All Stories

  1. Humans detect snakes more accurately and quickly than other animals under natural visual scenes: a flicker paradigm study
  2. Common marmosets (Callithrix jacchus) evaluate third-party social interactions of human actors but Japanese monkeys (Macaca fuscata) do not.
  3. The “social” facilitation of eating without the presence of others: Self-reflection on eating makes food taste better and people eat more
  4. Breaking Snake Camouflage: Humans Detect Snakes More Accurately than Other Animals under Less Discernible Visual Conditions
  5. Japanese monkeys (Macaca fuscata) quickly detect snakes but not spiders: Evolutionary origins of fear-relevant animals.
  6. Indifference of marmosets with prenatal valproate exposure to third-party non-reciprocal interactions with otherwise avoided non-reciprocal individuals
  7. Teaching newts tricks: a newt (Cynops pyrrhogaster) learned to pass through small rings for food reward
  8. Spiders do not evoke greater early posterior negativity in the event-related potential as snakes
  9. Marmosets evaluate third-party reciprocity
  10. Mindfulness and Psychological Status of Japanese Yoga Practitioners: a Cross-Sectional Study
  11. “Granny dumping”: Acceptability of sacrificing the elderly in a simulated moral dilemma
  12. Shadows Alter Facial Expressions of Noh Masks
  13. Emotional attention modulates microsaccadic rate and direction
  14. Snake recognition in monkeys: A reappraisal
  15. The Mysterious Noh Mask: Contribution of Multiple Facial Parts to the Recognition of Emotional Expressions
  16. Distinct aging effects for two types of inhibition in older adults
  17. An apology suppresses the approach motivation but not the emotional component of physiological and psychological anger
  18. Apology Isn't Good Enough: An Apology Suppresses an Approach Motivation but Not the Physiological and Psychological Anger
  19. The influence of color on snake detection in visual search in human children
  20. Attentional shift by eye gaze requires joint attention: Eye gaze cues are unique to shift attention1
  21. The reversed work-ethic effect: Monkeys avoid stimuli associated with high-effort1
  22. Simulator platform that enables social interaction simulation — SIGVerse: SocioIntelliGenesis simulator
  23. Human Young Children as well as Adults Demonstrate ‘Superior’ Rapid Snake Detection When Typical Striking Posture Is Displayed by the Snake
  24. Elimination of the enhanced Simon effect for older adults in a three-choice situation: Ageing and the Simon effect in a go/no-go Simon task
  25. Towards a new study on associative learning in human fetuses: fetal associative learning in primates
  26. Rapid detection of snakes by Japanese monkeys (Macaca fuscata): An evolutionarily predisposed visual system.
  27. Crossmodal spatial attention shift produced by centrally presented gaze cues
  28. Reproductive Memory Processes in Chimpanzees: Homologous Approaches to Research on Human Working Memory
  29. 反応コスト及び時間が刺激の選好に及ぼす効果
  30. Looking compensates for the distance between mother and infant chimpanzee
  31. Interference effects by spatial proximity and age-related declines in spatial memory by Japanese monkeys (Macaca fuscata): Deficits in the combined use of multiple spatial cues.
  32. The role of attention in the facilitation effect and another “inhibition of return”
  33. Looking compensates for the distance between mother and infant chimpanzee
  34. Fetal habituation correlates with functional brain development
  35. Avoidance learning in the crayfish (Procambarus clarkii) depends on the predatory imminence of the unconditioned stimulus: a behavior systems approach to learning in invertebrates
  36. Action planning in humans and chimpanzees but not in monkeys
  37. Color classification by chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) in a matching-to-sample task
  38. Associative learning and memory in a chimpanzee fetus: Learning and long-lasting memory before birth
  39. Erratum to: An infant chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes) follows human gaze
  40. An infant chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes) follows human gaze
  41. Evolution and development of sequential manipulation of symbols
  42. “Magical number 5” in a chimpanzee
  43. A conventional approach to chimpanzee cognition
  44. Numerical memory span in a chimpanzee
  45. Trends in Japanese Society for Animal Psychology : Analysis of annual meetings in this decade
  46. The number of trial upon the effects of US duration in conditioned licking suppression with rats
  47. Evidence for within-compound learning in an instrumental conditioning with rats
  48. Effects upon rats' responses on a running wheel of single alternation of large and small rewards and external cues
  49. Attenuation of conditioned flavor preference by US postexposure in the rats
  50. Failure of Retrospective Inference in Rats' Taste Aversion
  51. The effects of US intensity on the differential conditioning of US duration in rats
  52. An essay to the recent Japanese Journal of Animal Psychology
  53. Between- and Within-Subject Effects of US Duration on Conditioned Suppression in Rats: Contrast Makes Otherwise Unnoticed Duration Dimension Stand Out
  54. ラットにおける無条件刺激の長さの分化条件づけ 移行間間隔の効果
  55. Simultaneous contrast effects in a classical aversive conditioning situation with rats
  56. Attenuation of Conditioned Suppression by Immediately Preceding
  57. Cognitive Abilities Before Birth: Learning and Long-Lasting Memory in a Chimpanzee Fetus
  58. Color Recognition in Chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes)