23 results on '"Seiichi Watanabe"'
Search Results
2. Investigation of variation factors in EMG measurement of swallowing: instruction can improve EMG reproducibility
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Nobuyuki Ohmori, Seiichi Watanabe, Hideya Momose, Hiroshi Endo, Manabu Chikai, and Shuichi Ino
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Electromyography ,Biomedical Engineering ,Humans ,Reproducibility of Results ,Deglutition ,Computer Science Applications - Abstract
Variability in swallowing electromyography (EMG) has been reported to occur due to individual differences, even in studies with appropriate control of factors affecting EMG such as food type, properties, and posture. The increased variability broadens the confidence intervals of measures obtained from EMG, such as time and amplitude, and makes it difficult to detect differences in muscle activity. This makes it impossible to detect slight changes in swallowing function at an early stage, which is required for clinical examination. In this study, we focused on the tipper type and dipper type of oral swallows, which differ in the timing of muscle activity. The frequency of occurrence of both types varies between participants, and both types could occur in the same participant. In this study, we measured swallowing EMG wherein participants were instructed to swallow with a tipper and a dipper. The results showed that there was a significant difference in the between-participant duration between these two types of swallows. Within-participant variability was significantly lower in the tipper-dipper instruction condition compared to the baseline condition, which assumed a mixture of tipper-dipper swallowing. These results demonstrate that instructions on swallowing method are effective in improving the reproducibility of EMG.
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- 2022
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3. Visualization of aquaionic splitting via iron corrosion
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Seiichi Watanabe, Shuntaro Murakami, and Lihua Zhang
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Diffusion equation ,Materials science ,Science ,Diffusion ,02 engineering and technology ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,Article ,Corrosion ,law.invention ,Ion ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Chemical engineering ,law ,Multidisciplinary ,Aqueous solution ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Cathode ,0104 chemical sciences ,Anode ,chemistry ,Medicine ,Hydroxide ,0210 nano-technology - Abstract
We report a water decomposition mode called ‘Aquaionic Splitting (AiS)’ by means of iron corrosion in aqueous solution. In this paper, we investigated the phenomenon by controlling the reaction between iron and water. A pseudo-sacrificial protection method with oil paint was employed to select the anode and cathode formation locations that govern iron corrosion. Then, the AiS reaction was visualized by using BTB solution, whose colour corresponds to pH, to produce colour patterning that corresponds to the aquaion distribution. It has become clear that water can be selectively separated into protons and hydroxide ions by corrosion control treatment. In this vein, the diffusion coefficient of protons was estimated by using the colour patterning of BTB solution that accompanies iron corrosion, and aquaion distribution was then computer simulated by solving the diffusion equation.
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- 2020
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4. Japanese consensus guidelines for pediatric nuclear medicine
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Chisato Kondo, Tatsuo Kono, Shinichi Kanaya, Masayuki Kitamura, Ken Hoshino, Tetsuo Kida, Hiroshi Onuma, Masayuki Yano, Hiroshi Kamiyama, Shin Ichiro Hamano, Masayuki Sasaki, Kimio Kanegawa, Kiyoshi Koizumi, Hiroshi Matsuda, Yukihiko Fujita, Mitsuo Okuno, Hidekazu Masaki, Eiji Oguma, Hitoshi Terada, Hiroshi Hataya, Atsushi Nakanishi, Teisuke Hashimoto, Keishi Hirono, Seiichi Watanabe, Mayuki Uchiyama, and Kensuke Karasawa
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Diagnostic Imaging ,Restraint, Physical ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Consensus ,MEDLINE ,Urination ,Radiation Dosage ,Body weight ,Pediatrics ,Japan ,Medical imaging ,Humans ,Medicine ,Anesthesia ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Medical physics ,Pediatric nuclear medicine ,business.industry ,Body Weight ,Imaging Procedures ,General Medicine ,Dose optimization ,Others ,English version ,Nuclear Medicine ,Radiopharmaceuticals ,business - Abstract
The Japanese Society of Nuclear Medicine has recently published the consensus guidelines for pediatric nuclear medicine. This article is the English version of the guidelines. Part 1 proposes the dose optimization in pediatric nuclear medicine studies. Part 2 comprehensively discusses imaging techniques for the appropriate conduct of pediatric nuclear medicine procedures, considering the characteristics of imaging in children.
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- 2014
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5. Effect of density on growth and feed consumption of the abalones Haliotis discus discus, H. gigantea, H. madaka and their hybrids
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Faruq Ahmed, Seiichi Watanabe, Carlos Augusto Strüssmann, and Yasuyuki Koike
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Feed consumption ,Abalone ,Ecology ,Gigantea ,Aquatic Science ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Feed conversion ratio ,Animal science ,Stocking ,Haliotis discus ,Growth rate ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Hybrid - Abstract
Effect of stocking density was studied in three abalone species Haliotis discus discus (HDD), H. gigantea (HG), and H. madaka (HM) and their hybrids [HDD × HM, HM × HG and HG × HM, mother first] by rearing individually marked abalones for 217 days at low (22 % of available surface area; LD), medium (53 %; MD), and high (126 %; HD) densities. Feeding rate (FR) and feed conversion rate were observed by measuring the amount of feed ingested at an interval of 2–3 days. Reduction of growth rate with the increment of density was found in all three species [Specific growth rate in weight (G W ) HDD, LD: 0.121, MD: 0.093, HD: 0.069; HM: 0.12, 0.082, 0.061; HG: 0.254, 0.222, and 0.131] and the hybrids HDD × HM (0.18, 0.109, 0.108). The medium density produced the highest growth rates in HM × HG and HG × HM hybrids (0.284, 0.342, 0.28). A growth spurt was observed in all three species and hybrids in the last 44 days of rearing. FR varied from 0.72 to 7.97 % body weight and decreased with the increase in density in all species and hybrids. The results indicate differences in density thresholds for the three abalone species and their hybrids suggesting requirement of different aquaculture management strategies for them.
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- 2012
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6. Microstructure analysis of ion beam-induced surface nanostructuring of thin Au film deposited on SiO2 glass
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Tamaki Shibayama, Ruixuan Yu, Xuan Meng, Shinya Takayanagi, and Seiichi Watanabe
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Materials science ,Ion beam ,Physics::Instrumentation and Detectors ,Scanning electron microscope ,Mechanical Engineering ,Physics::Medical Physics ,Analytical chemistry ,Nanotechnology ,Substrate (electronics) ,Microstructure ,Ion ,Mechanics of Materials ,Transmission electron microscopy ,General Materials Science ,Irradiation ,Dewetting - Abstract
Effects of the irradiation dose on surface nanostructuring accompanied with the dewetting process of Au films deposited on SiO2 glass were examined using an atomic force microscope and a scanning electron microscope. In addition, the microstructural evolution and the chemical concentration of Au films were investigated using a transmission electron microscope equipped with an energy-dispersive spectrometer. As increasing the Ar ion irradiation dose, the lattice expansion of Au nanoscale islands sustained on the SiO2 glass was observed and irradiation-induced lattice defects together with irradiation-induced interface ion mixing were accounted for this lattice expansion. Finally a layer of photosensitive Au nanoballs with highly spherical shape embedded in a SiO2 substrate was obtained after Ar ion irradiation to 10.0 × 1016/cm2 and some of Au nanoballs were found to be single crystals. As the irradiation energy of the Ar ions increased from 100 to 150 keV, the average diameter of the Au nanoballs in the substrate increased and the red shift of the SPR peak was observed. This tendency of the experimental SPR peaks corresponded with that of the theoretically calculated SPR peaks using Mie solution.
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- 2012
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7. Formation of sphalerite and wurtzite ZnO in Pd–Zn alloy after internal oxidation at elevated temperatures
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Norihito Sakaguchi, Kei Watanabe, and Seiichi Watanabe
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Materials science ,Mechanical Engineering ,Metallurgy ,Alloy ,Stacking ,Nucleation ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Zinc ,engineering.material ,Crystallography ,Sphalerite ,chemistry ,Mechanics of Materials ,Phase (matter) ,engineering ,General Materials Science ,Internal oxidation ,Wurtzite crystal structure - Abstract
The crystalline structures of zinc oxide (ZnO) formed by the internal oxidation of a Pd–Zn alloy were examined at elevated temperatures. Metastable sphalerite ZnO with a tetrahedral shape preferentially nucleated in the Pd matrix, while plate-like precipitates consisting of a wurtzite ZnO phase preferentially grew at a high temperature. Unique ZnO precipitates with trapezoidal cross-section and consisting of inter-layered sequences with sphalerite ZnO and wurtzite ZnO were also examined at an intermediate temperature. It is inferred that the formation of stacking faults in the sphalerite ZnO is strongly related to the nucleation of the wurtzite-type ZnO sequence.
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- 2011
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8. How to determine the appropriate mortality in experimental larval rearing?
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Masashi Yokota, Hiroshi Fushimi, Tomonari Kotani, and Seiichi Watanabe
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Larva ,Stocking ,Statistics ,Overall survival ,%22">Fish ,Sampling (statistics) ,Aquatic Science ,Survival rate ,Mathematics ,Aquatic organisms - Abstract
Survival in larval rearing experiments is difficult to estimate due to accidental losses and periodic sampling. The number of sampled fish can be a large proportion of the stocked ones, making it difficult to calculate the overall survival rate and mortality coefficient as this is based on the initial number. Here, a new method of calculating survival is proposed using the mortality coefficient. When the initial stocking density and sampled and final numbers are known, and assuming that mortality coefficient is constant, the final number of fishes can be represented by the formula N t = e−mt (N 0 − ΣN Snemdn), where t is rearing period (days), N 0 indicates initial number, N t indicates the survival number at t days of rearing, m is the natural mortality coefficient, N Sn is the sampled number in the nth sampling, and dn is the rearing period until removal of the nth sample. The provisional mortality coefficient is calculated from initial and final stocking numbers. Then values for the natural mortality coefficient are substituted into the formula with successive approximation. The coefficient, which most closely approximates the actual survival, is determined as the best fit natural mortality coefficient. Examples of larval experiments are provided to demonstrate the method and show that survival is often underestimated using traditional methods.
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- 2011
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9. Genetic population structure and management units of the endangered Tokyo bitterling, Tanakia tanago (Cyprinidae)
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Hitoshi Kubota, Naoyuki Suguro, Kazuhiro Umezawa, Seiichi Watanabe, Katsutoshi Watanabe, and Masaaki Tabe
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Genetic diversity ,education.field_of_study ,Ecology ,Tanakia tanago ,Population ,Endangered species ,Allopatric speciation ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Phylogeography ,Captive breeding ,Genetics ,Genetic variability ,education ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
The Tokyo bitterling Tanakia tanago (Cyprinidae) was once found throughout the Kanto Plain, central Japan, but most of their habitats have been lost due to human activities such as urbanization and improvement of paddy fields. Subsequently, conservation efforts, including captive breeding and reintroduction, have been ongoing. However, the genetic relationships among populations of this species including captive and remnant wild populations have been uncertain and thus management units for this species have been unidentified. We examined the population differentiation among 12 populations, including four wild and eight captive populations, and their relative genetic diversities to assist in conservation management decisions. Phylogeographic analyses based on partial mitochondrial cytochrome b gene sequences and microsatellite polymorphisms revealed four geographically associated genetic groups in the populations. Northern Tochigi populations have diverged from other populations (0.77% of d A ), likely stemming from allopatric fragmentation following a change in the route of the Naka River, which occurred during the middle of the Pleistocene epoch. Microsatellite analysis has revealed that the genetic diversity of each population is generally low, and that most of the populations have experienced genetic bottlenecks. For future in- and ex-situ conservation programs to succeed, the population structure and genetic variability of remnant populations need to be taken into consideration.
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- 2010
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10. Uptake of dissolved free amino acids by spiny lobster Panulirus japonicus phyllosoma larvae
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Carlos Augusto Strüssmann, Samet Can Söylemez, Masashi Yokota, Seiichi Watanabe, and Keisuke Murakami
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chemistry.chemical_classification ,animal structures ,Methionine ,biology ,fungi ,Aquatic Science ,biology.organism_classification ,Phyllosoma ,Amino acid ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Biochemistry ,Valine ,Glycine ,Food science ,Threonine ,Incubation ,Panulirus japonicus - Abstract
This study examined the ability of late stage (instar XXVI) Japanese spiny lobster Panulirus japonicus phyllosoma larvae to uptake seven l-type amino acids (AAs; aspartic acid, Asp; threonine, Thr; glutamic acid, Glu; glycine, Gly; alanine, Ala; valine, Val; and methionine, Met) from the rearing medium. The time course uptake during incubation for 5 h in solutions containing 1, 2, 5, 10, or 20 μM of each AA was determined using high performance liquid chromatography. There was considerable individual variation in uptake rates and even occasional release of AAs, but larvae showed net uptakes of all seven AAs. Two polar acidic AAs (Glu and Asp) were readily taken up whereas neutral AAs, including three considered as essential for crustaceans (Val, Met, and Thr), had lower uptake rates. Transient releases of AAs by the larvae were common for the AAs with the lowest uptake rates at 1–2 h of incubation. Uptake rates increased with increasing AA concentration but less so for those taken up in larger amounts. Larvae took up AAs to a total of 16.4 μmol/g/h for incubation in the 20 μM solution. The ability to uptake nutrients directly from the medium may be important for the well-being of the larvae.
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- 2010
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11. An assessment of genetic diversity in wild and captive populations of endangered Japanese bitterling Tanakia tanago (Cyprinidae) using amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLP) markers
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Seiichi Watanabe, Katsutoshi Watanabe, Yoko Kakehi, and Hitoshi Kubota
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Genetics ,Mitochondrial DNA ,Genetic diversity ,Tanakia tanago ,Endangered species ,Zoology ,Aquatic Science ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Ex situ conservation ,Nucleotide diversity ,Captive breeding ,Amplified fragment length polymorphism ,human activities - Abstract
The Japanese bitterling Tanakia tanago (Cyprinidae) is on the verge of extinction in the wild, placing great importance on captive breeding programs for current conservation of the species. However, the loss of genetic diversity during captive breeding is an ongoing matter of concern. Since some captive populations have been almost monomorphic in mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA), this hampers assessments of their genetic diversity during captive breeding. To more accurately assess their genetic diversity, one wild and three captive populations were examined using amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLP) markers. Estimates of average heterozygosity and nucleotide diversity ranged 0.0479–0.1920 and 0.0023–0.0088, respectively, enabling comparison of genetic diversity among the wild and captive populations, and among year-classes of captive populations. Significant differences in numbers of amplified fragments and proportions of polymorphic fragments were observed among year-classes of all populations. The indices of genetic diversity calculated from AFLP seemed to be, however, less sensitive to weak bottlenecks. No continuous decrease in genetic diversity in nuclear DNA was detected in presently captive populations. This supports the possibility of re-introduction of the captive populations into the original habitats, although survival and reproductive ability in the wild must be taken into consideration.
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- 2008
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12. Genetic identification of native populations of fluvial white-spotted charr Salvelinus leucomaenis in the upper Tone River drainage
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Seiichi Watanabe, Hitoshi Kubota, Takahide Doi, and Shoichiro Yamamoto
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geography ,Genetic diversity ,education.field_of_study ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,biology ,Ecology ,Population ,Aquatic Science ,biology.organism_classification ,Hatchery ,Stocking ,Tributary ,Genetic structure ,Microsatellite ,education ,Salvelinus leucomaenis - Abstract
Stocking of exogenous, hatchery-reared white-spotted charr Salvelinus leucomaenis has been conducted throughout much of their range in Honshu Island, Japan, to increase angling opportunities. Although the native char populations are thought to have declined because of hybridization with introduce fish, their distribution and genetic status have been uncertain. Fine population structures of charr in the upper Tone River drainage were examined using mitochondrial DNA and microsatellite analyses so as to clarify the presence of native populations. One common mtDNA haplotype was detected in all populations in the Ohashi River and Watarase River, and four and one tributary populations were monomorphic for such haplotypes, respectively. However, several haplotypes, considered to have originated from stocked hatchery fish, were observed in the stocked and the remaining populations. Judging from the genetic integrity over a fine geographic scale, the former were considered as indicative of native populations and the latter as admixtures with hatchery fish. Comparisons of genetic diversity, deviations from the Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium, principal component analysis, and relatedness estimations based on microsatellite DNA can also provide evidence for distinguishing native populations from those influenced by hatchery fish.
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- 2007
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13. Maturity and reproduction of goneplacid crab Carcinoplax�vestita (Decapoda, Brachyura) in Tokyo Bay
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Than Than Lwin, Carlos Augusto Strüssmann, Masashi Yokota, Seiichi Watanabe, and Wataru Doi
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Gonad ,Secondary sex characteristic ,Zoology ,Anatomy ,Aquatic Science ,Biology ,Fecundity ,Spawn (biology) ,Sexual dimorphism ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Female sperm storage ,medicine ,Sexual maturity ,Carapace - Abstract
Sexual maturity, morphological sexual dimorphism, and reproduction of the goneplacid crab Carcinoplax vestita were investigated in Tokyo Bay, Japan, from November 2002 to October 2003. The puberty molt in males was evidenced by changes in the relative size of the chelipeds and merus of the walking legs, and was estimated to occur at a size range of 13.20–18.85 mm carapace length. Post-pubertal females were identified by the relative size of the abdomen and puberty was estimated to occur at a size range of 12.81–15.46 mm carapace length. Sexual dimorphism in C. vestita was observed in all features that showed secondary sexual characteristics. Monthly changes of gonad index in males, and of seminal receptacle index and occurrence of sperm plugs in females were synchronized, and indicated that mating was intense in spring. Ovaries began developing in March. Ovigerous females were found in all months except December, but were clearly more abundant between August and October. Fecundity ranged from 7800 to 57 000 mature oocytes per female per batch and was highly correlated with body size. The results suggest that some females may spawn more than one batch per year.
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- 2007
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14. Natural diet of grapsoid crab Plagusia dentipes de Haan (Decapoda: Brachyura: Plagusiidae) in Tateyama Bay, Japan
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Masashi Yokota, Stepanus A. Samson, Carlos Augusto Strüssmann, and Seiichi Watanabe
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animal structures ,Decapoda ,Ecology ,Grapsidae ,Coralline algae ,Zoology ,Aquatic Science ,Biology ,Ulvaceae ,biology.organism_classification ,Crustacean ,Algae ,Carapace ,Grapsoidea - Abstract
The natural diet of Plagusia dentipes de Haan was studied in Tateyama Bay, Japan, between June 2004 and May 2005. A total of 389 specimens were collected for analysis of stomach content during the period, with sizes ranging between 7.1 and 63.1 mm in carapace width. The major dietary item was rhodophycean algae (mostly articulated coralline algae), which was ingested by 91.8% of the crabs and accounted on average for 55.6% (points) of the volume of stomach contents. Chlorophycean algae (mostly Ulvaceae, 39.1% and 8.1 points) and crustaceans (mostly amphipods, 38% and 3 points) came next in feeding frequency and volume. Minor dietary items also included other algae such as Phaeophyceae and animals such as mollusks (bivalves, gastropods), annelids (polychaetes), other crustaceans (caprellids, isopods), and echinoids. Significant seasonal dietary differences were observed and, in general, the diet in spring contained more food items, particularly more animals, compared to other seasons. Feeding of Rhodophyceae was highest and lowest in winter and summer, respectively. The total volume of food consumed was also lowest in summer and likely reflected reduced availability of the main food item in this season. There were no differences in dietary items between male and female crabs. In conclusion. P. dentipes is a primarily herbivorous crab with incidental or opportunistic feeding on animal items, and it is suggested that seasonal shifts in consumption may be related to growth, molting, and reproductive activity.
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- 2007
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15. A pathway of nanocrystallite fabrication by photo-assisted growth in pure water
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Takahiko Kato, Melbert Jeem, Junya Ishioka, Shigeo Yatsu, M. R. M. Julaihi, Kazumasa Okamoto, Seiichi Watanabe, Tomio Iwasaki, and Tamaki Shibayama
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Multidisciplinary ,Aqueous solution ,Fabrication ,Materials science ,Hydrogen ,Oxide ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Bioinformatics ,Article ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Chemical engineering ,Photocatalysis ,Water splitting ,Nanorod ,Crystallite - Abstract
We report a new production pathway for a variety of metal oxide nanocrystallites via submerged illumination in water: submerged photosynthesis of crystallites (SPSC). Similar to the growth of green plants by photosynthesis, nanocrystallites shaped as nanoflowers and nanorods are hereby shown to grow at the protruded surfaces via illumination in pure, neutral water. The process is photocatalytic, accompanied with hydroxyl radical generation via water splitting; hydrogen gas is generated in some cases, which indicates potential for application in green technologies. Together with the aid of ab initio calculation, it turns out that the nanobumped surface, as well as aqueous ambience and illumination are essential for the SPSC method. Therefore, SPSC is a surfactant-free, low-temperature technique for metal oxide nanocrystallites fabrication.
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- 2015
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16. Mitochondrial DNA variation and population structure of the Japanese mitten crab Eriocheir japonica
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Carlos Augusto Strüssmann, Masashi Yokota, Izumi Yamasaki, Goro Yoshizaki, and Seiichi Watanabe
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Genetics ,Genetic divergence ,Mitochondrial DNA ,Genetic distance ,Genetic structure ,Genetic variation ,Zoology ,Aquatic Science ,Biology ,Restriction fragment length polymorphism ,Genetic analysis ,Gene flow - Abstract
The Japanese mitten crab Eriocheir japonica is a common grapsid species found throughout freshwater and estuarine regions in Japan. In order to obtain information on the genetic variation and population structure of this species, a polymerase chain reaction (PCR) restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) analysis was conducted on the cytochrome oxidase subunit I (CCI) of mitochondrial DNA, on 666 individuals from 19 sample sites covering the three main geographic regions of Japan (Main Islands, Okinawa, and Ogasawara). Genetic analysis using seven restriction enzymes produced an array of 61 composite haplotypes. Three regional groups corresponding to the three geographic regions were clearly identified by cluster and molecular variance model (AMOVA) analyses. Each of the three groups showed dominant haplotypes that were almost completely absent in populations from the other geographic areas. Comparison with published information for other species indicates that the degree of genetic divergence between these three main groups is equivalent to the genetic distance between congeneric species. Thus, the population structure of the Japanese mitten crab, as inferred from mtDNA analysis, is formed by genetically distinct groups that closely reflect their geographic distribution in the Japanese archipelago as well as restricted gene flow.
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- 2006
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17. Growth and reproduction of the red frog crab, Ranina ranina (Linnaeus, 1758), in the Andaman Sea off Thailand
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Seiichi Watanabe and Tassapon Krajangdara
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Fishery ,Animal science ,biology ,Ranina ranina ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Carapace ,Allometry ,Aquatic Science ,Reproduction ,biology.organism_classification ,Fecundity ,Body weight ,media_common - Abstract
Studies were conducted on growth and reproduction of the red frog crab, Ranina ranina (Linnaeus, 1758), in the Andaman Sea off Thailand from 1998 to 1999. Samples were collected from Ko Similan, Ko Surin and Thai-Myanmar boundary waters by gill net. Results showed that the relationship between carapace length (CL) and body weight (BW) for males (CL, 5.84–14.10 cm) was BW=0.2598 CL3.0931, and for females (CL, 5.35–10.97 cm) was BW=0.4280 CL2.8656. Growth in each gender showed allometric growth. The average CL of males was significantly larger than that of females. Average male and female crab sizes in 1999 were smaller than in 1998. The spawning season was found to be from November to February; maturing male crabs were abundant from September to December. Average sizes of CL at first maturity for males and females were 7.44 and 7.22 cm, respectively. Fecundity ranges of ovigerous female crabs were 74 600–167 900 eggs with an average egg diameter of 0.62 mm. The monthly sex ratios (male: female) varied between 1:0.56 and 1:2.77.
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- 2005
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18. A new model for radiation-induced grain boundary segregation with grain boundary movement in concentrated alloy system
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H. Takahashi, Seiichi Watanabe, and Norihito Sakaguchi
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Austenite ,Materials science ,Annihilation ,Condensed matter physics ,Mechanical Engineering ,Alloy ,Metallurgy ,Electron ,engineering.material ,Crystallographic defect ,Mechanics of Materials ,engineering ,Grain boundary diffusion coefficient ,General Materials Science ,Grain boundary ,Grain boundary strengthening - Abstract
We have developed a new model for radiation-induced grain boundary migration (RIGM) and radiation-induced segregation (RIS) for austenitic iron-chromium-nickel alloy system. It was assumed that the RIS was induced by diffusional and annihilation processes of excess point defects at the grain boundary, and the RIGM occurred due to rearrangement process of atoms on one of the interfacial planes by annihilation of point defects. The calculated results indicated that the region of RIS was enlarged by the RIGM and asymmetrical concentration profiles were observed around the migrated grain boundary. The present model could explain the RIS behavior with or without grain boundary migration as comparing with our previous experimental results.
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- 2005
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19. Nanostructural Fluctuation in Radiation-Amorphized Alloys
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Seiichi Watanabe, Nghi Q. Lam, and H. Takahashi
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Materials science ,Annihilation ,Condensed matter physics ,Metastability ,Autocorrelation ,Atom ,Cluster (physics) ,Power law ,Potential energy ,Nanoclusters - Abstract
Spatio-temporal nanostructural fluctuations brought about by transient, metastable atom-cluster formation and the manifold nature of inherent atomic ordering in electron-irradiation-amorphized NiTi were investigated by using a combination of in situ observations inside a high-resolution high-voltage electron microscope (HR-HVEM) and image analyses of molecular-dynamics-simulated atom configurations. Nanometer-sized clusters were found to appear and disappear in the irradiated region. The random formation and annihilation of such nanoclusters are believed to be responsible for nanostructural fluctuations which appear to be related to transitions among manifold inherent structural states, involving multirelaxation processes. Temporal fluctuations in the amorphized structure were manifested through the dose-dependent local amorphization parameter, potential energy, volume, and inherent cluster bonding. The observed fluctuations obey a universal power law. Within the framework of the multi-Lorentzian picture, the resultant power law describes the distribution of multirelaxation times or cluster lifetimes. In addition, a unified relation for the temporal autocorrelation function for such fluctuation phenomena has been determined.
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- 2003
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20. Modeling of Segregation and Microstructural Evolution near Grain Boundary in FE-CR-NI Alloy Under Irradiation
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Seiichi Watanabe, H. Takahashi, and Norihito Sakaguchi
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Microstructural evolution ,Materials science ,Alloy ,Metallurgy ,engineering ,Thermodynamics ,Grain boundary diffusion coefficient ,Grain boundary ,Activation energy ,Irradiation ,engineering.material ,Crystallographic defect ,Grain boundary strengthening - Abstract
We have investigated the solute segregation and simultaneous evolution of extended defects in an Fe-Cr-Ni alloy during irradiation by computer simulation. It sheds a light on the accomplishment of performing “the combined total calculation” or “the muliscale modeling” which deals with both radiation-induced segregation and various kinds of internal sink evolution. The formation of dislocation-free zone (DLFZ) was predicted in the vicinity of a grain boundary. It indicated that DLFZ formation is controlled by solute diffusional process via point defects diffusion near the grain boundary and the activation energy obtained by the width of DLFZ corresponds to the half of the value of the radiation-enhanced solute diffusivity.
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- 1998
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21. Effect of Stress and Impurities on Preferential Amorphization on Grain Boundaries in Polycrystalline Silicon
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Paul R. Okamoto, Hiroaki Abe, Mitsuhiro Takeda, Hiroshi Naramoto, Seiichi Watanabe, Nigh Q. Lam, and Somei Ohnuki
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Materials science ,Condensed matter physics ,Silicon ,Metallurgy ,Nanocrystalline silicon ,chemistry.chemical_element ,engineering.material ,Grain size ,Amorphous solid ,Polycrystalline silicon ,chemistry ,Impurity ,engineering ,Grain boundary ,Grain boundary strengthening - Abstract
Clarifying the local amorphization on the grain boundaries, the in-situ observation during ion-irradiation was carried out for poly-crystalline Si film. The critical dose of amorphous formation increased exponentially with increasing temperature, where the local amorphization was developed at middle temperature. The critical dose was affected by the doped impurity and the grain size. The preferential amorphization on and near grain boundaries had two processes; first stage with rapid growth rate and second stage with almost constant growth rate. The importance of stress was demonstrated from the acceleration due to the stress on the first stage of amorphization.
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- 1998
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22. Visualization of a car mirror wake
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Seiichi Watanabe, Ryoko Suzuki, Akira Rinoshika, and Masami Nakano
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Computer science ,Computer graphics (images) ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,Wake ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Visualization - Published
- 2006
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23. Late Stage Cardiac Abnormalities in the Kawasaki Disease Patient without Coronary Artery Lesion
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Seiichi Watanabe and Tetsuya Ohta
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Heart malformation ,business.industry ,Late stage ,Coronary artery lesion ,medicine.disease ,Myocardial perfusion imaging ,Internal medicine ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,medicine ,Cardiology ,ST segment ,Mitral valve prolapse ,Kawasaki disease ,business ,Depression (differential diagnoses) - Abstract
We examined whether Kawasaki disease (KD) patients without coronary artery lesion (CAL) would develop some cardiac abnormality at late stage. Methods. Study patients were 162 children of 335 Kawasaki Disease patients admitted to our hospital from 1982-1990 and started the treatment within 10th illness day. 272 out of 335 pts had no coronary artery lesion at acute stage. At both 5 yrs and 10 yrs after onset, three kinds of cardiac examinations (echocardiogram, treadmill exercise test, 24-h electrocardiogram) underwent in 162 out of 272 pts without CAL. They were 84 boys and 78 girls and their age at onset was average of 2.04-year-old (0.2-6.8). The patients with positive outcomes of three tests underwent myocardial perfusion imaging and/or coronary angiography as further investigation. Results. Abnormal cardiac findings consisted of left ventricular wall motion abnormality, mitral valve prolapse, ST segment depression with exercise, complex ventricular arrhythmia and sinus pause more than 2.5 seconds. The number of patients with positive outcome is 9 and 16 in the 5 yrs and 10 yrs after onset, respectively. The positive rate at 10 yrs after onset was significantly higher than that at 5 yrs (p < 0.0001). The age at onset of the patients with positive outcome was significantly higher than that of the others (2.99-year-old, 1.93-year-old, p = 0.006). The illness day started treatment, use of immunoglobulin and fever duration were no difference between the positive cases and the negative cases. Conclusions. This study clarified the presence and gradually increase of cardiac abnormalities in KD patients without CAL at late stage, moreover the necessity to follow up KD patients regardless of coronary status.
- Published
- 2003
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