521 research outputs found
AUT822502_Supplemental_material – Supplemental material for Clinical effectiveness of repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation treatment in children and adolescents with neurodevelopmental disorders: A systematic review
Supplemental material, AUT822502_Supplemental_material for Clinical effectiveness of repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation treatment in children and adolescents with neurodevelopmental disorders: A systematic review by Fumi Masuda, Shinichiro Nakajima, Takahiro Miyazaki, Ryosuke Tarumi, Kamiyu Ogyu, Masataka Wada, Sakiko Tsugawa, Paul E Croarkin, Masaru Mimura and Yoshihiro Noda in Autism</p
AUT822502_Lay_Abstract – Supplemental material for Clinical effectiveness of repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation treatment in children and adolescents with neurodevelopmental disorders: A systematic review
Supplemental material, AUT822502_Lay_Abstract for Clinical effectiveness of repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation treatment in children and adolescents with neurodevelopmental disorders: A systematic review by Fumi Masuda, Shinichiro Nakajima, Takahiro Miyazaki, Ryosuke Tarumi, Kamiyu Ogyu, Masataka Wada, Sakiko Tsugawa, Paul E Croarkin, Masaru Mimura and Yoshihiro Noda in Autism</p
GSH_meta_supplementary_figures_20190320 – Supplemental material for Glutathione levels and activities of glutathione metabolism enzymes in patients with schizophrenia: A systematic review and meta-analysis
Supplemental material, GSH_meta_supplementary_figures_20190320 for Glutathione levels and activities of glutathione metabolism enzymes in patients with schizophrenia: A systematic review and meta-analysis by Sakiko Tsugawa, Yoshihiro Noda, Ryosuke Tarumi, Yu Mimura, Kazunari Yoshida, Yusuke Iwata, Muhammad Elsalhy, Minori Kuromiya, Shin Kurose, Fumi Masuda, Shinji Morita, Kamiyu Ogyu, Eric Plitman, Masataka Wada, Takahiro Miyazaki, Ariel Graff-Guerrero, Masaru Mimura and Shinichiro Nakajima in Journal of Psychopharmacology</p
GSH_meta_supplementary_table_20190320 – Supplemental material for Glutathione levels and activities of glutathione metabolism enzymes in patients with schizophrenia: A systematic review and meta-analysis
Supplemental material, GSH_meta_supplementary_table_20190320 for Glutathione levels and activities of glutathione metabolism enzymes in patients with schizophrenia: A systematic review and meta-analysis by Sakiko Tsugawa, Yoshihiro Noda, Ryosuke Tarumi, Yu Mimura, Kazunari Yoshida, Yusuke Iwata, Muhammad Elsalhy, Minori Kuromiya, Shin Kurose, Fumi Masuda, Shinji Morita, Kamiyu Ogyu, Eric Plitman, Masataka Wada, Takahiro Miyazaki, Ariel Graff-Guerrero, Masaru Mimura and Shinichiro Nakajima in Journal of Psychopharmacology</p
Tone sandhi rule for pattern substitution in Suzhou Chinese : Verification using words beginning with a Ru syllable
1.はじめに 2.トーン交替規則 3.調査1 4.入声音節で始まる3音節語 5.調査2 6.パターン代入規則の成立過程 7.おわりにIt is well known that in Wu Chinese, there exists a type of tone sandhi that deletes tones from non-initial syllables and spreads the remaining tones to the whole word. In Suzhou dialect, a dialect of Wu Chinese, there is another type of tone sandhi, named pattern substitution, which alternates underlying tonal patterns of initial syllables with other tonal patterns. Masuda (2011) tried to show that pattern substitution in Suzhou dialect is not lexically determined, or in other words it is not the remnant of historical tonal alternation, but is caused by synchronic rules. He also presented the forms that these rules take. However, data of his work are restricted to words that do not include a syllable whose coda is a glottal stop, that is, Ru syllable, so pattern substitution in words that include a Ru syllable remains unexplained. This study examines novel loanwords created by the author with the Ru syllable as the first syllable. The result shows that pattern substitution is observed in these loanwords, although its realization is different from words which do not include Ru syllables. This finding supports the view that pattern substitution in Suzhou dialect is caused by the rules presented in Masuda (2011)
Explanation of the Plates: Two Fragments of the “Animal Scroll” (Choju Giga): A Newly Discovered Fragment and the Fragment from the Former Masuda Collection
In addition to the four celebrated scrolls of satirical drawings of animals and people which are preserved in the Kōzanji, Kyoto, three fragments, comparable both in subject and style to the first scroll, have long been known: 1) in Tokyo National Museum, 2) in the former Masuda Collection, and 3) in the collection of Mr. A. B. Martin, Brooklyn Museum, New York. The author presents here a new fragment of the same type which was discrovered last year in a private collection. By reproducing it beside the Masuda fragment, it may likewise be compared with the first Kōzanji scroll and in this way its authenticity may be determined.
The long “Masuda fragment” (Pls. V to VII: 119.2 x 29.2 cm) presently in a private collection, is in fact an ingenious assemblage of three separate fragments (fig. 5). On the right a monkey is shown exercising his mount (a deer) before his adversary, a rabbit who is seated on the back of a fox. To the left to this scene there appears a well disguised vertical connection which passes just between the small rabbit and monkey who are situated at the lower edge of the composition. This is followed by a central scene representing a race between the rabbit and the monkey over a low ground accentuated with autumn grasses. Among the five scrolls of the Sumiyoshi copies dated 1598, there is one which is not preserved among the originals in the Kōzanji, The first two scenes of the “Masuda fragment” are found in the middle section of this scroll. But the third scene in the “Masuda fragment” which shows a fox, turtle, frog, crane and duck as spectators of the race, is found in a slightly different variation toward the end of the same Sumiyoshi scroll instead.
The new fragment (Pl. IV; 51,6 X 29.1 cm) shows a monkey-nun, a lady fox, etc., walking in an autumn setting. In the Sumiyoshi copy cited above, this particular scene is situated just after the composition represented by the “Martin fragment”, also related to the race episode, which shows the monkey fallen from his mount. The position of the new fragment is confirmed by an examination of the traces of damage which occur across the surfaces of the three fragments (see the article by Mr. Kenji Ueno in this number). The pattern of the damage is similar to that shown in the first ten sheets of the first Kōzanji scroll. After a close examination of the condition of the two fragments, it may be said that the paper resembles that of the first roll in quality, but is not as well preserved. Similarly, the ink lines have faded and are sometimes retouched or obliterated. If it is certain that these two fragments originally belonged to a long composition which preceded the existing first part of the first Kāzanji scroll at the time of the temple fire in the middle of the sixteenth century, it must be confirmed that the drawing of these fragments is really identical to the first scroll in technique and style.
Moreover, in the course of comparison, it was discovered that, contrary to previous opinions, the first scroll seems to have been drawn by two different artists. The first hand appears in sheets 1 to 10 (Pl. VIII) and the second hand in the remainder of the scroll (Pl. IX). The drawing of the Masuda, Martin, and newly-discovered fragments resembles, in use of the brush, touches and accents, the style of the first section of the first Kōzanji scroll, and suggests that they were indeed executed by the same person.journal articl
漢語蘇州方言におけるパターン代入規則 : 入声音節で始まる語を用いた検証
It is well known that in Wu Chinese, there exists a type of tone sandhi that deletes tones from non-initial syllables and spreads the remaining tones to the whole word. In Suzhou dialect, a dialect of Wu Chinese, there is another type of tone sandhi, named pattern substitution, which alternates underlying tonal patterns of initial syllables with other tonal patterns. Masuda (2011) tried to show that pattern substitution in Suzhou dialect is not lexically determined, or in other words it is not the remnant of historical tonal alternation, but is caused by synchronic rules. He also presented the forms that these rules take. However, data of his work are restricted to words that do not include a syllable whose coda is a glottal stop, that is, Ru syllable, so pattern substitution in words that include a Ru syllable remains unexplained. This study examines novel loanwords created by the author with the Ru syllable as the first syllable. The result shows that pattern substitution is observed in these loanwords, although its realization is different from words which do not include Ru syllables. This finding supports the view that pattern substitution in Suzhou dialect is caused by the rules presented in Masuda (2011).1.はじめに 2.トーン交替規則 3.調査1 4.入声音節で始まる3音節語 5.調査2 6.パターン代入規則の成立過程 7.おわり
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