1.Moriguchi, Y., Kanda, T., Ishiguro, H., Shimada, Y., & Itakura, S.(in press).Can young children learn words from a robot?,Interaction Studies
2.Shimada, Y., Itakura, S (2008). Infant crying and mothers’ listening and interpretation, Perceptual and Motor Skills,107, 225-230.
Talks
1. Shimada Y., & ItakuraS. (2005). Alteation of adult’s auditory affinity to infant voice, Paper presented at Society for Reproductive and Infant Psychology 25th annual conference,University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, September 8-10.
2. Shimada, Y., & Itakura, S. (2006). Adults’ affinity for infant sound in accordance with Language experience, Paper presented at Inteational Conference on Infant Studies, Kyoto, June 19-22.
3. Shimada, Y., & Itakura, S. (2006). Adults’ affinity for infant sound in accordance with language experience, Paper presented at The 4th Inteational Work Shop for Young Psychologist, Kyoto, September 2-3.
4. Shimada, Y., & Itakura, S. (2006). Infant sound production as a playing behavior, Lancaster-Kyoto Joint Inteational Symposia, Lancaster, October 25-26.
5. Shimada, Y., Itakura, S. (2007), Infant sound production to listen to the sound; ontogenetic origin of singing, Paper presented at the 2007 Spring Meeting of the Japanese Society for Music Perception and Cognition, Hokkaido University, May 27.
6. Shimada, Y., & Itakura, S. (2008). Infants’ sound production as a playing behavior, Paper presented at Inteational Conference on Human Behavior and Evolution Society, Kyoto University, July 4-8.
7. Shimada, Y., & Itakura, S. (2008). Origin of singing; Infants’ vocalization in solitude, (Paper presented at) Inteational Conference on Music Psychology, Hokkaido university, August 25-29.
8. Shimada, Y.(2010).Overlapping vocalization in infant-caregiver interaction.The 9th symposium on the cultural formation of responsibility.Kyoto University, Japan,October 23, 2010
Topics
This is the website for the Grant-in-Aid for Young Scientists (S),"Cultural formation of responsibility in caregiver-child interactions"(October 2007-March 2012) funded by the Japanese Ministry of
Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology.
Following the opening of the integrated website of Caregiver-Child Interactions (CCI), our research team renovated this site and changed the URL.