Publications by authors named "Juri Fujiwara"

Article Synopsis
  • Observing mouth movements significantly alters speech perception, leading to the McGurk effect when sounds and lip movements are mismatched.
  • Recent studies using fMRI and TMS aimed to understand the motor network’s role in this multisensory illusion, revealing that the left inferior frontal gyrus is crucial in processing incongruent audiovisual information.
  • TMS applied to specific lip areas reduced the McGurk effect, indicating that the motor network has a targeted influence on how we integrate visual and auditory speech signals.
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Article Synopsis
  • - The study examines how the size of a choice set affects the value people place on their selected items, noting that larger sets can enhance enjoyment but may lead to a decrease in value if they become overwhelming.
  • - Participants rated items before and after making a choice from sets of varying sizes, revealing that the perceived value of chosen items increased with up to four alternatives but decreased with eight items, indicating a combination of linear and quadratic effects.
  • - Neural findings showed that the ventrolateral prefrontal cortex (VLPFC) is involved in how choice set size influences the revaluation of chosen items, with increased activity linked to higher value ratings, demonstrating a relationship between choice overload and the positive effects of larger options.
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Humans and animals value the opportunity to choose by preferring alternatives that offer more rather than fewer choices. This preference for choice may arise not only from an increased probability of obtaining preferred outcomes but also from the freedom it provides. We used human neuroimaging to investigate the neural basis of the preference for choice as well as for the items that could be chosen.

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Reward and punishment have opposite affective value but are both processed by the cingulate cortex. However, it is unclear whether the positive and negative affective values of monetary reward and punishment are processed by separate or common subregions of the cingulate cortex. We performed a functional magnetic resonance imaging study using a free-choice task and compared cingulate activations for different levels of monetary gain and loss.

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People experience relief whenever outcomes are better than they would have been, had an alternative course of action been chosen. Here we investigated the neuronal basis of relief with functional resonance imaging in a choice task in which the outcome of the chosen option and that of the unchosen option were revealed sequentially. We found parametric activation increases in anterior ventrolateral prefrontal cortex with increasing relief (chosen outcomes better than unchosen outcomes).

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A negative outcome can have motivational and emotional consequences on its own (absolute loss) or in comparison to alternative, better, outcomes (relative loss). The consequences of incurring a loss are moderated by personality factors such as neuroticism and introversion. However, the neuronal basis of this moderation is unknown.

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