1,082 research outputs found

    Learning-dependent modulation of working memory

    No full text
    Data and code associated with manuscript entitled 'Learning-dependent modulation of working memory'. Authors: Frida A.B. Printzlau, Athanasios Bourganos, Keisuke Fukuda and Michael L. Mack

    View to the U: An eye on UTM Research

    No full text
    This is an audio recording from the podcast series "View to the U: An eye on UTM research".On this episode of VIEW to the U we highlight Professor Keisuke Fukuda, also known as K, who talks about his research related to visual working memory and how memory guides behaviour. But along with that, K also talks about other studies his lab is taking on such as why is it so hard to forget things we would rather not remember and how memory distortion can come into play when we are processing information. K also talks about some of the daily inspirations that motivate his research

    Keisuke Fukuda's Quick Files

    No full text
    The Quick Files feature was discontinued and it’s files were migrated into this Project on March 11, 2022. The file URL’s will still resolve properly, and the Quick Files logs are available in the Project’s Recent Activity

    Fukuda&Woodman_ Predicting_and_improving_recognition_memory_using_multiple_electrophysiological_signals_in_real_time.

    No full text
    Predicting and improving recognition memory using multiple electrophysiological signals in real time

    sj-docx-1-tam-10.1177_17588359211058393 – Supplemental material for Adverse events induced by nivolumab and ipilimumab combination regimens

    No full text
    Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-tam-10.1177_17588359211058393 for Adverse events induced by nivolumab and ipilimumab combination regimens by Kohei Somekawa, Nobuyuki Horita, Ayami Kaneko, Yoichi Tagami, Nobuhiko Fukuda, Hiromi Matsumoto, Ho Namkoong, Yu Fujiwara, Kaoru Minegishi, Takeshi Fukumoto, Keisuke Watanabe, Yu Hara, Nobuaki Kobayashi and Takeshi Kaneko in Therapeutic Advances in Medical Oncology</p

    sj-docx-1-tam-10.1177_17588359231198453 – Supplemental material for Adverse events induced by durvalumab and tremelimumab combination regimens: a systematic review and meta-analysis

    No full text
    Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-tam-10.1177_17588359231198453 for Adverse events induced by durvalumab and tremelimumab combination regimens: a systematic review and meta-analysis by Hiromi Matsumoto, Kohei Somekawa, Nobuyuki Horita, Suguru Ueda, Megumi Kaneko, Ayami Kaneko, Nobuhiko Fukuda, Ami Izawa, Chisato Kamimaki, Katsushi Tanaka, Kota Murohashi, Hiroaki Fuji, Yoichi Tagami, Ayako Aoki, Keisuke Watanabe, Yu Hara, Nobuaki Kobayashi and Takeshi Kaneko in Therapeutic Advances in Medical Oncology</p

    Task-relevant Perceptual Comparisons Induce Lasting Memory Distortion

    No full text
    While retrieving a memory facilitates its future accessibility (i.e., testing effect), novel information present at the time of retrieval can distort memory content (e.g., misinformation effect). However, it is unclear what cognitive mechanism is responsible for driving these undesired changes to memory. Here, I tested the role of subjective similarity judgments that individuals make when comparing a retrieved memory representation to a novel perceptual input. Following similarity judgments, younger adults reliably reported systematic memory biases in real-world objects that were maintained in working memory (n = 32) or recalled from long-term memory (n = 30). These biases were larger in consolidated memories than recently-encoded memories and persisted when participants maintained high confidence in the accuracy of a biased memory. These findings suggest that subjective similarity judgments plausibly account for longstanding memory distortion phenomena.M.A

    TRADUÇÃO COMENTADA DO CONTO FOLCLÓRICO JAPONÊS “CHIKARA TAROU”, DE KEISUKE NISHIMOTO

    No full text
    This work consists of an annotated translation of the Japanese folklore’s short story “Chikara Tarou”, by Japanese author Keisuke Nishimoto, from Japanese language to Brazilian Portuguese language. The research aims to contribute to the Japanese Literary Translation Studies through an analysis of linguistic and cultural aspects presented in the source text, as well as its consequences in the target culture and language, theoretically based on Venuti’s (2004) concepts of foreignization and domestication. Furthermore, this monograph seeks to disseminate the Mukashi-banashi literary genre and the short story, not yet translated in Brazil, providing knowledge concerning the author, genre, Japanese culture. In addition, it is as an attempt of deconstructing sexism presented in the short story through its annotated translation.O presente trabalho consiste em uma tradução comentada do conto folclórico japonês “Chikara Tarou”, versão do autor Keisuke Nishimoto, do japonês para o português brasileiro. A pesquisa objetiva contribuir para os Estudos da Tradução Literária Japonesa através de uma análise dos aspectos linguísticos e culturais presentes no texto de partida e suas consequências na língua de chegada, utilizando como base os conceitos de estrangeirização e domesticação de Venuti (2004). Ademais, este trabalho também visa divulgar o gênero literário Mukashibanashi do conto, o qual ainda não possui tradução no Brasil, fornecendo informações acerca do autor, do gênero e cultura japonesa, como também busca desconstruir certos valores culturais machistas presentes no conto através de sua tradução

    A Mechanistic Role of Perceptual Comparisons in Undesired Memory Updating

    No full text
    Comparing visual memories to new visual inputs is a functionally adaptive form of human cognition that is ubiquitous in the lab and real-world. These perceptual comparisons allow observers to use their existing knowledge to discriminate between familiar and novel stimuli in their environment and adjust their behavior accordingly. Yet, evidence from basic and applied studies of cognition suggest that the same processes tied to perceptual comparisons may also contaminate memory content by producing systematic biases in current and subsequent recollections. Here, I report the findings from three studies that directly support a mechanistic role of perceptual comparisons in persistent memory bias. First, I show that perceptual comparisons modulate memory report biases that occur naturally as a result of stimulus-driven interactions between memory and perception. When compared to passively viewing or remembering an incoming percept during memory maintenance, explicit comparisons produce larger memory report biases overall. Second, I show that the nature of these report biases differs depending upon the psychological similarity between memory and perception that is experienced at the time of the comparison. In cases where perceptual inputs are perceived as similar to memory, memory report biases appear driven by integration between representations, whereas in cases where inputs are mistakenly perceived as identical to memory, subsequent biases appear driven by a replacement of memory by perception instead. Finally, I show that a single comparison between memory and perception is both necessary and sufficient to produce memory report biases that persist into subsequent recollections. Specifically, memory report biases induced by perceptual inputs can only persist if an explicit comparison is performed and this persistence is observed even when processes tied to memory reporting are removed. When taken together, the findings reported in the present thesis implicate perceptual comparisons as a unified, causal explanation for a wide variety of visual memory distortions that are observed in daily life.Ph.D
    corecore