1.7 MB - IOP2014 - International Organization of Psychophysiology
Transcription
1.7 MB - IOP2014 - International Organization of Psychophysiology
INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATION OF PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY (IOP) President: Giuseppe CHIARENZA (Milan, Italy) Secretary: Hiroshi NITTONO (Hiroshima, Japan) Vice-President: Risto NÄÄTÄNEN (Helsinki, Finland) Treasurer: Robert J. BARRY (Wollongong, NSW, Australia) Directors: Erol BAŞAR (Turkey) Nicole BRUNEAU (France) John F. CONNOLLY (Canada) Vilfredo DE PASCALIS (Italy) Connie C. DUNCAN (USA) Sirel KARAKAŞ (Turkey) Wolfgang SKRANDIES (Germany) Joseph J. TECCE (USA) Juanita TODD (Australia) Maurits VAN DER MOLEN (The Netherlands) INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZING COMMITTEE OF IOP2014 HONORARY PRESIDENTS PRESIDENT Shin-ichi NIWA (Fukushima, Japan) & Tadao HORI (Hiroshima, Japan) Hisaki OZAKI (Ibaraki, Japan) EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Hiroshi NITTONO (Hiroshima, Japan) *Chairman Keiko OGAWA (Hiroshima, Japan) Keiichi ONODA (Shimane, Japan) Izumi MATSUDA (Chiba, Japan) LOCAL ORGANIZING COMMITTEE Kyosuke FUKUDA (Fukuoka) Atsuko GUNJI (Tokyo) Shinji HIRA (Hiroshima) Koichi HIRATA (Tochigi) Tadao HORI (Hiroshima) Akira IMAI (Nagano) Tatsuya IWAKI (Hiroshima) Tetsuko KASAI (Hokkaido) Akiyoshi KATADA (Gifu) Jun'ichi KATAYAMA (Hyogo) Tetsuo KIDA (Tokyo) Motohiro KIMURA (Ibaraki) Toshihiko KINOSHITA (Osaka) Yoshihiko KOGA (Tokyo) Kenta KUBO (Aichi) Hiroaki MASAKI (Saitama) Izumi MATSUDA (Chiba) Shinji MIYAKE (Fukuoka) Makoto MIYATANI (Hiroshima) Satoru MIYAUCHI (Hyogo) Harumitsu MUROHASHI (Hokkaido) Yuichiro NAGANO (Saitama) Ken NAGATA (Akita) Yasuhiro NAGEISHI (Kyoto) Hiroshi NITTONO (Hiroshima) Shin-ichi NIWA (Fukushima) Keiko OGAWA (Hiroshima) Hideki OHIRA (Aichi) Mieko OHSUGA (Osaka) Shinji OKAZAKI (Ibaraki) Keiichi ONODA (Shimane) Mariko OSAKA (Osaka) Hisaki OZAKI (Ibaraki) Hiroaki SHOJI (Ibaraki) Shugo SUWAZONO (Okinawa) Naoto SUZUKI (Kyoto) Madoka TAKAHARA (Fukushima) Noriyoshi TAKASAWA (Chiba) Hideki TANAKA (Hiroshima) Shozo TOBIMATSU (Fukuoka) Akio UMEZAWA (Fukui) Hirooki YABE (Fukushima) Akihiro YAGI (Hyogo) Fumio YAMADA (Osaka) Shuhei YAMAGUCHI (Shimane) Shigeto YAMAWAKI (Hiroshima) Katuo YAMAZAKI (Saitama) Masao YUKIE (Tochigi) SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM COMMITTEE Andrey ANOKHIN (USA) Robert BARRY (Australia) Erol BAŞAR (Turkey) Luis BASILE (Brazil) Gershon BEN-SHAKHAR (Israel) Edward BERNAT (USA) Gary BERNTSON (USA) Nicole BRUNEAU (France) Kenneth CAMPBELL (Canada) Giuseppe CHIARENZA (Italy) Hugo CRITCHLEY (UK) Valéria CSÉPE (Hungary) István CZIGLER (Hungary) Nina DANILOVA (Russia) Vilfredo DE PASCALIS (Italy) Connie C. DUNCAN (USA) Guido H. E. GENDOLLA (Switzerland) Shihui HAN (China) Thalìa HARMONY (Mexico) Oscar H HERNÁNDEZ VÁZQUEZ (Mexico) Christoph HERRMANN (Germany) Alexey M. IVANITSKY (Russia) Stuart J. JOHNSTONE (Australia) Sirel KARAKAŞ (Turkey) Jun'ichi KATAYAMA (Japan) Jürgen KAYSER (USA) Motohiro KIMURA (Japan) Michael J. LARSON (USA) Vladimir V. LAZAREV (Brazil) Jang-Han LEE (Korea) Yuejia LUO (China) Heikki LYYTINEN (Finland) Sanja MANCEVSKA (Macedonia) Silvana MARKOVSKA-SIMOSKA (Macedonia) Hiroaki MASAKI (Japan) Axel MECKLINGER (Germany) Svyatoslav MEDVEDEV (Russia) Satoru MIYAUCHI (Japan) Risto NÄÄTÄNEN (Finland) Hiroshi NITTONO (Japan) Márk MOLNÁR (Hungary) Hideki OHIRA (Japan) Keiichi ONODA (Japan) Murat ÖZGÖREN (Turkey) Jordan POP-JORDANOV (Macedonia) Nada POP-JORDANOVA (Macedonia) John W. ROHRBAUGH (USA) J. Peter ROSENFELD (USA) Henrique SEQUEIRA (France) Wolfgang SKRANDIES (Germany) Elyse S. SUSSMAN (USA) Joseph J. TECCE (USA) Juanita TODD (Australia) Markus ULLSPERGER (Germany) Pedro A. VALDÉS-SOSA (Cuba) Maurits VAN DER MOLEN (The Netherlands) Scott VRANA (USA) Roeljan WIERSEMA (Belgium) Hirooki YABE (Japan) Juliana YORDANOVA (Bulgaria) Xiaolin ZHOU (China) STAFF Tomomi ABE, So ASAHARA, Kasumi HAMADA, Midori HASHIMOTO, Emi HASUO, Mitsuo HAYASHI, Takahiro HIRAO, Taichi HIRAYAMA, Miyu HOGAKU, Keisuke IDA, Yunosuke INADA, Mariko ITO, Makoto IWANAGA, Tsubasa IZAKI, Kohei KAMBARA, Noriaki KANAYAMA, Yui KANGORI, Taishi KAWAMOTO, Sayaka KAWANO, Chie KAWASAKI, Mariko KOMATSU, Hikaru KURAMOCHI, Hiroyuki KURAOKA, Ryuma KURIBAYASHI, Aiko KURITA, Azusa KURIYAMA, Shoko MAKIHARA, Shigeto MIKI, Madoka MIYAGI, Akane MIYAZAKI, Ryohei MIZUOCHI, Miki MORI, Aiko MORITA, Sanae NAKA, Mariko NAKANO, Takashi NAKAO, Keita NAKAO, Shushi NAMBA, Keisuke NISHIKORI, Takeyuki OBA, Yuya OGAWA, Aya OKABE, Sachi ONOUE, Masato OSAKI, Akemi OSUGI, Natsuki SAITO, Kiriko SAKATA, Shogo SAKATA, Hiroshi SHIMIZU, Eri SUGAWARA, Kenta SUGIE, Fumie SUGIMOTO, Yoshinori SUGIURA, Kento TAKAHASHI, Saeko TANAKA, Rina TANAKA, Yuki TEIOKA, Asako TOYAMA, Asami UJITA, Lu XU, Fumie YAMAGUCHI, Erika YOSHIMORI, Enru YOU SUPPORTED BY Science Council of Japan, Japanese Society for Physiological Psychology and Psychophysiology, Japanese Society of Clinical Neurophysiology, The Japanese Psychological Association, Japan Neuroscience Society, Japanese Society for Medical and Biological Engineering, The Japanese Psychonomic Society, The Japanese Society for Cognitive Psychology, The Japanese Society of Psychiatry and Neurology, The Japanese Association of Special Education, Japan Ergonomics Society, Hiroshima City, Hiroshima Prefecture, Hiroshima Convention & Visitors Bureau, Hiroshima Cancer Seminar Public Interest Incorporated Foundation, Wfamp SPONSORED BY The Japan World Exposition 1970 Commemorative Fund, The Uehara Memorial Foundation, Brain Science Foundation, Astellas Pharma Inc., Asuka YOSHIKAWA, Brain Products GmbH, Creact International Corporation, Daikoku Denki Co., Ltd., Eli Lilly Japan K.K., Hiroshi NITTONO, Katsuo YAMAZAKI, KISSEI COMTEC CO., LTD. , Kitaohjishobo, Mazda Motor Corporation, Medical Try System, Meiji Seika Pharma Co., Ltd., Miyuki Giken Co., Ltd., MSD K.K., NIHON KOHDEN CORPORATION, Pfizer Japan Inc., Physio-Tech Co., Ltd., SANEI-VITALS, SHIMADZU CORPORATION, Shionogi & Co., Ltd., Spectratech Inc., Suntory Holdings Limited, Yoshitomiyakuhin Corporation – 1 – – 2 – Opening Ceremony Keynote Lecture 1 Ryuta Kawashima Welcome Reception 17:30-18:30 18:40-20:00 14:00-16:30 IOP Board of Directors Meeting Registration TUESDAY September 23 17:00-17:30 14:00-17:00 TIME Break 13:10-13:30 17:50-18:50 19:30-21:00 International Journal of Psychophysiology Editorial Board Meeting Break Keynote Lecture 3 Roberto D. Pascual-Marqui Symposium D3: Hemispheric Asymmetry of Cognitive Processes Symposium C3: Psychophysiology of Developmental Disorders Symposium B3: RIDE - A New Method for the Decomposition of ERPs Based on Latency Variability: Principles and Applications Symposium A3: Neurodynamic of Emotion and Pathology Break Symposium D2: Psychophysiology in Exercise Science Symposium C2: Psychophysiology at Industrial Setting Symposium B2: Psychophysiological and Clinical Results from Advanced EEG Analysis and Combined Methods 17:30-17:50 15:40-17:30 15:20-15:40 13:30-15:20 Poster Session 1 11:40-13:10 Symposium A2: Recent Developments in Psychophysiological InformationDetection Research: Integrating Laboratory and Field Findings 11:20-11:40 Break 11:20-11:40 19:00-21:00 17:40-19:00 16:40-17:40 16:20-16:40 13:30-16:20 13:10-13:30 Social Dinner at Hiroshima Museum of Art Travel time (20-min walk) Keynote Lecture 5 John J. B. Allen Break Symposium D5: Brain Organization of Creativity Symposium C5: Neurocognitive Profiles of Learning and Forgetting Languages as Reflected by ERPs Symposium B5: Visual Mismatch Negativity: A Unique Window to Automatic Visual Cognitive Processing Symposium A5: How Blindness Can Open Our Eyes on Brain Function and Plasticity Break Poster Session 2 Break 10:20-11:20 10:20-11:20 11:40-13:10 Keynote Lecture 4 Carles Escera 10:00-10:20 Break Keynote Lecture 2 Kenji Doya Break Symposium B7: Pros and Cons of Principal Components Analysis of ERP and EEG data Symposium A7: Timescales of Relevance in the Auditory System Break Poster Session 3 Break Vice-President’s Lecture Risto Näätänen 19:00-20:00 17:50-18:50 17:30-17:50 15:40-17:30 15:20-15:40 Attraction, Kagura Keynote Lecture 6 Naoyuki Osaka Break Oral Session 3: Emotion and Decision Making Symposium C8: Current trends in Psychophysiology of Individual Differences Symposium B8: Psychophysiological Perspectives on Inhibition and Conflict Symposium A8: Novel Psychophysiological Approaches to Investigating Social Communication Break Oral Session 2: Psychopharmacology and Neurochemistry Psychophysiological Perspective of Emotional Responsivity and Attentional Processes in Adult Psychopathology 13:30-15:20 Symposium C7: A 13:10-13:30 11:40-13:10 11:20-11:40 10:20-11:20 10:00-10:20 Oral Session 1: Perception and Cognition Symposium D4: Calling One's Own Name: Event-Related Potential Studies Break Symposium C6: Psychophysiology of Computer/Video Games Symposium C4: Neurofeedback Technology for Cognitive Ability Training 10:00-10:20 Symposium D1: Psychophysiology and Kansei Engineering Applications Symposium C1: Music, Language, Speech, and Brain 8:30-10:00 8:30-10:00 Poster Setup Symposium B6: Cognitive and Psychomotor Influence on Postural Control 8:00-10:00 FRIDAY September 26 Symposium B4: The Oscillations of Biological Systems: Methods and Perspective, Part 2 Poster Setup TIME Symposium B1: The Oscillations of Biological Systems: Methods and Perspective, Part 1 8:00-10:00 THURSDAY September 25 Symposium A6: Recent Research Topics on Eye Blink Behavior TIME Symposium A1: Functional Neuroimaging of Deception Poster Setup WEDNESDAY September 24 Symposium A4: Auditory Sensory Memory as Probed by Mismatch Negativity 8:00-10:00 8:30-10:00 TIME Awards and Closing Ceremony General Assembly of IOP Members Presidential Address Giuseppe A. Chiarenza Break Symposium C9: Toward a Visualization of the Cognitive Function: Traditional and New Approaches Symposium B9: Recent Psychophysiological Research in Children and Adolescents Symposium A9: ERP Indices for Language Processing in East and West: Cognitive Universals and Culture-Dependent Variables SATURDAY September 27 NOTE: Beverages and snacks are available during breaks at Room E (Himawari) where poster sessions take place. 12:00-12:30 11:30-12:00 10:20-11:20 10:00-10:20 8:30-10:00 TIME Floor Map (B2F, 2nd Basement Floor) Room E Registration Desk Room A Room B Room C Cloak Head Office Cosmos Room D Exhibition B th Booths Room E (Himawari) Layout of Poster Panels Poster presenters are requested to set up on the panel with the designated number during 8:00‐10:00 am on the day of presentation. Please stay in front of the posters during 11:40 am‐1:10 pm for discussion. – 3 – GENERAL INFORMATION Congress Venue International Conference Center Hiroshima Address: 1-5 Nakajima-cho, Naka-ku, Hiroshima 730-0811, Japan Phone: +81-82-242-7777, Fax: +81-242-8010, http://www.pcf.city.hiroshima.jp/icch/english.html Registration Desk The registration desk will be open at the lobby in front of Rooms B and C (Dahlia 1 & 2). September 23: 14:00–18:00, September 24-26: 8:00–18:00, September 27: 8:00–12:00 Registration Fees Members 40,000 yen / Non-members 50,000 yen Student or Post-doc Members 20,000 yen / Student or Post-doc Non-members 30,000 yen Accompanying Person 3,000 yen Coffee Breaks Beverages and snacks are available at Room E (Himawari) where poster sessions take place. Visiters can experience a Japanese tee ceremony (see page 30 of this program book). Exhibition Seven booths are open at the lobby in front of Room A (Phoenix Hall). Brain Products GmbH, Physio-Tech Co., Ltd., SANEI-VITALS, Creact International Corporation, Spectratech Inc./biz-mashup. LLC/B.R.Systems Inc., Creact International Corporation, SHIMADZU CORPORATION, Eli Lilly Japan K.K. Welcome Reception September 23 (Tuesday), 18:40–20:00 at Room E (Himawari) All participants are invited without reservations. Social Dinner September 25 (Thursday), 19:00–21:00 Hiroshima Museum of Art (3-2 Motomachi, Naka-ku, Hiroshima 730-0011, Japan) Phone: +81-82-223-2530, http://www.hiroshima-museum.jp/en/index.html For details, please refer to page 30 of this program book. *Advanced reservations required Attraction: Kagura (Japanese Traditional Theater) September 26 (Friday), 19:00–20:00 at Room E (Himawari) All participants are invited without reservations. For details including the history of Kagura and the story, please refer to page 31 of this program book. Language The official language is English. Wireless LAN Hiroshima Free Wi-Fi service is available at the congress venue. – 4 – INSTRUCTIONS FOR PRESENTERS Keynote Lectures Each speaker has 60 min. A brief Q & A time may or may not be included. The chair will introduce the speaker. An LCD projector is provided with a VGA connector cable. Mac users are requested to bring their own laptops with a Mini Display Port to VGA converter. Symposia Each speaker has 20 min, including a brief Q & A time. The duration of the symposium depends on the number of speakers. z z z three or four speakers: 90 min (20 min × 4 + extra 10 min). five speakers: 110 min (20 min × 5 + extra 10 min). six or seven speakers: 170 min (20 min × 7 + extra 30 min including breaks) The organizers are requested to control the allocation of time within this time window. An LCD projector is provided with a VGA connector cable. Mac users are requested to bring their own laptops with a Mini Display Port to VGA converter. Oral Sessions Each speaker has 20 min, including a brief Q & A time. The chair will introduce the speaker. An LCD projector is provided with a VGA connector cable. Mac users are requested to bring their own laptops with a Mini Display Port to VGA converter. Slide Preparation Speakers who use their own laptops (Windows 7 with PowerPoint 2010) can go directly to the room at least 15 min before the session starts. Speakers who want to use our laptops are requested to visit a slide center next to the registration desk at least 1 hour before the session starts (or on the day before). Please feel free to ask more information at the registration desk. Poster Sessions Poster sessions will take place at Room E (Himawari). The size of each poster panel is 90 cm wide and 180 cm height (vertical orientation). Thumbtacks will be provided at each poster panel. The posters will be set up on the panels with designated numbers during 8:00-10:00 am and removed by 5:00 pm on the day of presentation. *All the poster presenters are requested to attend in front of their posters from 11:40 am to 1:10 pm. *Beverages and snacks are available at Room E. – 5 – September 23, Tuesday September 23, Tuesday 13:30–16:00 Room A (Phoenix Hall) Public Symposium “Science of the Brain and the Mind” (in Japanese, for a general audience) Welcome Address: Shin-ichi Niwa (Japan) Closing Address: Tadao Hori (Japan) Chair: Hisaki Ozaki (Japan) Speakers: Ryuta Kawashima (Japan), Hideki Ohira (Japan), & Hideki Tanaka (Japan) Organizers: Keiko Ogawa (Japan), Tatsuya Iwaki (Japan), & Hiroshi Nittono (Japan) 14:00–17:00 Lobby in front of Rooms B & C (Dahlia 1 & 2) Registration 14:00–16:30 Room D (Cosmos) IOP Board of Director meeting 17:00–17:30 Room A (Phoenix Hall) Opening Ceremony In memoriam: Dietrich Lehmann & Enoch Callaway 17:30–18:30 Room A (Phoenix Hall) Keynote Lecture 1: Ryuta Kawashima (Japan) Real time monitoring of other’s state of mind during communication Chair: Hisaki Ozaki (Japan) 18:40–20:00 Room E (Himawari) Welcome Reception – 6 – September 24, Wednesday September 24, Wednesday 8:00– Room E (Himawari) Poster Setup 8:30–10:00 Room A (Phoenix Hall), Room B (Dahlia 1), Room C (Dahlia 2), Room D (Cosmos) Symposium 1 (90 min) [A1] Functional Neuroimaging of Deception Organizer: Svyatoslav V. Medvedev (Russia) Neural basis of deception Tatia M. C. Lee & Chetwyn C. H. Chan Reward sensitivity in the nucleus accumbens predicts dishonest behavior Nobuhito Abe Deception related changes in functional connectivity between prefrontal cortex and caudate nucleus Maxim Kireev, Natalia Medvedeva, Alexander Korotkov, & Svyatoslav V. Medvedev [B1] The Oscillations of Biological Systems: Methods and Perspective, Part 1 Organizers: Nina N. Danilova (Russia) & Gennady G. Knyazev (Russia) Approaches to the study of resting state oscillatory networks Gennady G. Knyazev, Nina V. Volf, & Ludmila V. Belousova Oscillatory activity in the organization of behavior of unicellular and multicellular organisms Tatiana N. Grechenko Oscillatory brain activity in the development and the actualization of semantic categories Nina N. Danilova Cortical brain network in learning from performance-related feedback Caroline Di Bernardi Luft & Joydeep Bhattacharya [C1] Music, Language, Speech and Brain Organizer: Olga Bazanova (Russia), Chairs: Atsuko Gunji (Japan) & Christo Pantev (Germany) Multimodal cortical plasticity and music Christo Pantev Cortical responses modulated by auditory feedback changes in speech production: An MEG study Atsuko Gunji & Hidehiko Okamoto How does women musical perception depend upon music performance experience and neurohumoral status? Olga M. Bazanova & Ekaterina D. Nikolenko Interhemispheric functional organization of brain cortex in musicians during improvisation Igor Sergeevich Dikiy, Liudmila Alexandrovna Dikaya, & Irina Anatol'evna Skirtach [D1] Psychophysiology and Kansei Engineering Applications Organizer: Tatsuya Iwaki (Japan) Psychophysiological index contributing to kansei engineering method Tatsuya Iwaki Phychophysiological measurements in kansei engineering based product developments: SANYO shaver case Shigekazu Ishihara The combination effect of sound environment and the odor in the mental work load Yoshiro Okazaki Choice-induced preference increase for chosen stimuli accompanies increased allocation of attentional resource to the stimuli Kenta Kimura & Jun'ichi Katayama – 7 – September 24, Wednesday 10:20–11:20 Room A (Phoenix Hall) Keynote Lecture 2: Kenji Doya (Japan) Toward the neurophysiology of mental simulation Chair: Hideki Ohira (Japan) 11:40–13:10 Room E (Himawari) Poster Session 1 (90 min) 13:30–15:20 Room A (Phoenix Hall), Room B (Dahlia 1), Room C (Dahlia 2), Room D (Cosmos) Symposium 2 (110 min) [A2] Recent Developments in Psychophysiological Information-Detection Research: Integrating Laboratory and Field Findings Organizer: Gershon Ben-Shakhar (Israel) Retrieval-induced forgetting: A potential countermeasure technique against psychophysiological memory detection methods Gershon Ben-Shakhar, Nurit Gronau, Lotem Elber, Shai Satran, & Assaf Breska Personality dimensions predict psychophysiological responses in the Concealed Information Test Liza Zvi & Eitan Elaad Application of CIT as an information detection technique in Japan Tokihiro Ogawa, Izumi Matsuda, & Michiko Tsuneoka Screening individuals with pretest data improves the performance of concealed information tests Izumi Matsuda, Tokihiro Ogawa, Michiko Tsuneoka, & Bruno Verschuere Review and analysis of the practical data conducted in Japanese criminal investigation Akemi Osugi [B2] Psychophysiological and Clinical Results from Advanced EEG Analysis and Combined Methods Organizer: Luis F. H. Basile (Brazil) EEG correlates of autobiographical memory as revealed by temporal and spatial ICA Gennady Knyazev Coherence and phase lag index analyses -A preliminary MEG/EEG sensor-level study on functional connectivities during the Sternberg memory task Shiho Okuhata & Tetsuo Kobayashi Reduced directional transmission of cortical oscillatory beta activity between attention and memory nodes in Alzheimer’s disease Roberto D. Pascual-Marqui, Keiichiro Nishida, Masafumi Yoshimura, Yuichi Kitaura, Toshiaki Isotani, Hiroshi Mii, & Toshihiko Kinoshita Common topography of beta activity during attention task engagement and resting Luis F. H. Basile, João R. Sato, Milkes Y. Alvarenga, Henrique A. Pasquini, Mariana P. Nucci, & Mirna D. Lozano (Continued) – 8 – September 24, Wednesday [C2] Psychophysiology at Industrial Setting Organizers: Akihiro Yagi (Japan) & Jun’ich Katayama (Japan) Effects of differences in task characteristics on autonomic nervous system responses Hiroyuki Kuraoka, Shinji Miyake, & Chikamune Wada Affective-evaluation difference observed at synchronization between music and respiration cannot be explained by the reaction time of sound change at different respiration phases Takashi G. Sato & Takehiro Moriya Pupil dilation reveals cognitive effort, and cognitive effortless Megan H. Papesh & Stephen D. Goldinger Irrelevant probe technique using somatosensory stimuli for evaluating the amount of attentional resource allocated to a task Fumie Sugimoto & Jun'ichi Katayama Quantitative analysis of trade-off between depth and width of visual information processing Kimihiro Yamanaka [D2] Psychophysiology in Exercise Science Organizer: Hiroaki Masaki (Japan) Effect of pressor response on increase response in cerebral blood flow to visual stimulation at rest and during exercise Naoyuki Hayashi & Yuji Yamaguchi The effects of acute exercise and hypoxia on cognitive function Soichi Ando, Takaaki Komiyama, Mizuki Sudo, & Yasuki Higaki Exercise and brain health in older adults with mild cognitive impairment Hyuma Makizako & Hiroyuki Shimada Positive association between childhood fitness and cognitive control Keita Kamijo & Hiroaki Masaki Balance training affects the psychophysiological characteristics of older women Andrey Podoinikov, Olga M. Bazanova, Ekaterina D. Nikolenko, Natalia Kholodina, & Oleg V. Kubryak 15:40–17:30 Room A (Phoenix Hall), Room B (Dahlia 1), Room C (Dahlia 2), Room D (Cosmos) Symposium 3 (110 min) [A3] Neurodynamic of Emotion and Pathology Organizers: Henrique Sequeira (France) & Joëlle Martineau (France) Looking for brain-body networks of affective pictures processing Henrique Sequeira, Fabien D'Hondt, & Jacques Honore Brain’s oscillatory responses in perception of emotional pictures Bahar Güntekin, Elif Tülay, Bilge Turp- Gölbası, & Erol Başar Cingulate functional connectivity and emotional dysregulation Chris Baeken Psychophysiological reactivity in blood-injection-injury phobia Jose M. Martinez-Selva, Juan P. Sanchez-Navarro, Enrique Maldonado, Eduvigis Carrillo, Sara Pineda, & Ginesa Torrente Emotional static and dynamic faces processing in autism spectrum disorders and typical development Joëlle Martineau, Nadia Hernandez, Laëtitia Roché, Catherine Barthélémy, Jean -Claude Elian, & Frédérique Bonnet-Brilhault (Continued) – 9 – September 24, Wednesday [B3] RIDE – A New Method for the Decomposition of ERPs Based on Latency Variability: Principles and Applications Organizers: Werner Sommer (Germany) & Chang Song Zhou (Hong Kong) Restoring latency-variable ERP components from single trials: A new approach to ERP analysis with residue iteration decomposition (RIDE) Changsong Zhou, Guang Ouyang & Werner Sommer The algorithms, utilities and tips about the toolbox of RIDE (residue iteration decomposition) Guang Ouyang, Werner Sommer, & Changsong Zhou Testing the stimulus-to-response bridging function of the P3b component by residue iteration decomposition (RIDE) Rolf Verleger, Kamila Smigasiewicz, Guang Ouyang, & Changsong Zhou Dissociating the LPC to affective words from the P3b with residue iteration decomposition (RIDE) Hadiseh Nowparast Rostami, Guang Ouyang, Mareike Bayer, Annekathrin Schacht, Changsong Zhou, & Werner Sommer The time course of semantic and syntactic processing in reading Chinese: A demonstration of using residue iteration decomposition (RIDE) in a rapid serial visual presentation (RSVP) paradigm Wang Suiping, Wang Fang, Guang Ouyang, & Changsong Zhou [C3] Psychophysiology of Developmental Disorders Organizers: Harumitsu Murohashi (Japan) & Giuseppe A. Chiarenza (Italy) Analysis of reading and writing performances of children with dyslexia before and after treatment with sublexical method Giuseppe A. Chiarenza, Federica Doniselli, Sara F. Di Pietro, Matteo Iudice, Eugenio Tonolli, & Paola Coati Face recognition in children with autism spectrum disorders Yosuke Kita A role of visual attention in expert word reading: Implications for the cause of developmental dyslexia Yasuko Okumura, Tetsuko Kasai, & Harumitsu Murohashi Psychophysilological evaluation of verbal working memory as risk factors for kanji word-reading difficulty in Japanese elementary school children Toshihide Koike, Mito Mekaru, & Takaaki Goto Eye fixation patterns and saccades of children with Dyslexia in Japanese Michiru Iwata, Shun Itagaki, Kazuyori Yagyu, & Harumitsu Murohashi [D3] Hemispheric Asymmetry of Cognitive Processes Organizer: Pavel Ermakov (Russia) Hemispheric asymmetry of aggressive behaviour and hereditary factors Pavel Ermakov Psychophysiological predictors for hemispheric functional asymmetry Irina Abakumova Hemispheric asymmetry in the pooling of local visual information Vitaly V. Babenko & Pavel Ermakov Mirror-image monozygotic twins: EEG spatial synchronization Elena Vorobyeva & Pavel Ermakov Interhemispheric distribution of event-related potentials as indicator of deceitful responses Igor Sergeevich Dikiy & Liudmila Alexandrovna Dikaya 17:50–18:50 Room A (Phoenix Hall) Keynote Lecture 3: Roberto D. Pascual-Marqui (Switzerland/Japan) Advances in EEG methods applied to intra-cortical connectivity inference and to functional imaging: Examples in psychiatry research Chair: Giuseppe A. Chiarenza (Italy) 19:30–21:00 Room D (Cosmos) Editorial Board Meeting – 10 – September 25, Thursday September 25, Thursday 8:00– Room E (Himawari) Poster Setup 8:30–10:00 Room A (Phoenix Hall), Room B (Dahlia 1), Room C (Dahlia 2), Room D (Cosmos) Symposium 4 (90 min) [A4] Auditory Sensory Memory as Probed by Mismatch Negativity Organizers: Hirooki Yabe (Japan) & Calres Escera (Spain) Simultaneous fMRI-EEG-DTI recording of MMN in schizophrenia Eiji Kirino Sound representations are time-compressed in sensory memory: Evidence from MMN Seiji Tamakoshi & Jun’ichi Katayama Functional relationships between mismatch negativity and early deviance-related effects Carles Escera, Maryam Aghamollaie, Heike Althen, Tetsuya Shiga, Katarzyna Zarnowiec, & Sabine Grimm Temporal integration of auditory information as revealed by MMN and earlier evoked potential correlates: A preliminary study Tetsuya Shiga, Miriam Cornella, Katarzina Zarnowiec, Shuntaro Itagaki, Michinari Nozaki, Satoko Asano, Yusuke Osakabe, Masayuki Hikita, Hirooki Yabe, & Carles Escera [B4] The Oscillations of Biological Systems: Methods and Perspective, Part 2 Organizers: Vilfredo De Pascalis (Italy) & Robert J. Barry (Australia) Effects of placebo analgesia and hypnotizability on prepulse inhibition of the startle reflex: A study of induced neural oscillatory activity Vilfredo De Pascalis & Paolo Scacchia Psychophysiological investigations of individual differences (personality orientations) using EEG & fMRI Joseph Ciorciari & John Gountas Problems in estimating oscillatory phase of the EEG at stimulus onset Robert J. Barry & Frances M. De Blasio Mapping the effects of prestimulus EEG band amplitude in an equiprobable Go/NoGo task Frances M. De Blasio & Robert J. Barry [C4] Neurofeedback Technology for Cognitive Ability Training Organizer: Olga Bazanova (Russia) Neurofeedback training efficiency of regularly cycling women may differ throughout the month, depending on progesterone status Olga M. Bazanova, Natalia Kholodina, & Ekaterina D. Nikolenko Neurofeedback games for the enhancement of cognitive abilities related to multitasking Olga Sourina, Xiyuan Hou, Lipo Wang, Wei Lun Lim, & Yisi Liu Individual alpha EEG indices as AD/HD syndrome severity predictors in children Elena Sapina EEG-enabled tests for neurofeedback training assessment Yisi Liu & Olga Sourina (Continued) – 11 – September 25, Thursday [D4] Calling One’s Own Name: Event-Related Potential Studies Organizer: Shugo Suwazono (Japan) SON negativity: an event-related potential component reflecting preattentive detection of subject’s own name (SON) Kosuke Itoh, Toshihiko Tateuchi, & Tsutomu Nakada ERP responses to unattended own names: Effects of emotion and experimental paradigms Hiroshi Arao & Shugo Suwazono ERP and time-frequency analysis of the response to hearing subject’s own name Kaori Tamura, Takaaki Mizuba, & Keiji Iramina Toward a new clinical application of auditory event-related potentials: Responses to one's own name - preliminary data in patients with parkinsonism Shugo Suwazono & Hiroshi Arao 10:20–11:20 Room A (Phoenix Hall) Keynote Lecture 4: Carles Escera (Spain) Tagging the acoustic world: regularity encoding from brainstem to cerebral cortex Chair: Hirooki Yabe (Japan) 11:40–13:10 Room E (Himawari) Poster Session 2 (90 min) 13:30–16:20 Room A (Phoenix Hall), Room B (Dahlia 1), Room C (Dahlia 2), Room D (Cosmos) Symposium 5 (170 min, with pauses) [A5] How Blindness Can Open Our Eyes on Brain Function and Plasticity Organizer: Emiliano Ricciardi (Italy) The blind brain: Anatomy, physiology and behaviour Maurice Ptito & Ron Kupers Structural, metabolic and functional changes in the congenitally blind brain Ron Kupers & Maurice Ptito Audio-tactile crossmodal correspondences in sighted, early, and late blind people Malika Auvray, Ophelia D. Deroy, Irène Fasiello, & Vincent Hayward When plasticity matters Ophelia D. Deroy Unmasking visual routes in cortical blindness Beatrice de Gelder The blind brain: How (lack of) vision shapes the development of the morphological and functional architecture of the human brain Pietro Pietrini Towards a supramodal organization of conceptual knowledge Emiliano Ricciardi (Continued) – 12 – September 25, Thursday [B5] Visual Mismatch Negativity: A Unique Window to Automatic Visual Cognitive Processing Organizers: István Czigler (Hungary) & Motohiro Kimura (Japan) Stimulus-driven prediction in vision: Its information-filtering function indicated by prediction-mismatch and prediction-match ERP effects Motohiro Kimura & Yuji Takeda Refractory issue and visual mismatch negativity: A skeleton in the cupboard István Czigler, István Sulykos, & Krisztina Kecskés-Kovács Visual MMN elicited by orientation changes of faces Wang Wei, Miao Danmin, & Zhao Lun Visual mismatch magnetic responses to a windmill pattern in first episode and chronic schizophrenia: An MEG study Toshihiko Maekawa, Itta Nakamura, Naotoshi Ohara, Yuko Oda, Toshiaki Onitsuka, Tomokazu Urakawa, & ShozoTobimatsu Early visual evoked potentials and mismatch negativity in Alzheimer’s disease and Mild Cognitive Impairment: Cross-sectional findings and longitudinal follow-up George Stothart, Nina Kazanina, Andrea Tales, & Risto Näätänen Hypersensitivity to change in children with Autism Spectrum Disorder: Convergent evidence from visual and auditory MMN studies Nicole Bruneau, Helen Cléry, Joëlle Malvy, Catherine Barthélémy, Frédérique Bonnet -Brilhault, & Marie Gomot [C5] Neurocognitive Profiles of Learning and Forgetting Languages as Reflected by ERPs Organizers: Valéria Csépe (Hungary) & Karsten Steinhauer (Canada) Learning and forgetting languages – An introduction to ERP approaches Karsten Steinhauer Prosodic bootstrapping: ERP correlates of emerging word stress template in infants Valéria Csépe, Linda Garami, Anett Ragó, & Ferenc Honbolygó Component changes in ERP profiles during language acquisition Phaedra Royle & Karsten Steinhauer Two languages in one brain: Competition and control in the syntax of late acquired L2 John E. Drury Prosodic priming in second language lexical identification: Evidence from an ERP study Ferenc Honbolygó, Andrea Kóbor, Angelika Becker, Claudia Friedrich, & Valéria Csépe The case of a non-native-like first language: ERP evidence of first language (L1) attrition in lexical and morphosyntactic processing Kristina Kasparian, Francesco Vespignani, & Karsten Steinhauer [D5] Brain Organization of Creativity Organizer: Svatoslav V. Medvedev (Russia) Personality specific differences in EEG reactivity on convergent and divergent thinking Olga M. Razumnikova & Anna A. Yashanina Brain organization in creative thinking Maria G. Starchenko, Maxim V. Kireev, & Svyatoslav V. Medvedev Spontaneous creativity: Its theoretical and neurocognitive framework Joydeep Bhattacharya & Geraint Wiggins The structure of functional brain EEG network is sensitive to genre specific musical creativity: a study on jazz and classical piano music performance Ernesto Pereda, Shama Rahman, & Joydeep Bhattacharya Inter- and intrahemispheric functional organization of brain cortex in artists during creative process Igor Sergeevich Dikiy, Liudmila Alexandrovna Dikaya, & Viktoriya Viktorovna Karpova Brain mechanisms of intuitive problem solving in board game experts Keiji Tanaka, Xiaohong Wan, & Kang Cheng – 13 – September 25, Thursday 16:40–17:40 Room A (Phoenix Hall) Keynote Lecture 5: John J. B. Allen (USA) Neural systems underlying risk for depression: Towards a neurally-informed treatment approach Chair: Izumi Matsuda (Japan) 19:00–21:00 Social Dinner at Hiroshima Museum of Art * 20-minutes walk from the congress venue. Taxis can be booked at the reception desk. – 14 – September 26, Friday September 26, Friday 8:00– Room E (Himawari) Poster Setup 8:30–10:00 Room A (Phoenix Hall), Room B (Dahlia 1), Room C (Dahlia 2), Room D (Cosmos) Symposium 6 (90 min) [A6] Recent Research Topics on Eye Blink Behavior Organizer: Fumio Yamada (Japan) Separating the effects on cognitive processing of the startle stimulus and response Terry D. Blumenthal An investigation into the relationship between spontaneous eye blinks and cognitive processing Kyosuke Fukuda Using eye blink measures to determine deceptive intent Frank M. Marchak The processes involved with fewer eyeblinks in a concealed information test Takuro Otsuka, Mitsuyoshi Mizutani, & Fumio Yamada [B6] Cognitive and Psychomotor Influence on Postural Control Organizers: Olga Bazanova (Russia) & Paula Viana Wackermann (Germany) Postural control and neurological rehabilitation Paula Viana Wackermann Effects of respiratory sinus arrhythmia biofeedback training on alpha EEG activity, heart rate variability, postural control and shooting performance in young athletes Anastasia Kovaleva, Vladimir Kasatkin, & Konstantin Bochaver Changes in vertical stance parameters in humans while viewing different images Oleg Kubryak, Alexandra Guseva, & Sergey Grohovsky Postural control training using Aikido improves psychomotor performance Olga M. Bazanova, Natalia Kholodina, Yumiko Kurose –Payet, Jackues Payet, Ekaterina D. Nikolenko, & Andrey Sh. Podoinikov [C6] Psychophysiology of Computer/Video Games Organizers: Nobuyuki Kawai (Japan) & Yuichiro Nagano (Japan) The impact of active coping aspects on autonomic responses during video game playing Yuichiro Nagano, Rina Taira, Kohei Fuseda, Nobuyuki Kawai, Shota Watanabe, & Kazuo Okanoya Event-related P300 reflects enthusiasm for playing video games: The existence of an opponent increases immersion Kenta Kubo, Kazuo Okanoya, & Nobuyuki Kawai Psychological and physiological responses for flow state during a game task Shunya Omori, Yuichiro Nagano, Takefumi Kobayashi, & Jun'ichi Katayama Video game exposure and recognition of facial expressions: Event-related potential data Yoshiyuki Tamamiya & Kazuo Hiraki [D6] Oral Session 1: Perception and Cognition Chair: Wolfgang Skrandies (Germany) An event-related brain potential study on intra- and inter-modal duration discrimination: Differential effects of task difficulty Emi Hasuo, Emilie Gontier, Takako Mitsudo, Yoshitaka Nakajima, Shozo Tobimatsu, & Simon Grondin Learning mathematical rules affects the frequencies of electrical brain activity Wolfgang Skrandies & Alexander Klein Envelope-following responses in MEG and EEG as indices of temporal processing in the human auditory system Huizhen Tang, Jon Brock, Stephen Crain, & Blake Johnson Attentional selection of dissociated global and local letters: An MEG study Mitchell Vades-Sosa, Jorge Iglesias, Maria A. Bobes, Jafri Abdullah, NorSafira Elaina, & Alwani Alwani – 15 – September 26, Friday 10:20–11:20 Room A (Phoenix Hall) Vice-President’s Lecture: Risto Näätänen (Estonia/Finland) The mismatch negativity (MMN) - a unitary biomarker for predicting schizophrenia onset Chair: Juanita Todd (Australia) 11:40–13:10 Room E (Himawari) Poster Session 3 (90 min) 13:30–15:20 Room A (Phoenix Hall), Room B (Dahlia 1), Room C (Dahlia 2), Room D (Cosmos) Symposium 7 (110 min) [A7] Timescales of Relevance in the Auditory System Organizer: Juanita Todd (Australia) Fine-grained violations in rhythmic auditory stimulation modulate the human frequency following response Katarzyna Zarnowiec, Jordi Costa-Faidella, & Carles Escera On the interaction of temporal and formal prediction in auditory processing Alessandro Tavano & Erich Schröger Resolution of human auditory perception is determined by frequency of oscillatory activity in the auditory cortex Alina Baltus & Christoph S. Herrmann Order-driven distortions in auditory relevance filtering systems Juanita Todd [B7] Pros and Cons of Principal Components Analysis of ERP and EEG Data Organizers: Robert J. Barry (Australia) & Hiroshi Nittono (Japan) What do principal components mean? A potential risk of overinterpreting PCA results Hiroshi Nittono & Izumi Matsuda ERPs in long and short ISI dishabituation tasks: A comparison using PCA Genevieve Z. Steiner, Robert J. Barry, & Frances M. De Blasio Time-frequency PCA of event-related EEG changes in the Orienting Reflex Frances M. De Blasio, Robert J. Barry, Edward M. Bernat, & Genevieve Z. Steiner Caffeine effects on sequential processing in the equiprobable Go/NoGo task Robert J. Barry, Frances M. De Blasiao, & Adele E. Cave Decomposing affective and cognitive subcomponents of late positive potentials by temporal -spatial principal component analysis Izumi Matsuda & Hiroshi Nittono [C7] A Psychophysiological Perspective of Emotional Responsivity and Attentional Processes in Adult Psychopathology Organizer: Danielle Mathersul (USA) Autonomic arousal responsivity in Autism Spectrum Disorder: Implications for social motivation Danielle Mathersul, Skye McDonald, & Jacqueline A. Rushby Empathy and arousal to emotional videos in Autism Spectrum Disorder Emily M. Trimmer, Skye McDonald, & Jacqueline A. Rushby Behavioural and neural deficits in adults with Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) throughout complex probabilistic association learning Matthew P. F. Gerathy & Jacqueline A. Rushby Electrocortical reactivity to emotional faces distinguishes first degree relatives of individuals with major depression Anna J. Watters, Anthony W. F. Harris, & Leanne M. Williams Impaired emotional prosody processing in severe traumatic brain injury Jacqueline A. Rushby, Skye McDonald, Francesca Froreich, Alana Fisher, Nicklas Parks, & Jaimi Iredale (Continued) – 16 – September 26, Friday [D7] Oral Session 2: Psychopharmacology and Neurochemistry Chair: Markus Ullsperger (Germany) The role of serotonin (5-HT) in performance monitoring and control: A combined genetic and pharmacological EEG study Adrian G. Fischer, Tanja Endrass, Martin Reuter, Christian Kubisch, & Markus Ullsperger Genger differences in association between serotonin transporter gene polymorphism a nd resting-state EEG activity Nina V. Volf, Ludmila V. Belousova, Gennady G. Knyazev, & Alexander V. Kulikov Steady State visually evoked potential (SSVEP) phase change as an index of Spatial Working Memory task performance: The influence of nootropic supplementation David A. Camfield, Andrew Scholey, Richard Silberstein, Andrew Pipingas, & Con Stough Brain development, drug therapy and EEG photic driving reactivity in partial epilepsy Vladimir V. Lazarev, Maria Alice Genofre, & Leonardo C. deAzevedo The role of a default mode network in perceptual information processing Hiroakira Matsui, Osamu Hoshino, & Kazuhiro Tsuboi 15:40–17:30 Room A (Phoenix Hall), Room B (Dahlia 1), Room C (Dahlia 2), Room D (Cosmos) Symposium 8 (110 min) [A8] Novel Psychophysiological Approaches to Investigating Social Communication Organizers: Keiko Ogawa (Japan) & Anne S. Warlaumont (USA) Role of REM sleep in the emotional brain regulation for social pain Keiko Ogawa & Erika Otani Perceived untrustworthiness of a face goes beyond its race when it comes to empathizing with others’ pain: An event-related potentials study Federica Meconi & Paola Sessa Role of pupil-synchronization in trust Mariska E. Kret, Masaki Tomonaga, Carsten de Dreu, Agneta Fischer, & Tetsuro Matsuzawa Mothers' multimodal information processing is modulated by multimodal interactions with their infants Yukari Tanaka, Hirokata Fukushima, Kazuo Okanoya, & Masako Myowa-Yamakoshi Linking infant communication behavior to neurophysiology using computat ional modeling Anne S. Warlaumont [B8] Psychophysiological Perspectives on Inhibition and Conflict Organizers: Maurits W. van der Molen (The Netherlands) & Robert J. Barry (Australia) Covert response inhibition in choice reaction time tasks Franck P. Vidal Selective inhibition of response-related processing Maurits W. van der Molen, Marijke van de Laar, Wery P. M. van den Wildenberg, & Geert, J. M. van Boxtel ERP components and performance in the equiprobable Go/NoGo task: Inhibition in children Robert J. Barry & Frances M. De Blasio Proactive and reactive cognitive controls: A brain potential study Karen L. Mansfield, Maurits W. van der Molen, & Geert J. M. van Boxtel Training-induced improvements in inhibitory control Nicholas Benikos, Stuart J. Johnstone, & Steven J. Roodenrys (Continued) – 17 – September 26, Friday [C8] Current Trends in Psychophysiology of Individual Differences Organizers: Vilfredo De Pascalis (Italy) & Boris V. Chernyshev (Russia) Individual differences in electrophysiological correlates of auditory attention Boris V. Chernyshev, Dina M. Ramendik, Ivan E. Lazarev, Evgeniya S. Osokina, & Nikita A. Novikov Role of individual Posterior Dominant alpha Rhythm frequency EEG in psychophysiological individual differences Olga M. Bazanova Personality-related differences in EEG correlates of self-referential processing Gennady G. Knyazev Mental ability and information processing during discrimination of auditory motion patterns: Effects on P3 and mismatch negativity Vilfredo De Pascalis, Enrico Varriale, Maria Fulco, & Francesca Fracasso [D8] Oral Session 3: Emotion and Decision Making Chair: Márk Molnár (Hungary) Risky and cautious choice-making – age-dependent changes of feedback related negativity in a gambling task Márk Molnár, Zsófia K. Kardos, Roland Boha, Bálint File, & Brigitta Tóth Decision-making in individuals with intellectual disabilities revealed by near infrared spectroscopy Hiroaki Shoji, Ayano Mizokoshi, Taichi Hirayama, & Hisaki Ozaki Effect of emotion reappraisal on phasic cardiovascular responses to affective pictures Jonathan R. Krygier, James A. J. Heathers, James J. Gross, Maree Abbott, & Andrew H. Kemp The relationship between resting state cortical hemodynamics and emotion regulation Noriaki Kanayama, Satoru Sakurai, Hirona Konishi, Tomoya Matsumoto, Yasumasa Okamoto, & Shigeto Yamawaki Neuroticism facilitates daytime wakefulness and sleep devaluation via higher neural efficiency in the bilateral prefrontal cortex Takuya Yoshiike, Ken’ichi Kuriyama, Motoyasu Honma, Hiroki Ikeda, & Yoshiharu Kim 17:50–18:50 Room A (Phoenix Hall) Keynote Lecture 6: Naoyuki Osaka (Japan) Understanding self and others in the social working brain Chair: Jun’ichi Katayama (Japan) 19:00–20:00 Room E (Himawari) Attraction, Kagura (a Japanese traditional theater) – 18 – September 27, Saturday September 27, Saturday 8:30–10:00 Room A (Phoenix Hall), Room B (Dahlia 1), Room C (Dahlia 2) Symposium 9 (90 min) [A9] ERP Indices for Language Processing in the East and the West: Cognitive Universals and Culture-Dependent Variables Organizer: Shingo Tokimoto (Japan) Neural activity in processing discontinuous dependency in sentences: Universality and peculiarity of the Japanese sentence processing Shingo Tokimoto Parafoveal preview effects in alphabetic languages and Chinese: Evidence from ERP/eye movement coregistration Werner Sommer, Nan Li, Florian Niefind, Olaf Dimigen, & Suiping Wang Processing construction-based pragmatic constraints during sentence comprehension: Evidence from Chinese and English Xiaoming Jiang, Mengyan Zhu, & Xiaolin Zhou Computation for syntactic dependency at language-culture interface: A view from Japanese honorific processing Hiromu Sakai, Shengyan Long, Yingyi Luo, & Manami Sato [B9] Recent Psychophysiological Research in Children and Adolescents Organizer: Bram Dierckx (The Netherlands), Chair: Giuseppe A. Chiarenza (Italy) A prospective study of heart rate and externalising behaviours in young children Bram Dierckx, Rianne Kok, Joke H. M. Tulen, Vincent W. Jaddoe, Albert Hofman, Frank C. Verhulst, Marianne J. Bakermans-Kranenburg, Marinus H. van Ijzendoorn, & Henning Tiemeier Alterations in HPA-axis and autonomic nervous system functioning in childhood anxiety disorders point to a chronic stress hypothesis Gwen Dieleman, Anja C. Huizink, Joke H. M. Tulen, Elisabeth M. W. J. Utens, Hanneke Creemers, Jan van der Ende, & Frank C. Verhulst Temperament, Character and QEEG in children with ADHD-C and ADHD-C+ODD Giuseppe A. Chiarenza, Jorge Bosch-Bayard, Stefania Villa, Marco P. Chiarenza, Lidice Galan, Eduardo Aubert, & Pedro Valdes Sosa No-Go P3, a heritable neural marker of inhibitory control, prospectively predicts regular smoking in adolescents Andrey P. Anokhin & Simon Golosheykin [C9] Toward a Visualization of the Cognitive Function: Traditional and New Approaches Organizer: Seiji Tamakoshi (Japan), Discussant: Robert J. Barry (Australia) Transition of attentional allocation for deviant stimulus reflected by ERP P3 Fumihito Morimoto Increaced difficulty in visual discrimination enhances attentional capture by both visual and auditory deviant stimuli Fumie Sugimoto & Jun'ichi Katayama Common neural mechanism for maintaining representation in visual mental imagery and visual short-term memory Keiko Yamazaki The association between childhood obesity and neuroelectric measures of cognitive control Keita Kamijo & Charles H. Hillman 10:20–11:20 Room A (Phoenix Hall) Presidential Address: Giuseppe A. Chiarenza (Italy) Psychophysiology of reading Chair: Hiroshi Nittono (Japan) – 19 – September 27, Saturday 11:30–12:00 Room A (Phoenix Hall) General Assembly of IOP members 12:00–12:30 Room A (Phoenix Hall) Awards and Closing Ceremony – 20 – Poster session 1 POSTER SESSION 1 (September 24, Wednesday) 1. Development of systems for measuring and analyzing autonomic nerve activity using LabView and its application Yoshimitsu Okita, Kazuhiko Ishihara, Yutaka Taira, Motoko Takaoka, Kumiko Ohara, Motohiko Kimura, Toshifumi Sugiura, & Harunobu Nakamura 2. Development of human computer interface based on eye movement using Emotiv EEG heads et Hiroyuki Dekihara & Tatsuya Iwaki 3. Development of neurocommunicator, a mobile BMI/BCI system for communication aid Yoshiko Nakamura & Ryohei P. Hasegawa 4. Impact of cognitive and personality profiles on mental-imagery based brain-computer interface-control performance Camille Jeunet, Fabien Lotte, Martin Hachet, & Bernard N'Kaoua 5. Effect of transcranial magnetic stimulation applied over the premotor cortices on Bayesian estimation in tactile temporal-order judgment Shigeki Takeuchi, Hirofumi Sekiguchi, & Makoto Miyazaki 6. Tonic balance of neural excitation and inhibition for improving perceptual performance Maho Horinaga, Osamu Hoshino, & Kazuhiro Tsuboi 7. EEG informational code dependence on the functional state: General trends and characteristic period Alexey A. Mekler & Sergey V. Borisenok 8. The study of EEG complexity in the positive and negative emotions induced by music Alexey A. Mekler, Akio Mori, Kazuma Oki, Ryo Koshizawa, Masaki Takayose, Nahoko T Minakawa, Vladimir S. Orlov, & Elizaveta Galperina 9. Systemic processes in the brain: The EEG Study on the emotions of different hierarchical levels and signs Alexey A. Mekler, Ivan Gorbunov, & Vladimir Gavrilov 10. The subjective localization of acoustic stimuli in the body Nickolay A. Almayev, Vasiliy A. Sadov, & Alexander S. Tarkhov 11. Source localization of brain electrical activity while listening to high -resolution digital sounds with inaudible high-frequency components Ryuma Kuribayashi & Hiroshi Nittono 12. EEG correlates of perception of tonal modulation in musical fragments Grigorii S Radchenko, Sergei B. Parin, Sophia A. Polevaya, Marina N. Korsakova -Kreyn, & Alexander I. Fedotchev 13. Psychophysiological correlates of the "native" and "alien" music perception Alla Vladimirovna Toropova, Irina Nikolaevna Simakova, & Olga Mikhailovna Bazanova 14. The role of parents in educating the math and musical abilities of children from infancy to seven years Olga M. Bazanova, Anna V. Kondratenko, Tatiana I. Petrenko, & Naoko Takehara 15. Distinction between neural correlates of audiovisual temporal order and simultaneity judgments Kozue S Matsuzaki, Hiroshi Kadota, Takuo Aoyama, Shigeki Takeuchi, Hirofumi Sekiguchi, Takanori Kochiyama, & Makoto Miyazaki 16. EEG functional brain connectivity changes associated to the perception of binaural beats : A study based on information theory Ernesto Pereda, Christos Ioannou, & Joydeep Bhattacharya 17. Effects of the smell of young barley grass on autonomic nervous system Yasuyuki Aotsuka, Yoshimitsu Okita, Momoe Ukeguchi, Isao Takahashi, Motohiko Kimura, Toshi fumi Sugiura, & Harunobu Nakamura 18. Unpleasant odor accelerates the sound processing in brain Meicong Xu, Xi Chen, Isao Takahashi, Yoko Mizutani, Hisashi Hirata, & Toshifumi Sugiura 19. Does color surroundings affect the pain-related somatosensory event-related potentials (SEPs) to painful electrical stimulus? Kenzo Konishi, Midori Hashimoto, Ippei Umeki, Seiya Tahara, Yushi Kato, & Jun-ichi Akiyama 20. Averaging number in MMN calculations suitable for clinical application Kazuko Kanno, Shuntaro Itagaki, Takashi Matsuoka, Tetsuya Shiga, Michinari Nozaki, Satoko Asano, Yusuke Osakabe, Masayuki Hikita, Norikatsu Itoh, & Hirooki Yabe – 21 – Poster session 1 21. Cortical regions involved in integration of visual information of point -light walker and background motion velocity Tamaki Miyamoto 22. The role of different class neurons of cat visual cortex in the local synchronization Evgeniya Belova & Irina Ischenko 23. Specific "vision deficit": Description and primary analysis Gennady S. Voronkov 24. Psychophysiological analysis of multidimensional structure of brightness perception in normal and altered states of consciousness Andrey A. Kiselnikov, Ivan S. Pozdniakov, Anastasiya O. Myasnichenko, Alexander V. Vartanov, Janna M. Glozman, Stanislav A. Kozlovskiy, & Maria M. Pyasik 25. Correlates of conscious synchronous stimulation perception - a steady-state EEG study Marcin Koculak, Urszula Gorska, & Marek Binder 26. Components of event-related fields exhibited during apparent motion illusion with a binocular stereoscopic stimulus: A magnetoencephalographic study Akira Imai, Hiroki Takase, Ikumi Hoshino, Keita Tanaka, & Yoshinori Uchikawa 27. An integrative framework of the cutaneous neural encoding of touch, pain, cold, and heat sensations: Mechanoreceptors activity patterns versus “labeled lines” Sofia Alexandrovna Polevaia & Alexandr Vasilievitsch Zeveke 28. The oculomotor activity in semiprojective psychological research Y.V. Bessonova, L.A. Lobanova, V.E. Mikhailov, & A. A. Oboznov 29. Visual evoked potential related to visual imagery Keiko Ogawa & Naruho Hara 30. Sensory modality of the stop-signal influences response inhibition and error detection: An event -related potentials study Magdalena Senderecka 31. How the type of go and stop stimuli is reflected the behavioral performance and event -related potential components using the stop-signal task: Preliminary study for children with ADHD Yasushi Nakano & Shinji Okazaki 32. Electrophysiological measures reveal similar capacity limits for both present and absent information Hiroyuki Tsubomi, Keisuke Fukuda, Katsumi Watanabe, & Edward K. Vogel 33. EEG effects on electrophysiological and behavioural responses during a cued CPT Diana Karamacoska, Robert J. Barry, & Frances M. De Blasio 34. Physiological sources of stimulus-preceding negativity: Source analysis using fMRI and ERP Yasunori Kotani, Yoshimi Ohgami, Jun-ichiro Arai, Shigeru Kiryu, & Yusuke Inoue 35. The approach of visual stimuli influences expectation of subsequent somatosensory stimuli Tsukasa Kimura & Jun'ichi Katayama 36. Assessing a viewer's interest in video clips by P3 amplitude and alpha-band power in a single-stimulus probe method Shigeto Miki & Hiroshi Nittono 37. Task-related changes in functional properties of the human brain network underlying attentional control Tetsuo Kida, Emi Tanaka, & Ryusuke Kakigi 38. Attention to emotional picture modulates pupillary light reflex Syoichi Iwasaki 39. Attentional bias of sexual offenders against child on pedophilic sexual stimuli Bomyi Jeon, Gilchan Ra, & Jang-Han Lee 40. Transition of attention in three-stimulus oddball paradigm reflected by ERP P3 Fumihito Morimoto & Jun'ichi Katayama 41. Lower gamma-band phase synchronization involves in top-down attention in the attentional blink Ken Kihara & Yuji Takeda 42. Auditory selective attention and ERP: Comparison between the ABR and Nd Kazunari Ikeda 43. Early and late components of stimulus-preceding negativity prior to face, word, and symbol stimuli Yoshimi Ohgami, Yasunori Kotani, Jun-Ichiro Arai, Shigeru Kiryu, & Yusuke Inoue – 22 – Poster session 1 44. Manifestations of attentional lapses in auditory evoked potential Ivan E. Lazarev, Boris V. Chernyshev, Dmitri V. Bryzgalov, Anastasiya S. Antonenko, Elena A. Arkhipova, & Galiya R. Khusyainova 45. Habituation processes of skin conductance response (SCR) and normalize pulse volume (NPV) in pseudo concealed information test Yuki Hamamoto, Takehiro Komatsu, Mariko Takeuchi, Hitoshi Yonemori, Seigo Ishimura, & Yuko Sugisawa 46. Psychophysiological mechanisms of the dynamic stereotypes Evgeny Aydarkin 47. Physiological mechanisms of intermodal interactions in the sensory masking Marina Pavlovskaya 48. Cerebral examination of letter fluencies due to vocalization and handwriting Yui Kangori, Sachi Onoue, Yusuke Seya, Hiroaki Shoji, & Hisaki Ozaki 49. ERP responses to code-switching in cognate/non-cognate word recognition by Chinese-Japanese bilinguals Yingyi Luo, Changhao Jiang, Shengyan Long, & Hiromu Sakai 50. An event-related potential study on matching processes of numeral classifiers and nouns Tomoki Uno, Yasuko Okumura, & Tetsuko Kasai 51. Electrophysiological findings of syntactic anomalies in patients with bipolar disorder and sc hizophrenia: A P600 study Sung Hwa Kim, Chang Woo Lee, Vin Ryu, Ra Yeon Ha, Su Jin Lee, Jee Soo You, & Hyun Sang Cho 52. The time course of lexical stress activation revealed by event-related brain potentials Simone Sulpizio, Francesco Vespignani, & Remo Job 53. Writing letter fluency with dominant and non-dominant hand by NIRS Sachi Onoue, Yui Kangori, Yusuke Seya, Hiroaki Shoji, & Hisaki Ozaki 54. Behavioral and cognitive correlates of foreign language proficiency Valeriia Demareva & Sophia Polevaya 55. Type A and B personalities from a psychological perspective among medical students Faisal A. Alnasir & Abdul Rahman Alfulaij 56. Electrodermal response in a clinical and nonclinical group in a stressful cognitive and emotional task Izabela Krejtz, Marzena Rusanowska, John Nezlek, Paweł Holas, & Andrzej Wiatrow 57. Skin conductance measures of emotional reactivity to threatening stimuli in obsessive -compulsive disorder versus panic disorder Susan J. Thomas, Craig J. Gonsalvez, & Stuart J. Johnstone 58. Neuropsychological and psychophysiological mechanisms of attention deficit Janna Glozman, Irina Shevchenko, Sergey Kiselev, Ekaterina Nurieva, Stanislav Kozlovskiy, Maria Pyasik, & Andrey Kiselnikov 59. Characteristics of passive speech processing in children with typical developmen t and with autistic spectrum disorders Kota Suzuki, Atsuko Gunji, Tomoka Kobayashi, Hiroshige Takeichi, Heng Li, Akira Yasumura, & Masumi Inagaki 60. Hemodynamic changes during problem-making and solving in typically development adults Kasumi Hamada, Masumi Aoki, & Shinji Okazaki 61. Effect of osmotic-release methylphenidate in adult attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder by measuring mismatch negativity Shuntaro Itagaki, Takashi Matsuoka, Tetsuya Shiga, Kazuko Kanno, Michinari Nozaki, Satoko Asano, Yusuke Osakab e, Masayuki Hikita, Shin-ichi Niwa, & Hirooki Yabe 62. An ERP study of the relationship between anticipation, executive control and performance monitoring under interference condition in children with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder Masumi Aoki & Shinji Okazaki 63. Decision making process in gambling task with several conditions of response selection Aya Okabe 64. Deficit of executive abilities as a risk factor for weakness in grammar understanding in Russian -speaking children - longitudinal research Sergey Kiselev 65. Default mode network in young male adults with autism spectrum disorder: Relationship with autism spectrum traits Miinyoung Jung, Hirotaka Kosaka, Daisuke Saito, Makoto Ishitobi, Toshio Munesue, Akemi Tomod a, Yuji Wada, Hidehiko Okazawa, & Tetsuya Iidaka – 23 – Poster session 2 POSTER SESSION 2 (September 25, Thursday) 1. Hemispheric asymmetry of deviation-detection sensitivity as reflected by the TWI function of MMN Michinari Nozaki, Yusuke Osakabe, Satoko Asano, Norikatsu Itoh, Masayuki Hikita, Kazuko Kanno, Tetsuya Shiga, Shuntaro Itagaki, Takashi Matsuoka, & Hirooki Yabe 2. Hemodynamic activites and the electroencephalogram during relaxation Seiya Uchida, Tsutomu Kamei, Kiyoshi Yamaoka, & Hisanobu Sugano 3. A study on measurement cutaneous hand blood flow in patients with schizophrenia and schizoaffective disorder treating with atypical antipsychotics Linda F. Kader, Arpandy Reza, Blessing Esther, Ootsuka Youichirou, & William Blessing 4. Trait anxiety modulates emotional expression processing Eligiusz Wronka, Karolina J. Swider, & Wioleta Walentowska 5. The influence of emotional expression on visual competition between facial stimuli Karolina J. Swider & Eligiusz Wronka 6. Some ‘faces’ are faces more than the other ‘faces’. Evidence from N170 Eligiusz Wronka, Karolina J. Swider, & Wioleta Walentowska 7. Event-related brain potential study of the effects of makeup on facial recognition Keiko Tagai, Hitomi Shimakura, Hiroko Isobe, Haruna Yamanami, & Hiroshi Nittono 8. Event-related potentials associated with matching in fashion coordination Erika Yoshimori & Hiroshi Nittono 9. Evaluation of taste preference and the following memory retrieval: An ERP study Koki Tsuji, Midori Shibata, Arisa Sato, & Satoshi Umeda 10. The effect of force parameter modification on the contingent negative variation Lu Xu, Werner Sommer, Noriyoshi Takasawa, & Hiroaki Masaki 11. The modulation of muscle activity for constant force control by the cognitive processes involved in response-conflict task Tatsufumi Fujii, Hiroshi Naito, & Kazumitsu Shinohara 12. Change or stick? Anticipation processes associated with subjective and objective probability of winning in a Monty Hall Dilemma task Takahiro Hirao, Tim I. Murphy, & Hiroaki Masaki 13. The effect of monetary punishment on error monitoring in a Go/Nogo task Maruo Yuya, Sommer Werner, & Masaki Hiroaki 14. Effects of countermeasures on P300-based concealed information test using a new multiple probe protocol Shinji Hira, Yuhki Yamashita, Yoko Saragai, Yuki Hamamoto, & Isato Furumitsu 15. Detecting salience on the fringe of awareness using the P300 Abdulmajeed Alsufyani, Alexia Zoumpoulaki, Omid Hajilou, Marco Filetti, & Howard Bowman 16. Resampling the peak - Applications in the analysis of event related potentials Alexia Zoumpoulaki, Abdulmajeed Alsufyani, & Howard Bowman 17. The neural efficiency hypothesis: Further evidence from the EEG study of conceptual thinking Olga V. Shcherbakova, Ivan A. Gorbunov, Irina V. Golovanova, & Marina A. Kholodnaya 18. The effect of biological motion of action with communicative meaning on human visual processing: A study using event-related potentials and reaction time Hidehiko Matsumoto, Shintaro Sugino, Kentaro Tanaka, & Takashi Morotomi 19. A study of cognitive functions with exercise in high performance players Kisho Zippo & Masanobu Araki 20. The return trip effect is postdictively induced and breaks the relationship between time perception and parasympathetic nervous system activity Ryosuke Ozawa, Keisuke Fujii, & Motoki Kouzaki 21. Action-based knowledge controls over the stimulus-driven visual prediction: An electrophysiological study Motohiro Kimura & Yuji Takeda 22. Belief in free will promotes the transition from exploitation to exploration in decision making through sympathetic activity Takayuki Goto, Yuya Ishibashi, Shogo Kajimura, Ryunosuke Oka, & Takashi Kusumi – 24 – Poster session 2 23. Facial emotion recognition under different situational context revealed by eye tracking Hikaru Kuramochi, Taichi Hirayama, Hiroaki Shoji, & Hisaki Ozaki 24. Cardiovascular responses to cognitive task demands: A systematic review Maarten A. Immink, Russell W. Chan, Joshua Rosenthal, & Kade Davison 25. The effect of dynamic visual noise on brain hemodynamic response during a concrete word production task Masahiro Takamura, Mika Nishimoto, Shunsuke Hayashi, Fumie Yamamoto, & Makoto Miyatani 26. Neuromagnetic indices for decision on time perception: Use of time-shrinking phenomenon Takako Mitsudo, Naruhito Hironaga, Yoshitaka Nakajima, Hiroshige Takeichi, & Shozo Tobimatsu 27. The effect of intense exercise on cognitive function Takaaki Komiyama, Soichi Ando, Yoichi Hatamoto, Mizuki Sudo, Akira Kiyonaga, Hiroaki Tanaka, & Yasuki Higaki 28. Separate stimulation of EEG alpha rhythm for emotional state and personality traits regulation Yuri G. Pavlov 29. The longitudinal study of brain correlates of creativity development Igor Sergeevich Dikiy & Liudmila Alexandrovna Dikaya 30. Features of functional integration of cortical areas of gifted senior pupils at the solution of cognitive tasks Igor Sergeevich Dikiy, Evgenia Borisovna Pokyl, & Liudmila Alexandrovna Dikaya 31. Numerical cognition: A prospective on self-organization theory Xiaoping Li, Leinian Li, & Hanrui Miao 32. Sleep spindle contributes to the recuperative power of a short nap Azusa Kuriyama, Keiko Ogawa, & Mitsuo Hayashi 33. Pre-sleep emotional induction impacts the sleep electrodermal activation Julien Delannoy, Osamu Mandai, Hiroaki Arakawa, Jacques Honore, Toshinori Kobayashi, & Henrique Sequeira 34. The relationship between subjective sleep quality, depression and personality traits Yutarou Kanno, Ritsuko Tsugawa, & Asako Yoda 35. Nine minutes of sleep stage 2 is optimum for obtaining the greatest benefits from a daytime nap Mitsuo Hayashi, Aoi Fushimi, & Hisashi Iizuka 36. Relationship between emotional reactivity to emotional visual stimuli an d dream properties during sleep Kenta Sugie, Hiroyuki Tsubomi, Keiko Ogawa, & Naokuni Ebihara 37. Effects of sleep education with self-help treatment for elementary schoolchild Hideki Tanaka & Norihisa Tamura 38. Relationship between the Dream Property Scale and physiological activities during REM sleep Sayaka Kawano & Keiko Ogawa 39. Improvement in motor skills performance and mental activities during sleep Tsubasa Izaki, Kazuya Miyamoto, & Keiko Ogawa 40. A pilot study on the olfactory evoked potential during sleep with jasmine and lavender Shusaku Nomura, Masaya Sato, Toyonari Fujikawa, Madoka Takahara, Masako Hasegawa -Ohira, & Kanetoshi Ito 41. Recovery from potential sleep debt via sleep extension may improve emotion regulation Yuki Motomura, Shingo Kitamura, Kyoko Nakazaki, Kentaro Oba, Ruri Katsunuma, Yasuko Katayose, Akiko Hida, Yoshiya Moriguchi, Shigekazu Higuchi, & Kazuo Mishima 42. Effects of viewing two kinds of pleasant affective pictures on sleep parameters in subsequent nighttime sleep: examining latency to each stage of sleep Toshihiko Sato 43. Modulation of electrophysiological responses to auditory stimuli by awareness in waking and sleep Daniela Dentico, Madoka Takahara, Melanie Boly, & Giulio Tononi 44. Effect of a 20-minute nap after sleep restriction on physical performance Madoka Takahara, Ryoichi Nakamura, Yudai Ono, & Fumihiko Oki 45. Active rest promoting both performance and recovery from subjective fatigue during mental work sessions Asako Honda 46. Slow diaphragmatic breathing as a relaxation skill for elementary school children: A psychophysiological assessment Kensuke Terai, Tatsunori Shimo, & Akio Umezawa – 25 – Poster session 2 47. Excessive brain tryptophan and kynurenic acid lead to abnormal social behavior in central fatigue induced by chronic sleep disorder Masatoshi Yamashita & Takanobu Yamamoto 48. The dynamic cardiovascular markers of acute stress Anastasya Vladimirovna Bakhchina, Ivan Sergeevich Shishalov, Sergey Borisovich Parin, & Sofia Aleksandrovna Polevaya 49. A neurochemical framework of the theory of stress Sergei Borisovich Parin, Anastasia Vladimirovna Bakhchina, & Sofia Alexandrovna Polevaia 50. Influence of the context of public speaking on human functional state Maria Koroleva, Anastasia Bakhchina, Ivan Shyshalov, Sergey Borisovich Parin, & Sofia Alexandrovna Polevaia 51. Cardiorespiratory plasticity in children during short periods of paced breathing Andrey V. Gorbunov, Maria S. Ogorodnikova, Vera S. Trubacheva, Vladimir V. Trubachev, & Victor V. Sevastyanov 52. Plasticity of cardiorespiratory coupling during visual control of breathing rate in athletes and non-athletes of the same age Vladimir V. Trubachev, Andrey V. Gorbunov, Vera S. Trubacheva, Maria S. Nemtseva, & Alexey A. Rozhentsov 53. The effects of mood state and psychological well-being on heart rate variability during mental stress Elena Saperova & Dmitry Dimitriev 54. Electrodermal activity as a predictor of daily affect and overall functioning measured by a diary in clinical and nonclinical groups Marzena Rusanowska, Izabela Krejtz, Paweł Holas, John Nezlek, & Andrzej Wiatrow 55. The association of interpersonal conflict at the workplace and immunity: A cross-sectional study among white-collar employees at a trading company Nozomi Sonoda, Akinori Nakata, Masahiro Irie, & Masaya Takahashi 56. Job control, job demands, and cell-mediated immune response: A 2-year prospective cohort study of white-collar employees Akinori Nakata, Masahiro Irie, & Masaya Takahashi 57. Mechanisms of adaptation to environment of high school Liza Magomedovna Khalidova, Lubov Ivanovna Gubareva, & Rosa Said -Ahmedovna Zahkieva 58. Hyperventilation and autonomic hyperarousal are related to emotional disorders in adolescent girls Erik M. G. Olsson, Eva Serlachius, Margaret A. Chesney, & Eva Henje Blom 59. Gray matter volume abnormalities in the apathetic elderly Hongjie Yan, Keiichi Onoda, & Shuhei Yamaguchi 60. Effects of neurofeedback training on event-related components and self-reported measures in healthy individuals Kota Akutsu, Mashahiro Ishii, Haruo Shinoda, & Kota Suzuki 61. Event related desynchronization: Precaution is needed to use as indicator of cognitive processes Erol Başar & Bilge Turp Gölbaşı 62. Decrease of delta oscillatory responses is associated with increased age in healthy elderly D. Durusu Emek-Savaş, Bahar Güntekin, Görsev G. Yener, & Erol Başar 63. Event-related oscillatory gamma responses appear late in Alzheimer disease Erol Başar, D. Durusu Emek-Savaş, Bahar Güntekin, & Görsev G. Yener 64. Eyes-closed vs. eyes-open EEG in young and older adults Robert J. Barry, Frances M. De Blasio, & Adele E. Cave 65. Occurrence patterns among the theta, alpha and beta bands of the electroencephalogram for infants Nahoko T. Minakawa, Akio Mori, Kazuma Oki, Ryo Koshizawa, Masaki Takayose, & Satoshi Kawashima 66. Assessment of therapeutic effect with clozapine using event related potential: A pilot study Akane Miyazaki, Atsuhito Toyomaki, Naoki Hashimoto, & Ichiro Kusumi 67. Prolonged impairment of sexual function associated with anabolic-androgenic steroid abuse: An underrecognized problem Harrison G. Pope, Gen Kanayama, James I. Hudson, James DeLuca, Stephanie Isaacs, Aaron Baggish, Rory Weiner, & Shalender Bhasin – 26 – Poster session 3 POSTER SESSION 3 (September 26, Friday) 1. Interoceptive sensitivity predicts performance of event-based prospective memory: Evidence from cardiovascular reactivity Saiko Tochizawa, Yuri Terasawa, Midori Shibata, & Satoshi Umeda 2. The effect of pattern separation on fear conditioning Per Davidson, Ingegerd Carlsson, Peter Jonsson, & Mikael Johansson 3. Relationship between Kanji letter use-frequency and processing: Electroencephalographic dipole source modeling of activity in dorsal and ventral pathways Ryohei Mizuochi & Kazuaki Maeda 4. The effect of stimulus familiarity on the subsequent information processing: An ERP study Mikhail S. Sopov 5. Comparing autonomic responses between learned and unlearned stimuli presented with equal probability Michiko Tsuneoka, Izumi Matsuda, Tokihiro Ogawa, & Yohtaro Takano 6. Involvement of eye movement in forward and backward recall on a spatial wor king memory task Yuhei Oi, Yoshifumi Ikeda, Hideyuki Okuzumi, & Mitsuru Kokubun 7. Effects of a 3D printing course on mental rotation ability among 10 -year-old primary students Motong Chen, Yun Zhang, & Yueying Zhang 8. Physical and semantic features of long-term memory Natalya G. Shpagonova, Vasiliy A. Sadov, & Daria L. Petrovich 9. Unconscious acoustical stimuli effects on event-related potentials in humans Viktoriia Yu. Ivanova, Ekaterina A. Kopeikina, Varvara V. Choroshich, & Anton Yu. Aleksandrov 10. Activation of left lingual gyrus related to working memory for schematic faces Stanislav A. Kozlovskiy, Maria M. Pyasik, Anna V. Korotkova, Alexander V. Vartanov, Janna M. Glozman, & Andrey A. Kiselnikov 11. Psychophysiological mechanisms of color-emotional semantic integration Andrey A. Kiselnikov, Arkadiy A. Sergeev, Anna P. Dolgorukova, Alexander V. Vartanov, Janna M. Glozman, Stanislav A. Kozlovskiy, & Maria M. Pyasik 12. Neural substrates of positive emotion induced in hypnosis Chihiro Hasegawa & Nobutsugu Hirono 13. Semantic and physical features: effects of emotional category and signal-to-noise ratio on eye movements Joanna Pilarczyk & Michał Kuniecki 14. Influences of positive emotion inducement on hemodynamic response to a mental work Xinxin Liu, Kazuma Ishimatsu, Midori Sotoyama, & Kazuyuki Iwakiri 15. Modulation of emotion elicitation by prior cognitive activity: An fMRI study Saea Tohira, Hiroki, C. Tanabe, Akira Ishizuka, Tamotsu Kawai, Haruo Isoda, & Hideki Ohira 16. Changes in facial skin temperature induced by joy or fear stimuli Young-Ji Eum, Jin-Sup Eom, Mi-Sook Park, E-Nae Cheong, & Jin-Hun Sohn 17. Eye movement responses to emotional faces among individuals with major depressive disorder Eun-Ye Kim, Un-Jung Jang, Hye-Ryeon Yang, & Jin-Hun Sohn 18. Trustworthiness modulates facial responses to emotional faces Tomomi Fujimura & Kazuo Okanoya 19. Verification of the three dimensional model of emotions with spectral analysis of independent EEG components Miroslaw Wyczesany & Tomasz S Ligeza 20. Relationship between cognitive activity involved in emotional processing and personality Midori Motoi, Yuka Egashira, Takayuki Nishimura, Damee Choi, Matsumoto Riko, & Shigeki Watanuki 21. Investigating the reliability and validity of candidate psychophysiological endophenotypes of affective processing David A. Camfield, Rodney Croft, Keith Wesnes, Sarah Boyall, Monique Taylor, Rachael Tasca, & Emma Kornfield 22. Structural equation modelling to assess relationships between event-related potential components, heart rate and skin conductance in the context of emotional stimuli Susan J. Thomas, Peter R. C. Leeson, Craig J. Gonsalvez, & Stuart J. Johnstone 23. The influence of answer to the self-report scale on cardiovascular recovery Yosuke Tezuka, Naho Murayama, Yosuke Morioka, & Naoto Suzuki 24. The body action coding system I & II: Muscle activations during the perception and expression of emotion Elisabeth M. J. Huis in't Veld, Geert J. M. van Boxtel, & Beatrice L. M. F. de Gelder 25. Psychological and physiological responses during flow state: A study for flow state during a g ame task Shunya Omori, Yuichiro Nagano, Takefumi Kobayashi, & Jun'ichi Katayama – 27 – Poster session 3 26. An fMRI study of unconscious emotional processing in cerebellum Kyota Inagaki, Keiichi Onoda, & Shuhei Yamaguchi 27. Evaluation of emotional response to affective picture stimulations by AAE and comfort vector models Xi Chen, Isao Takahashi, Yoshimitsu Okita, Hisashi Hirata, & Toshifumi Sugiura 28. Effects of perspective-taking on the pain empathy in alexithymia Natsuki Saito & Hideki Ohira 29. Analytical performance of a Fujimori method-based system for EEG analysis Yuki Watanabe, Naoyuki Aikawa, & Tatsuya Iwaki 30. Individual differences in psychophysiological responses in stress states Yu Tanaka 31. Psychophysiological measures of positive and negative emotion regulation in Koreans Hyejeen Lee 32. A proposed novel and applicative assessment method of brain activity related to human feeling Shigeru Tominaga & Tatsuya Iwaki 33. An evaluation of the differences in subjective responses to the attractiveness of pictures of the opposite sex after a visual presentation Kohei Fuseda, Yuichiro Nagano, & Takefumi Kobayashi 34. Empathic trait predicts the psychophysiological response of emotional tears Kazuma Mori, Yuji Wada, & Makoto Iwanaga 35. Effects of state and trait emotions on prepulse inhibiton: A study of induced o scillatory brain activity Vilfredo De Pascalis & Kathrin Sommer 36. Mental ability and social influence: An event-related potential study Vilfredo De Pascalis & Francesca Fracasso 37. Socioeconomic decision making in manic and euthymic patients with bipolar disord er: The feedback-related negativity study Vin Ryu, Ra Yeon Ha, & Hyun Sang Cho 38. An investigation of the EEG correlates associated with viewing alcohol and drug related behaviours on social media Sandra Gountas, Joseph Ciorciari, John Gountas, & Stuart Huddl e 39. Video game exposure and recognition of facial expressions: Event-related potential data Yoshiyuki Tamamiya & Hiraki Kazuo 40. Event-related potentials indicate low self-esteem individuals give enhanced attention to disgusted faces after being ostracized Taishi Kawamoto, Hiroshi Nittono, & Mitsuhiro Ura 41. Neural basis of dishonest choices for harmful and helpful stories Nobuhito Abe, Toshikatsu Fujii, Ayahito Ito, Aya Ueno, Yuta Koseki, Ryusaku Hashimoto, Akiko Hayashi, Shunji Mugikura, Shoki Takahashi, & Etsuro Mori 42. The modulation effect of cost benefit ratios on altruistic behaviours Sai Li 43. Effect of 5HT2A receptor gene polymorphism on lateral prefrontal cortex activation during empathy Toshiyuki Himichi, Masayuki Kaneko, Jun Nomura, Yasunobu Okuma, Yasuyuki Nomura, & Michio Nomura 44. Product harm crises: The contingent role of information specificity on word-of-mouth effectiveness Julian Ming-Sung Cheng & Melissa Mei-Ling Hsu 45. Resting-state EEG power predicts conflict-related brain activity in internally guided but not in externally guided decision-making Takashi Nakao, Yu Bai, Hitomi Nashiwa, & Georg Northoff 46. Anticipatory SCRs associated with decision making under ambiguity and risk in Iowa gambling task Manabu Akiyama & Chihiro Hasegawa 47. Performance and cortical EEG dynamics during bimanual go/stop tasks in right- and left-handed individuals Kentaro Yamanaka 48. Grasp points in different tasks are switched by each task demand: An investigation by a task -change paradigm Masazumi Katayama & Takahiro Fujita 49. How does foot elevation height during upright standing affect the activity of leg muscles on the supporting and lifting side? Hirofumi Ida, Sambit Mohapatra, & Alexander S. Aruin – 28 – Poster session 3 50. Frontal asymmetry and affective responses during exercise: An exploratory study using near infrared spectroscopy Gavin D. Tempest, Roger G. Eston, & Gaynor Parfitt 51. Effects of subjective and physiological responses during steady-state exercise on post-exercise self-efficacy Eriko Matsuo, Shigeru Matsubara, Masatoshi Shiota, Seigo Shiga, & Kentar o Yamanaka 52. Unpredictable visual feedback modulates activation in somatosensory areas during movement execution Toshiaki Wasaka 53. Source localization and synchronization analysis on EEG recorded from professional shooters and novices: A comparison study Junhua Li, Roxana Semenyuk, Patricia Ratmanova, Dmitry Napalkov, & Andrzej Cichocki 54. ERP “old/new” effects in schizophrenia with and without hallucinations Ji Woon Jeong, Chan Hyun Park, Seung-Hwan Lee, Hyun Jung Han, & Hyun Taek Kim 55. An update on behavioural and psychological symptoms of dementia: Pathophysiological and clinical aspects Cheuk Yan Leung & Andrew Chi Kin Law 56. Opioid-related cognitive and cardiovascular features Sofia Alexandrovna Polevaya, Vladislav Vycheslavovich Vetyugov, Anastasya Vladimirovna Bakhchina, & Sergey Borisovich Parin 57. Dependence of aggression and hostility level on the type of temperament and properties of the central nervous system Lubov Ivanovna Gubareva & Helena Victorovna Agarkova 58. Obesity is one of the main reactions to stress Lubov Ivanovna Gubareva & Victorya Victorovna Posokhina 59. Psychophysiological profile of workers gas transportation system with good and bad adaptation Lubov Ivanovna Gubareva, Tatjana Yurevna Ponomareva, & Elena Vladimirovna Kolodichuk 60. The validity of detection of guilty knowledge using fNIRS in a practical situation Megumi Sato, Shiho Miyazawa, Shoichi Iwasaki, Daisuke Suzuki, & Ichiro Sora 61. The difference of psychophysiological response among truth, unintended untruth, and intended deception Mooah Lee, Kiho Kim, & Jang-han Lee 62. Detecting deception using integrated thermal imaging and polygraph Kiho Kim & Jang-han Lee 63. Neural correlates of deception in lie detection using EEG frequency analysis YeSeul Chun, Ji Woon Jeong, Hyeonjin Jeon, Sang Hyun Lee, Suk Chan Kim, Cheol Bang, Hoon Choi, Keun Young Kim, & Hyun Taek Kim 64. The developmental changes of eye movements during sign language reading of a hearing child: From 2 years -old zero month to 2 years-old six months Shinichi Ganmaru, Motoyoshi Akikawa, & Inho Chung 65. Effects of depression on cortisol awakening responses in college athletes Susumu Kadooka, Takahiro Matsutake, Takayuki Sugo, & Masanobu Araki 66. Hair and fingernail cortisol and acute coronary syndrome in middle -aged and elderly men Shuhei Izawa, Keiichi Miki, Masao Tsuchiya, Haruyo Yamada, & Masatoshi Nagayama – 29 – SOCIAL PROGRAMS Welcome Reception: September 23, Tuesday, 18:30-20:00, at Room E (Himawari) All the participants including accompanying persons can join without reservations. Japanese cuisine and rice wine (Sake) as well as Western and Asian foods are available. Tea Ceremony: September 24-26, 13:30-17:00, at Room E (Himawari) Tea ceremonies will be held and all the participants can experience it free of charge. Japanese traditional flower arrangements (Ikebana) will also be exhibited. Social Dinner: September 25, Thursday, 19:00-21:00, at Hiroshima Museum of Art *Advanced reservations required A garden-party-style dinner will be held at Hiroshima Museum of Art, which is a 20-minute walk from the congress venue (1.5 km). This museum is one of the best art museums in Japan and it is well-known for the rich collection of modern Western and Japanese paintings. At the party, a musical concert of traditional Japanese musical instruments, Koto and Shakuhachi, will be staged. KOTO: The Koto is a 13-string musical instrument that came from China 1300 years ago. The body of the instrument is made from paulownia wood. It is laid on the floor and plucked with finger-picks. Each string is supported by an independent bridge, which can be moved to change the tuning. SHAKUHACHI: The Shakuhachi is a traditional Japanese bamboo flute with five holes that is played vertically. Shakuhachi also came from China 1300 years ago. The name Shakuhachi is derived from the instrument's length, which consists of one Shaku (30.3 cm) and Hachi (Hachi in Japanese means eight: and it is equal to 24.5 cm), giving the Shakuhachi a total length of 54.5 cm (1/8 feet). – 30 – Attraction, Kagura: September 26, Friday, 19:00-20:00, at Room E (Himawari) Kagura (originally means, Shinto music and dance numbers) is a Japanese traditional theater with a history of several centuries. This evening, you will enjoy “Yamata no orochi (a serpent with 8 heads and 8 tails),” which is one of the most popular acts. All the participants including accompanying persons are invited without reservations. WHAT IS KAGURA? Kagura can be traced back to a time when performances of dancing and music were dedicated to the deities of Japanese myth. According to myth, when the Sun Goddess Amaterasu hid inside a cave, the world became pitch dark. To lure the goddess out, other deities danced in front of the cave. This dancing by deities is believed to have inspired Kagura. In early days, only a select number of people were permitted to perform the sacred dance, as it was a form of ritual to pray for a good harvest or ward off illness. But as time went by, Kagura became broadly popular, and, in some areas, evolved into new forms featuring highly entertaining elements. Today, Kagura is performed at special events and permanent stages, as well as at shrines where the performances are still dedicated to the deities. STORY OF “YAMATA NO OROCHI” In Izumo (now in Shimane prefecture, in the north of Hiroshima), a deity called Susanoo-nomikoto comes upon an elderly couple who are weeping. They explain that seven of their eight daughters have been snatched by a giant serpent and they now fear that the eighth, Kushinada-hime, will perish next. The deity, pledging to vanquish the serpent in return for their daughter’s hand in marriage, tells the couple to fetch some strong sake (rice wine). The deity is able to defeat the serpent when it becomes drunk from the sake. In the end, the deity and daughter are happily wed. – 31 –