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Interactions Between Chewing and Brain Activity in Humans

Authors :
K. Kanematsu
Masami Niwa
Kin-ya Kubo
Y. Ono
Yoshiyuki Hirano
Minoru Onozuka
Wanjae Kim
Kenichi Sasaguri
Kazuko Watanabe
Atsumichi Tachibana
Source :
Novel Trends in Brain Science ISBN: 9784431732419
Publication Year :
2008
Publisher :
Springer Japan, 2008.

Abstract

The involvement of chewing in brain activity in humans has been studied. In our studies using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and behavioral techniques, chewing resulted in a bilateral increase in blood oxygenation leveldependent (BOLD) signals in the sensorimotor cortex, supplementary motor area, insula, thalamus, and cerebellum. In addition, in the first three regions, chewing moderately hard gum produced stronger signals than chewing hard gum. However, in the aged group, the BOLD signal increases were smaller in the first three regions and higher in the cerebellum. Only the aged subjects showed significant increases in various association areas to which input activities in the primary sensorimotor cortex, supplementary area, or insula had positive path coefficients. Furthermore, chewing ameliorates the age-related decrease in hippocampal activities during encoding and that in retrieval memory. The findings suggest the involvement of chewing in memory processes.

Details

ISBN :
978-4-431-73241-9
ISBNs :
9784431732419
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Novel Trends in Brain Science ISBN: 9784431732419
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........29131c1d72f710c287d5d2ae50a7285f
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-4-431-73242-6_6