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Hiroshi Imamizu

Hiroshi Imamizu

D-Index & Metrics

Neuroscience

D-Index
38
Citations
8954
World Ranking
8452
National Ranking
300

Overview

Hiroshi Imamizu is affiliated with the University of Tokyo in Japan. Their research primarily focuses on neuroscience, with a significant emphasis on cognitive neuroscience. The scope of their work spans several subfields, including social psychology, radiology, nuclear medicine and imaging, psychiatry and mental health, and experimental and cognitive psychology.

The main topics covered in Imamizu's research include functional brain connectivity studies, neural dynamics and brain function, and neural and behavioral psychology studies. Other notable topics are EEG and brain-computer interfaces, free will and agency, action observation and synchronization, and psychosomatic disorders and their treatments.

Imamizu has published extensively across a range of scientific venues. Frequent places of publication include bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory) with 15 publications, Scientific Reports and The Proceedings of the Annual Convention of the Japanese Psychological Association both with 3, as well as PLoS Biology and Cerebral Cortex with 2 publications each.

Key recent papers authored by Hiroshi Imamizu are:

  • A multi-site, multi-disorder resting-state magnetic resonance image database, 2021, Scientific Data
  • The sense of agency in perception, behaviour and human-machine interactions, 2022, Nature Reviews Psychology
  • Generalizable brain network markers of major depressive disorder across multiple imaging sites, 2020, PLoS Biology
  • Sense of Agency Beyond Sensorimotor Process: Decoding Self-Other Action Attribution in the Human Brain, 2020, Cerebral Cortex
  • Overlapping but Asymmetrical Relationships Between Schizophrenia and Autism Revealed by Brain Connectivity, 2020, Schizophrenia Bulletin

Frequent collaborators include Hidehiko Takahashi, Mitsuo Kawato, Kiyoto Kasai, Yasumasa Okamoto, and Tomohisa Asai. Imamizu's publications with these coauthors indicate an active network within the neuroscience research community.

Best Publications

  • Human cerebellar activity reflecting an acquired internal model of a new tool

    Hiroshi Imamizu;Satoru Miyauchi;Tomoe Tamada;Yuka Sasaki

  • Consensus Paper: The Cerebellum's Role in Movement and Cognition

    Leonard F. Koziol;Deborah Budding;Nancy Andreasen;Stefano D’Arrigo

  • Quantitative examinations of internal representations for arm trajectory planning: minimum commanded torque change model.

    Eri Nakano;Hiroshi Imamizu;Rieko Osu;Yoji Uno

  • Modular organization of internal models of tools in the human cerebellum

    Hiroshi Imamizu;Tomoe Kuroda;Satoru Miyauchi;Toshinori Yoshioka

  • A neural correlate of reward-based behavioral learning in caudate nucleus: a functional magnetic resonance imaging study of a stochastic decision task.

    Masahiko Haruno;Tomoe Kuroda;Kenji Doya;Keisuke Toyama

  • Internal forward models in the cerebellum: fMRI study on grip force and load force coupling.

    Mitsuo Kawato;Tomoe Kuroda;Hiroshi Imamizu;Eri Nakano

  • A small number of abnormal brain connections predicts adult autism spectrum disorder

    Noriaki Yahata;Jun Morimoto;Ryuichiro Hashimoto;Giuseppe Lisi

  • The cerebellum coordinates eye and hand tracking movements.

    R. C. Miall;G. Z. Reckess;H. Imamizu

  • Composition and decomposition of internal models in motor learning under altered kinematic and dynamic environments.

    J. Randall Flanagan;Eri Nakano;Hiroshi Imamizu;Rieko Osu

  • Harmonization of resting-state functional MRI data across multiple imaging sites via the separation of site differences into sampling bias and measurement bias

    Ayumu Yamashita;Noriaki Yahata;Noriaki Yahata;Takashi Itahashi;Giuseppe Lisi

  • Activation of the Human Superior Temporal Gyrus during Observation of Goal Attribution by Intentional Objects

    Johannes Schultz;Hiroshi Imamizu;Mitsuo Kawato;Chris D. Frith

  • Functional magnetic resonance imaging examination of two modular architectures for switching multiple internal models.

    Hiroshi Imamizu;Tomoe Kuroda;Toshinori Yoshioka;Mitsuo Kawato

  • THE LOCUS OF VISUAL-MOTOR LEARNING AT THE TASK OR MANIPULATOR LEVEL: IMPLICATIONS FROM INTERMANUAL TRANSFER

    Hiroshi Imamizu;Shinsuke Shimojo

  • Internal representations of the motor apparatus: implications from generalization in visuomotor learning.

    Hiroshi Imamizu;Yoji Uno;Mitsuo Kawato

  • Functional MRI neurofeedback training on connectivity between two regions induces long-lasting changes in intrinsic functional network

    Fukuda Megumi;Ayumu Yamashita;Mitsuo Kawato;Hiroshi Imamizu

  • A multi-site, multi-disorder resting-state magnetic resonance image database

    Saori C Tanaka;Ayumu Yamashita;Noriaki Yahata;Takashi Itahashi

  • Activation of the cerebellum in co-ordinated eye and hand tracking movements: an fMRI study.

    R C Miall;Hiroshi Imamizu;S Miyauchi

  • Shared neural correlates for language and tool use in Broca's area.

    Satomi Higuchi;Thierry Chaminade;Hiroshi Imamizu;Mitsuo Kawato

  • Cerebellar Activity Evoked By Common Tool-Use Execution And Imagery Tasks: An Fmri Study

    Satomi Higuchi;Hiroshi Imamizu;Mitsuo Kawato

  • Brain mechanisms for predictive control by switching internal models: implications for higher-order cognitive functions

    Hiroshi Imamizu;Mitsuo Kawato

  • Explicit contextual information selectively contributes to predictive switching of internal models

    Hiroshi Imamizu;Norikazu Sugimoto;Rieko Osu;Kiyoka Tsutsui

Frequent Co-Authors

Mitsuo Kawato
Mitsuo Kawato Advanced Telecommunications Research Institute International
Noriaki Yahata
Noriaki Yahata National Institutes for Quantum and Radiological Science and Technology
Hidehiko Takahashi
Hidehiko Takahashi Tokyo Medical and Dental University
Yasumasa Okamoto
Yasumasa Okamoto Hiroshima University
Go Okada
Go Okada Hiroshima University
Yuka Sasaki
Yuka Sasaki Brown University
Ben Seymour
Ben Seymour University of Oxford
Koji Matsuo
Koji Matsuo Yamaguchi University
Hajime Asama
Hajime Asama University of Tokyo
Takeo Watanabe
Takeo Watanabe Brown University

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