NORITAKE, Atsushi
Profile
Education & Professional Experience
1999 Graduated from Kwansei Gakuin University, Department of Psychological Sciences.
2005 Completed the doctoral course in Kwansei Gakuin Univeristy, Psychological Sciences.
2005 Postdoctral Fellow & Program-specific Researcher Brain Science Institute, Tamagawa University.
2009 Assistant Professor, Kansai Medical University School of Medicine
2017 Assistant Professor, NIPS.
ExpertiseFNeurophysiology, Cognitive Neuroscience
Selected Publications
Higuchi, T., Ishizaki,
Y., Noritake, A. Yanagimoto, Y., Kobayashi, H., Nakamura,
K., Kaneko, K. (2017). Spatiotemporal characteristics of gaze of
children with autism spectrum disorders while looking at
classroom scenes. PLoS One 2017 May 4;
12(5):e0175912
ฅ ๚, ้c น๒ (2015). ะ๏IKwฦWcTCY, ถฬฬศw, 66 (1):72-75.
บ ม}, ั aq, ฅ ๚ (2014). ำv่EsฎI๐ฬ_oศw Zgjฦำv่, Clinical Neuroscience, 32(1):55-57
Isoda, M., Noritake, A. (2013). What makes the dorsomedial frontal cortex active during reading the mental states of others? Front. Neurosci. 2013 Dec 5;7:232
Noritake, A., Uttl, B., Terao, M., Nagai, M., Watanabe, J., Yagi, A. (2009). Saccadic compression of rectangle and Kanizsa figures: now you see it, now you don't. PLoS One. 2009 Jul 27; 4(7): e6383
Noritake, A., Kazai, K., Terao, M., & Yagi, A. (2005). A continuously lit stimulus is perceived to be shorter than a flickering stimulus during a saccade. Spatial Vision, 18, 297-316.
Noritake, A., Watanabe, J., Ando, H., Terao, M., & Yagi, A. (2005).@Spatial dependency of saccade-induced image.@Psychologia, 48, 146-153.
Watanabe, J., Noritake, A., Maeda, T., Tachi, S., & Nishida, S. (2005). Perisaccadic perception of continuous flickers. Vision Research, 45, 413-30.
Yagi, A., Fujimoto, K., Takahashi, T., Noritake, A., Iwai, M., & Suzuki, N. (2005).@Development of a system to measure visual functions of the brain for assessment of entertainment. Lecture Notes in Computer Science 3711, 99-105, Springer.
Yagi, A., Kazai, K., Fujimoto, K., Noritake, A., Takahashi, T., Iwai, M., & Mogami, M. (2005). A new system to analyze the temporal changes of the event related potential associated with offset of saccades. In Tsuji, S., et al. (eds.), Unveiling the Mystery of the Brain: Neurophysiological Investigation of the Brain Function. 437-440. Elsevier.