Publications by authors named "Yuko Hakamata"

Background: Contextual memory loss of emotional events plays a critical role in depression psychopathology. Individuals with depression, clinical or subclinical, exhibit enhanced and impaired memory for emotionally negative stimuli and context in an event, respectively. This suggests that contextual encoding may fail because of attentional interference caused by concurrent negative stimuli, possibly leading to contextual memory loss as a depression risk.

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  • The immune system plays a significant role in brain function and mental health, particularly in stress-related disorders, which involves interleukin-6 secretion and amygdala activity.
  • One hundred eight participants with varying anxiety and depression levels underwent MRI scans and saliva tests to analyze interleukin-6 patterns and amygdala responses to emotional stimuli while examining gene-stress interactions.
  • Results showed that a disrupted diurnal pattern of interleukin-6 correlated with decreased amygdala activity in response to fear, particularly in individuals with specific genetic profiles and negative life experiences, highlighting a potential mechanism for predicting and addressing vulnerability to depressive disorders.
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  • Adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) can lead to significant and lasting changes in the brain and body, increasing the likelihood of mental health issues later in life.
  • A systematic review identified 27 meta-analyses outlining key neurobiological alterations in individuals with ACEs, such as reduced cortisol response, low-grade inflammation, heightened emotional responses, and decreased hippocampal volume.
  • The review emphasizes the need for future research to focus on a multidisciplinary approach for preventing and treating mental disorders linked to ACEs.
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Childhood maltreatment has been associated with increased inflammation, as indicated by elevated levels of proinflammatory markers such as interleukin-6 (IL-6) and C-reactive protein (CRP). Studies in humans show that secretion of IL-6 follows a clear circadian rhythm, implying that its disturbed rhythm represents an important aspect of dysregulated inflammatory system. However, possible alterations in diurnal secretion patterns of IL-6 associated with childhood maltreatment have not been studied.

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Anxiety and depression are linked to both explicit and implicit memory biases, which are defined as the tendency to preferentially recall emotionally negative information at conscious and subconscious levels, respectively. Functional connectivity (FC) of the basolateral amygdala (BLA) and related stress hormones (i.e.

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Background: Psychological trauma can damage the brain, especially in areas where glucocorticoid receptors are expressed, via perturbed secretion of cortisol. Childhood trauma is associated with blunted basal cortisol secretion, brain alterations, and autobiographical memory deficits referred to as overgeneral autobiographical memory (OGM). However, it remains unknown whether childhood trauma affects OGM through altered cortisol and brain alterations.

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  • Childhood maltreatment, particularly emotional abuse, is linked to higher attention bias variability (ABV), indicating long-term effects on emotional attention control in healthy adult women.
  • The study found a significant positive correlation between childhood emotional abuse and ABV, as well as a connection between proinflammatory markers (like tumor necrosis factor-α) and ABV, though not directly with childhood maltreatment.
  • Additionally, individuals with specific genetic variations (BDNF Met alleles) showed increased ABV in the presence of emotional abuse, suggesting a complex interaction between genetics, childhood experiences, and emotional attention.
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Memory abnormalities are considered a core feature of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Studies attempting to quantify such memory dysfunction in PTSD have reported that individuals with this disorder exhibit selective memory bias toward negative material. The low expression Met allele of brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) Val66Met polymorphism has been associated with the aetiology of PTSD and with memory abnormalities.

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Background: The amygdala can enhance emotional memory encoding as well as anxiogenesis via corticotropin-releasing factor neurons. However, the amygdala's explicit role in emotional encoding remains unclarified in humans. We examined how functional connectivity (FC) of amygdala subnuclei affects emotional encoding, considering its mechanism in which anxiety, attention, and cortisol conceivably participate.

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Cortisol is known to affect visuospatial memory through its major binding site in the brain, the hippocampus. The synchronization of neural activity between the hippocampus, prefrontal cortex (PFC), and visual cortex is presumed to be essential for the formation of visuospatial memory because of their visuospatial learning-dependent neuroplasticity. However, it remains unclear how hippocampal connectivity with the PFC and visual cortex is involved in the relationship between cortisol and visuospatial memory in humans.

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Objective: Most previous studies have concluded that decreased cognitive function and performance due to ultra-short acting hypnotics do not persist after 6-9 h post-administration. This study examined the effects of ultra-short acting hypnotics on cognitive function and performance 12 h after administration, ie, a time considered sufficient for the effects of hypnotics to disappear.

Methods: Thirteen healthy young male volunteers (mean age, 23.

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  • Attentional bias modification (ABM) has been shown to reduce anxiety by shifting how individuals process attention towards threats, but the underlying neural mechanisms are still not fully understood.
  • In a study with 54 anxious participants, those who received ABM training for one month showed significant reductions in anxiety traits and changes in functional connectivity in the brain compared to a control group.
  • The findings suggest that ABM enhances the pulvinar's ability to regulate attention towards goals while reducing attentional focus on threats, indicating the pulvinar's important role in helping alleviate anxiety.
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The amygdala plays a critical role in emotion. Its functional coupling with the hippocampus and ventromedial prefrontal cortex extending to a portion of the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) is implicated in anxiogenesis and hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) system regulation. However, it remains unclear how amygdala-centred functional connectivity (FC) affects anxiety and cortisol concentrations in everyday life.

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  • The pulvinar is key for selective attention to visual stimuli, but it also processes emotional stimuli, influenced by its connection to the amygdala.
  • An fMRI study showed that the amygdala responds more to unattended fearful faces, while the pulvinar has greater effective connectivity to the amygdala.
  • Individual differences in attention, such as attentional bias toward threats, influence how the pulvinar interacts with emotional stimuli and other brain networks.
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Background: Although poorer cognitive performance has been found to be associated with anxiety, it remains unclear whether neurocognitive function affects biased cognitive processing toward emotional information. We investigated whether general cognitive function evaluated with a standard neuropsychological test predicts biased cognition, focusing on attentional bias toward threat.

Methods: One hundred and five healthy young adults completed a dot-probe task measuring attentional bias and the Repeatable Battery for the Assessment of Neuropsychological Status (RBANS) measuring general cognitive function, which consists of five domains: immediate memory, visuospatial/constructional, language, attention, and delayed memory.

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Some sleep disorders and sleep problems are reported as risk of dementia. It is reported that 50-80% of idiopathic REM sleep behavior had a later conversion to a synucleinopathy, thus this parasomnia is regarded as early marker of Parkinson disease, dementia with Lewy bodies and multiple system atrophy. Obstructive sleep apnea syndrome causes reversible decline of cognitive functions in children and adults, and it increases the risk of dementia and mild cognitive impairment in elderly women.

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Background: Human personality consists of two fundamental elements character and temperament. Character allays automatic and preconceptual emotional responses determined by temperament. However, the neurobiological basis of character and its interplay with temperament remain elusive.

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Background: Attentional bias (AB), selective information processing towards threat, can exacerbate anxiety and depression. Despite growing interest, physiological determinants of AB are yet to be understood. We examined whether stress hormone cortisol and its diurnal variation pattern contribute to AB.

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Sleep disorders are defined as disorders which symptoms or pathophysiology are related with sleep regardless of comorbid physical and/or mental disorders. Sleep disorders are classified into 6 major categories: sleep related breathing disorders which exhibit abnormal breathing during sleep, sleep related movement disorders which show involuntary movements and/or abnormal sensations during sleep and/or nighttime, hypersomnia of central origin not due to other sleep disorders, circadian rhythm sleep disorders due to desynchronization between sleep-wake pattern and required social schedule, parasomnia which exhibit abnormal behavior during sleep and/or around sleep, and insomnia not due to other sleep disorders.

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Background: Attention Bias Modification Treatment (ABMT) is a newly emerging, promising treatment for anxiety disorders. Although recent randomized control trials (RCTs) suggest that ABMT reduces anxiety, therapeutic effects have not been summarized quantitatively.

Methods: Standard meta-analytic procedures were used to summarize the effect of ABMT on anxiety.

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Recent functional neuroimaging studies have suggested that specific brain regions might be associated with the formation of anxiety-related personality traits, which are well known to be influenced by gender. Such anxiety-related personality traits are one of the representative predisposing factors for mood and anxiety disorders, whose incidence is also known to be much influenced by gender. However, little is known about the gender differences in brain function related to anxiety-related personality traits.

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Although smaller hippocampi and amygdalae were found in cancer survivors with intrusions, associations between cancer-related posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and these volumes are unknown. The authors performed MRI volumetric analyses of these regions in 15 cancer survivors with PTSD, 15 cancer survivors without PTSD, and 15 healthy comparison subjects. The authors also examined the correlation between PTSD symptom scores of the Impact of Event Scale and these volumes in the PTSD group.

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The neurobiological basis of cancer-related post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) has never been studied. We investigated brain structural alterations and the longitudinal courses in patients with cancer-related PTSD. Baseline scans using magnetic resonance imaging were performed in 14 cancer survivors with PTSD, 100 without PTSD, and 70 healthy subjects.

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  • The study explored how certain genes related to the dopaminergic pathway, specifically MAO-A, COMT, DRD2, and DRD3, might influence personality traits in Japanese women.* -
  • Despite the investigation, single marker analysis found no significant links between these gene polymorphisms and personality scores based on the NEO-FFI inventory.* -
  • However, a combination involving specific variations in MAO-A, COMT, and DRD3 exhibited a marginally significant relationship with the personality trait of Agreeableness.*
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Personality, and in particular temperament, is thought to have a biological basis. In the present study, the relationships between regional brain glucose metabolism and temperament have been investigated. Regional brain glucose metabolism was measured using [18F] fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography in 31 healthy subjects.

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