Publications by authors named "Daichi Hirai"

Objective: To investigate whether newer anti-seizure medications (ASMs) are widely prescribed for a range of adult patients in Japan, including patients with previously and newly diagnosed epilepsy, or with focal and generalized epilepsies.

Methods: A retrospective cohort study was conducted using the Japanese insurance claims database including 8.4 million people to identify adults (≥16 years of age) with epilepsy diagnosis code identified between January 2015 and December 2018.

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Memories are initially encoded in the hippocampus but subsequently consolidated to the cortex. Although synaptic plasticity is key to these processes, its precise spatiotemporal profile remains poorly understood. Using optogenetics to selectively erase long-term potentiation (LTP) within a defined temporal window, we found that distinct phases of synaptic plasticity play differential roles.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study focuses on the responses of mechanoreceptors involved in tactile sensation, specifically analyzing the whisker array in rats to understand how these receptors code and transmit tactile information.
  • Researchers used in vivo techniques to identify and record four types of mechanoreceptors in the whisker follicle, discovering that only ring-sinus Merkel endings showed slowly adapting properties.
  • Findings revealed strong "angular tuning" for all receptor types in response to whisker deflection, but only Merkel afferents aligned with their anatomical locations; differences in tuning sensitivity were linked to anatomical features and force sensitivity along the whisker length.
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Sleep plays important roles in sensory and motor memory consolidation. Sleep oscillations, reflecting neural population activity, involve the reactivation of learning-related neurons and regulate synaptic strength and, thereby affect memory consolidation. Among sleep oscillations, slow waves (0.

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Massive corticothalamic afferents originating from layer 6a of primary sensory cortical areas modulate sensory responsiveness of thalamocortical neurons and are pivotal for shifting neuronal firing between burst and tonic modes. The influence of the corticothalamic pathways on the firing mode and sensory gain of thalamic neurons has only been extensively examined in anesthetized animals, but has yet to be established in the awake state. We made lesions of the rat barrel cortex and on the following day recorded responses of single thalamocortical and thalamic reticular neurons to a single vibrissal deflection in the somatosensory system during wakefulness.

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Unlabelled: The architectonic subdivisions of the brain are believed to be functional modules, each processing parts of global functions. Previously, we showed that neurons in different regions operate in different firing regimes in monkeys. It is possible that firing regimes reflect differences in underlying information processing, and consequently the firing regimes in homologous regions across animal species might be similar.

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It has been reported that neurons in the amygdala respond to visual cues that predict reward and aversive outcomes. However, it remains unclear whether the representation of reinforcement in the amygdala depends on the relative preference for an outcome compared with another simultaneously available outcome. In this study, we introduced three reinforcements (juice, water, and electrical stimulus) and used two of them in one experimental block.

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