition of kokugo (the state language) in metropolitan Japan. The language was initially taught in Okinawa by means of a bilingual textbook and the method of translation. Primary sources often note linguistic barriers and problems arising in the communication between teachers and students, making effective teaching virtually impossible without recurring on the use of the local Shuri language. Thus during the initial phase following the annexation of Okinawa in 1879, the Shuri language played a significant auxiliary role in Okinawans’ acquisition of the Japanese standard language. The element of written translation disappeared from textbooks after 1888 as these textbooks were replaced by new monolingual Japanese ones. As a result, teachers were obliged to translate the contents orally into Shuri. Around the turn of the century, in the light of the Japanese war victories over China and Russia, teachers began to turn away from the Shuri language as a language of teaching, and the importance of applying the direct or monolingual teaching method was emphasized with increasing vehemence. Thus a ban on using the mother tongue was implemented in Japanese language classes. This ban was subsequently extended to the classroom as a whole as well as to conversations taking place in the school courtyard outside class hours. Finally, in the 1930s, Japan’s language education in Okinawa began to permeate elementary students’ lives outside school as they began to use Japanese as their everyday language in their homes

    Schizotypy is associated with difficulties detecting emotional facial expressions

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    People with schizophrenia or subclinical schizotypal traits exhibit impaired recognition of facial expressions. However, it remains unclear whether the detection of emotional facial expressions is impaired in people with schizophrenia or high levels of schizotypy. The present study examined whether the detection of emotional facial expressions would be associated with schizotypy in a non-clinical population after controlling for the effects of IQ, age, and sex. Participants were asked to respond to whether all faces were the same as quickly and as accurately as possible following the presentation of angry or happy faces or their anti-expressions among crowds of neutral faces. Anti-expressions contain a degree of visual change that is equivalent to that of normal emotional facial expressions relative to neutral facial expressions and are recognized as neutral expressions. Normal expressions of anger and happiness were detected more rapidly and accurately than their anti-expressions. Additionally, the degree of overall schizotypy was negatively correlated with the effectiveness of detecting normal expressions versus anti-expressions. An emotion–recognition task revealed that the degree of positive schizotypy was negatively correlated with the accuracy of facial expression recognition. These results suggest that people with high levels of schizotypy experienced difficulties detecting and recognizing emotional facial expressions

    Widespread and lateralized social brain activity for processing dynamic facial expressions

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    Dynamic facial expressions of emotions constitute natural and powerful means of social communication in daily life. A number of previous neuroimaging studies have explored the neural mechanisms underlying the processing of dynamic facial expressions, and indicated the activation of certain social brain regions (e.g., the amygdala) during such tasks. However, the activated brain regions were inconsistent across studies, and their laterality was rarely evaluated. To investigate these issues, we measured brain activity using functional magnetic resonance imaging in a relatively large sample (n = 51) during the observation of dynamic facial expressions of anger and happiness and their corresponding dynamic mosaic images. The observation of dynamic facial expressions, compared with dynamic mosaics, elicited stronger activity in the bilateral posterior cortices, including the inferior occipital gyri, fusiform gyri, and superior temporal sulci. The dynamic facial expressions also activated bilateral limbic regions, including the amygdalae and ventromedial prefrontal cortices, more strongly versus mosaics. In the same manner, activation was found in the right inferior frontal gyrus (IFG) and left cerebellum. Laterality analyses comparing original and flipped images revealed right hemispheric dominance in the superior temporal sulcus and IFG and left hemispheric dominance in the cerebellum. These results indicated that the neural mechanisms underlying processing of dynamic facial expressions include widespread social brain regions associated with perceptual, emotional, and motor functions, and include a clearly lateralized (right cortical and left cerebellar) network like that involved in language processing

    The Japanese version of the Generalized Problematic Internet Use Scale 2 (GPIUS2): Psychometric evaluation and analysis of the theoretical model

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    BACKGROUND: The Generalized Problematic Internet Use Scale 2 (GPIUS2) is a self-administered questionnaire that evaluates problematic internet use (PIU) from a multidimensional perspective. We analysed the psychometric properties and adequacy of the theoretical model of Japanese version of the GPIUS2. METHODS: This study included 291 healthy Japanese adults (median age = 25 years; interquartile range 22-43 years; 128 women) who completed the GPIUS2 and several other questionnaires evaluating the degree of PIU, self-esteem, depression, and impulsivity. RESULTS: Exploratory factor analysis (EFA) revealed a similar factor structure between the original and Japanese versions of the GPIUS2, with only minor differences in item composition. Higher-order confirmatory factor analyses revealed a good overall fit for the factorial model suggested by EFA, indicating adequate construct validity. The model showed acceptable internal consistency. Partial correlation analyses between GPIUS2 and other measures, with age as a control variable, revealed good convergent validity. Finally, structural equation modelling showed a good fit to the data, supporting the cognitive-behavioural model of Caplan (2010). CONCLUSIONS: The Japanese version of the GPIUS2 has good psychometric properties and the theoretical model of the original GPIUS2 is applicable to Japanese adults

    Psychological resilience is correlated with dynamic changes in functional connectivity within the default mode network during a cognitive task

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    Resilience is a dynamic process that enables organisms to cope with demanding environments. Resting-state functional MRI (fMRI) studies have demonstrated a negative correlation between resilience and functional connectivities (FCs) within the default mode network (DMN). Considering the on-demand recruitment process of resilience, dynamic changes in FCs during cognitive load increases may reflect essential aspects of resilience. We compared DMN FC changes in resting and task states and their association with resilience. Eighty-nine healthy volunteers completed the Connor–Davidson Resilience Scale (CD-RISC) and an fMRI with an auditory oddball task. The fMRI time series was divided into resting and task periods. We focused on FC changes between the latter half of the resting period and the former half of the task phase (switching), and between the former and latter half of the task phase (sustaining). FCs within the ventral DMN significantly increased during “switching” and decreased during “sustaining”. For FCs between the retrosplenial/posterior cingulate and the parahippocampal cortex, increased FC during switching was negatively correlated with CD-RISC scores. In individuals with higher resilience, ventral DMN connectivities were more stable and homeostatic in the face of cognitive demand. The dynamic profile of DMN FCs may represent a novel biomarker of resilience

    The rice OsERF101 transcription factor regulates the NLR Xa1-mediated immunity induced by perception of TAL effectors

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    イネが病原菌の感染力の源を検出して免疫を誘導する仕組みを解明 --病気に強い植物の開発に期待--. 京都大学プレスリリース. 2022-09-07.Plant nucleotide-binding leucine-rich repeat receptors (NLRs) initiate immune responses by recognizing pathogen effectors. The rice gene Xa1 encodes an NLR with an N-terminal BED domain, and recognizes transcription activator-like (TAL) effectors of Xanthomonas oryzae pv. oryzae (Xoo). Our goal is to elucidate the molecular mechanisms controlling the induction of immunity by Xa1. We used yeast two-hybrid assays to screen for host factors that interact with Xa1 and identified the AP2/ERF-type transcription factor OsERF101/OsRAP2.6. Molecular complementation assays were used to confirm the interactions among Xa1, OsERF101, and two TAL effectors. We created OsERF101-overexpressing and knockout mutant lines in rice and identified genes differentially regulated in these lines, many of which are predicted to be involved in regulation of response to stimulus. Xa1 interacts in the nucleus with the TAL effectors and OsERF101 via the BED domain. Unexpectedly, both the overexpression and knockout lines of OsERF101 displayed Xa1-dependent, enhanced resistance to an incompatible Xoo strain. Different sets of genes were up- or down-regulated in the overexpression and knockout lines. Our results indicate that OsERF101 regulates the recognition of TAL effectors by Xa1, and functions as a positive regulator of Xa1-mediated immunity. Further, an additional Xa1-mediated immune pathway is negatively regulated by OsERF101

    Human cortical activity evoked by contextual processing in attentional orienting

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    The ability to assess another person’s direction of attention is paramount in social communication, many studies have reported a similar pattern between gaze and arrow cues in attention orienting. Neuroimaging research has also demonstrated no qualitative differences in attention to gaze and arrow cues. However, these studies were implemented under simple experiment conditions. Researchers have highlighted the importance of contextual processing (i.e., the semantic congruence between cue and target) in attentional orienting, showing that attentional orienting by social gaze or arrow cues could be modulated through contextual processing. Here, we examine the neural activity of attentional orienting by gaze and arrow cues in response to contextual processing using functional magnetic resonance imaging. The results demonstrated that the influence of neural activity through contextual processing to attentional orienting occurred under invalid conditions (when the cue and target were incongruent versus congruent) in the ventral frontoparietal network, although we did not identify any differences in the neural substrates of attentional orienting in contextual processing between gaze and arrow cues. These results support behavioural data of attentional orienting modulated by contextual processing based on the neurocognitive architecture

    Immobilization-induced hypersensitivity associated with spinal cord sensitization during cast immobilization and after cast removal in rats

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    This study examined mechanical and thermal hypersensitivity in the rat hind paw during cast immobilization of the hind limbs for 4 or 8 weeks and following cast removal. Blood flow, skin temperature, and volume of the rat hind paw were assessed in order to determine peripheral circulation of the hind limbs. Sensitization was analyzed by measuring the expression of the calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) in the spinal dorsal horn following cast immobilization. Two weeks post immobilization, mechanical and thermal sensitivities increased significantly in all rats; however, peripheral circulation was not affected by immobilization. Cast immobilization for 8 weeks induced more serious hypersensitivity compared to cast immobilization for 4 weeks. Moreover, CGRP expression in the deeper lamina layer of the spinal dorsal horn increased in the rats immobilized for 8 weeks but not in those immobilized for 4 weeks. These findings suggest that immobilization-induced hypersensitivity develops during the immobilization period without affecting peripheral circulation. Our results also highlight the possibility that prolonged immobilization induces central sensitization in the spinal cord.The final publication is available at link.springer.co

    Neural Correlates of Non-clinical Internet Use in the Motivation Network and Its Modulation by Subclinical Autistic Traits

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    Background: Increasing evidence regarding the neural correlates of excessive or pathological internet use (IU) has accumulated in recent years, and comorbidity with depression and autism has been reported in multiple studies. However, psychological and neural correlates of non-clinical IU in healthy individuals remain unclear.Objectives: The aim of the current study was to investigate the relationships between non-clinical IU and functional connectivity (FC), focusing on the brain’s motivation network. We sought to clarify the influence of depression and autistic traits on these relationships in healthy individuals.Methods: Resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) was performed in 119 healthy volunteers. IU, depression, and autistic traits were assessed using the Generalized Problematic Internet Use Scale 2 (GPIUS2), Beck Depression Inventory-II (BDI-II), and the autism spectrum quotient (AQ) scale, respectively. Correlational analyses were performed using CONN-software within the motivation-related network, which consisted of 22 brain regions defined by a previous response-conflict task-based fMRI study with a reward cue. We also performed mediation analyses via the bootstrap method.Results: Total GPIUS2 scores were positively correlated with FC between the (a) left middle frontal gyrus (MFG) and bilateral medial prefrontal cortex; (b) left MFG and right supplementary motor area (SMA); (c) left MFG and right anterior insula, and (d) right MFG and right insula. The “Mood Regulation” subscale of the GPIUS2 was positively correlated with FC between left MFG and right SMA. The “Deficient Self-Regulation” subscale was positively correlated with FC between right MFG and right anterior insula (statistical thresholds, FDR < 0.05). Among these significant correlations, those between GPIUS2 (total and “Mood Regulation” subscale) scores and FC became stronger after controlling for AQ scores (total and “Attention Switching” subscale), indicating significant mediation by AQ (95% CI < 0.05). In contrast, BDI-II had no mediating effect.Conclusion: Positive correlations between IU and FC in the motivation network may indicate health-promoting effects of non-clinical IU. However, this favorable association is attenuated in individuals with subclinical autistic traits, suggesting the importance of a personalized educational approach for these individuals in terms of adequate IU
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