N
Norimichi Kitagawa
Researcher at Nippon Telegraph and Telephone
Publications - 36
Citations - 949
Norimichi Kitagawa is an academic researcher from Nippon Telegraph and Telephone. The author has contributed to research in topics: Perception & Crossmodal. The author has an hindex of 13, co-authored 35 publications receiving 892 citations. Previous affiliations of Norimichi Kitagawa include Kanazawa Institute of Technology & Tokyo Metropolitan University.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Hearing visual motion in depth
TL;DR: It is shown that an auditory aftereffect occurs from adaptation to visual motion in depth, and psychophysical evidence is provided that, for processing of motion in Depth, the auditory system responds to both auditory changing intensity and visualmotion in depth.
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Action sounds recalibrate perceived tactile distance.
Ana Tajadura-Jiménez,Ana Tajadura-Jiménez,Aleksander Väljamäe,Iwaki Toshima,Toshitaka Kimura,Manos Tsakiris,Norimichi Kitagawa +6 more
TL;DR: The results suggest that tactile perception is referenced to an implicit body-representation which is informed by auditory feedback, the first evidence of the contribution of self-produced sounds to body- representative, addressing the auditory-dependent plasticity of body- representation and its spatial boundaries.
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Audio-visual integration in temporal perception.
TL;DR: Cross-modal asymmetry effects are influenced by the reliability of visual and auditory information as well as modality appropriateness, and a new phenomenon is found that is associated with a perceived change in the frequency of auditory stimuli.
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Audiotactile interactions in near and far space.
Norimichi Kitagawa,Norimichi Kitagawa,Massimiliano Zampini,Massimiliano Zampini,Charles Spence +4 more
TL;DR: The results suggest that the spatial modulation of audiotactile interactions occurs predominantly for complex auditory stimuli originating from the region close to the back of the head.
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Separability and Commonality of Auditory and Visual Bistable Perception
Hirohito M. Kondo,Norimichi Kitagawa,Miho Kitamura,Miho Kitamura,Ai Koizumi,Ai Koizumi,Michio Nomura,Michio Nomura,Michio Nomura,Makio Kashino,Makio Kashino +10 more
TL;DR: The findings suggest that the formation and selection of percepts involve neural processes in cortical and subcortical areas and that the auditory and shape factors reflect the functions of the dopamine and serotonin systems.