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Results for 'Noboru Matsumoto'

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  1.  25
    Effects of self-relevant cues and cue valence on autobiographical memory specificity in dysphoria.NoboruMatsumoto &Satoshi Mochizuki -2017 -Cognition and Emotion 31 (3):607-615.
  2.  19
    Direct accessibility for overgeneral memory predicts a worse course of depression: re-analysis of the online computerised memory specificity training for major depression study.NoboruMatsumoto &David John Hallford -2023 -Cognition and Emotion 37 (2):339-351.
    Researchers have been interested in what retrieval process is responsible for overgeneral autobiographical memories (OGM) in depression. Previous cross-sectional studies demonstrated that, for negatively valenced cues, directly retrieved OGM, rather than generatively retrieved OGM, are associated with depression. However, longitudinal evidence of this relationship is still lacking and needs to be tested. We conducted a re-analysis of the online computerised memory specificity training (c-MeST) data to examine whether directly retrieved OGM for negative cues prospectively predicts high levels of depression 1 (...) month later. Participants who met the criteria of current major depressive disorders (N = 116; n = 58 in the c-MeST group and n = 58 in the control group) recalled autobiographical memories for positive and negative cues and judged each retrieval process (i.e. direct or generative). The results supported our prediction, and directly retrieved OGM for negative cues predicted high levels of depressive symptoms 1 month later even after controlling for the group effect, baseline depressive symptoms, executive functioning and rumination. Exploratory analysis showed that direct retrieval of specific memories prospectively predicted low levels of depression. These results support the theory that elevated accessibility of negatively valenced general memory representations is a vulnerability factor for depressive symptoms. (shrink)
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  3.  164
    The conversational condition on horn scales.YoMatsumoto -1995 -Linguistics and Philosophy 18 (1):21 - 60.
  4.  37
    Many different covering numbers of Yorioka’s ideals.Noboru Osuga &Shizuo Kamo -2014 -Archive for Mathematical Logic 53 (1-2):43-56.
    For ${b \in {^{\omega}}{\omega}}$ , let ${\mathfrak{c}^{\exists}_{b, 1}}$ be the minimal number of functions (or slaloms with width 1) to catch every functions below b in infinitely many positions. In this paper, by using the technique of forcing, we construct a generic model in which there are many coefficients ${\mathfrak{c}^{\exists}_{{b_\alpha}, 1}}$ with pairwise different values. In particular, under the assumption that a weakly inaccessible cardinal exists, we can construct a generic model in which there are continuum many coefficients ${\mathfrak{c}^{\exists}_{{b_\alpha}, 1}}$ (...) with pairwise different values. In conjunction with these results, we give a generic model in which there are many Yorioka’s ideals ${\mathcal{I}_{f_\alpha}}$ with pairwise different covering numbers. (shrink)
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  5.  54
    Consciousness, volition, and the neuropsychology of facial expressions of emotion.DavidMatsumoto &Mija Lee -1993 -Consciousness and Cognition 2 (3):237-54.
    Although we have learned much about the neuropsychological control of facial expressions of emotion, there is still much work to do. We suggest that future work integrate advances in our theoretical understanding of the roles of volition and consciousness in the elicitation of emotion and the production of facial expressions with advances in our understanding of its underlying neurophysiology. We first review the facial musculature and the neural paths thought to innervate it, as well as previous attempts at understanding the (...) neural control of facial expressions of emotion, focusing on the voluntary-involuntary dichotomy and studies of hemispheric specialization. In the second section, we discuss four major aspects of the psychology of facial expressions of emotion that have particular import to their neurophysiological substrates. We offer these as a starting point for a better integration of psychological and neurophysiological perspectives in considering the neuropsychological control of facial expressions of emotion. (shrink)
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  6. Nihon kinsei shisō no kenkyū.Noboru Fujiwara -1971 - Horitsu Bunkasha.
     
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  7. Henkakuki ni okeru kokugaku.Noboru Haga -1975
  8. Kindai Mitogaku kenkyūshi.Noboru Haga -1996 - Tōkyō: Kyōiku Shuppan Sentā.
  9. Motoori Norinaga.Noboru Haga -1972
     
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  10.  18
    Notas sobre el pensamiento actual japonés.Noboru Kinoshita -1984 -Cuadernos Salmantinos de Filosofía 11:637-643.
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  11.  66
    The Mind of the Scenario Thinker.Noboru Konno,Ikujiro Nonaka &Jay Ogilvy -2014 -World Futures 70 (1):44-51.
    (2014). The Mind of the Scenario Thinker. World Futures: Vol. 70, Strategy, Story, and Emergence: Essays on Scenario Planning, pp. 44-51.
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  12. Kyōiku tetsugaku.Noboru Murata (ed.) -1983 - Tōkyō: Yūshindō.
     
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  13.  5
    Rusō to sono jidai.Noboru Oshimura (ed.) -1987 - Tōkyō: Tamagawa Daigaku Shuppanbu.
  14. Ningen no tetsugaku.Noboru Shirotsuka (ed.) -1973
     
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  15. Kyōiku hōhō ron.Noboru Yoshida -1951
     
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  16.  40
    The cardinal coefficients of the Ideal $${{\mathcal {I}}_{f}}$$.Noboru Osuga &Shizuo Kamo -2008 -Archive for Mathematical Logic 47 (7-8):653-671.
    In 2002, Yorioka introduced the σ-ideal ${{\mathcal {I}}_f}$ for strictly increasing functions f from ω into ω to analyze the cofinality of the strong measure zero ideal. For each f, we study the cardinal coefficients (the additivity, covering number, uniformity and cofinality) of ${{\mathcal {I}}_f}$.
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  17.  85
    American-Japanese cultural differences in judgements of emotional expressions of different intensities.DavidMatsumoto,Theodora Consolacion,Hiroshi Yamada,Ryuta Suzuki,Brenda Franklin,Sunita Paul,Rebecca Ray &Hideko Uchida -2002 -Cognition and Emotion 16 (6):721-747.
    Although research has generated a wealth of information on cultural influences on emotion judgements, the information we have to date is limited in several ways. This study extends this literature in two ways, first by obtaining judgements from people in two cultures of expressions portrayed at different intensity levels, and second by incorporating individual level measures of culture to examine their contribution to observed differences. When judging emotion categories in low intensity expressions, American and Japanese judges see the emotion intended (...) at above-chance rates, albeit lower than when judging high intensity faces. Also, American and Japanese intensity ratings of external displays and internal experiences differ dramatically for low intensity expressions compared to high intensity faces. Finally, the two cultural dimensions measured in this study—individualism versus collectivism (IC) and status differentiation (SD)—accounted for almost all of the variance in the observed differences. These findings are discussed in terms of their underlying possible mechanisms, and future research possibilities. (shrink)
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  18.  35
    The covering number and the uniformity of the ideal ℐf.Noboru Osuga -2006 -Mathematical Logic Quarterly 52 (4):351-358.
  19.  115
    Retrocausation acting in the single-electron double-slit interference experiment.Noboru Hokkyo -2008 -Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part B: Studies in History and Philosophy of Modern Physics 39 (4):762-766.
  20.  54
    Vaccine A: The Covert Government Experiment that's Killing our Soldiers and why GI's are only the First Victims.GaryMatsumoto -2005 -Journal of Military Ethics 4 (1):77-80.
  21. Bakumatsu kokugaku no kenkyū.Noboru Haga -1980
     
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  22. Kokugaku undō no shisō.Noboru Haga -1971 - Edited by Sannosuke Matsumoto.
  23. Sōmō no seishin.Noboru Haga -1970
     
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  24. Hyūmanizumu.Noboru Hiraoka (ed.) -1977
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  25. Bukkyō to Marukishizumu.Noboru Inaba -1966 - Sogensha.
     
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  26. Gendaihō kōgi.Noboru Kataoka (ed.) -1970
     
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  27.  63
    Virtue-Based Management.Noboru Konno,Ikujiro Nonaka &Jay Ogilvy -2014 -World Futures 70 (1):19-27.
    (2014). Virtue-Based Management. World Futures: Vol. 70, Strategy, Story, and Emergence: Essays on Scenario Planning, pp. 19-27.
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  28.  16
    Analyzing 'Evolutionary Functional Analysis' in Evolutionary Psychology.ShunkichiMatsumoto -2008 -Annals of the Japan Association for Philosophy of Science 16 (1-2):95-112.
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  29. Beyond Prejudice.ToruMatsumoto -1946
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  30.  25
    Excitability of the Ipsilateral Primary Motor Cortex During Unilateral Goal-Directed Movement.TakuyaMatsumoto,Tatsunori Watanabe,Takayuki Kuwabara,Keisuke Yunoki,Xiaoxiao Chen,Nami Kubo &Hikari Kirimoto -2021 -Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 15.
    IntroductionPrevious transcranial magnetic stimulation studies have revealed that the activity of the primary motor cortex ipsilateral to an active hand plays an important role in motor control. The aim of this study was to investigate whether the ipsi-M1 excitability would be influenced by goal-directed movement and laterality during unilateral finger movements.MethodTen healthy right-handed subjects performed four finger tapping tasks with the index finger: simple tapping task, Real-word task, Pseudoword task, and Visually guided tapping task. In the Tap task, the subject (...) performed self-paced simple tapping on a touch screen. In the real-word task, the subject tapped letters displayed on the screen one by one to create a Real-word. Because the action had a specific purpose, this task was considered to be goal-directed as compared to the Tap task. In the Pseudoword task, the subject tapped the letters to create a pseudoword in the same manner as in the Real-word task; however, the word was less meaningful. In the VT task, the subject was required to touch a series of illuminated buttons. This task was considered to be less goal-directed than the Pseudoword task. The tasks were performed with the right and left hand, and a rest condition was added as control. Single- and paired-pulse TMS were applied to the ipsi-M1 to measure corticospinal excitability and short- and long-interval intracortical inhibition in the resting first dorsal interosseous muscle.ResultsWe found the smaller SICI in the ipsi-M1 during the VT task compared with the resting condition. Further, both SICI and LICI were smaller in the right than in the left M1, regardless of the task conditions.DiscussionWe found that SICI in the ipsi-M1 is smaller during visual illumination-guided finger movement than during the resting condition. Our finding provides basic data for designing a rehabilitation program that modulates the M1 ipsilateral to the moving limb, for example, for post-stroke patients with severe hemiparesis. (shrink)
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  31. Non)referentiality of silent reference in Japanese conversation: how and what are inferred.YoshikoMatsumoto -2024 - In Michael C. Ewing & Ritva Laury,(Non)referentiality in conversation. Philadelphia: John Benjamins.
     
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  32. Shina tetsugaku shi.BunzaburōMatsumoto -unknown
     
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  33.  55
    The Nature of Adaptationism.ShunkichiMatsumoto -2008 -Proceedings of the Xxii World Congress of Philosophy 43:121-127.
    In this paper, I will take advantage of the controversy on the legitimacy of adaptationism in evolutionary biology to further investigate the nature of adaptationistic thinking, or biological explanations in general. To this end, first I will look at the famous and provocative criticism made by Gould and Lewontin (1979) against then-prevalent adaptationism --- a research strategy for accounting for the origin of traits of organisms seemingly adapted to the environment by appealing primarily to natural selection. Then I will consider (...) its counterarguments put forward by Dennett (1995), one of the proponents of adaptationism, in order toscrutinize the intrinsically hypothetical character of adaptationistic thinking. By amplifying Dennett’s points, I will finally reach the conclusion that there are two senses --- objective and subjective --- in which adaptationistic thinking is said to be hypothetical, which nonetheless do not prevent it from qualifying as scientific practice. In the process, I will also gain an insight into the sense in which the theory of natural selection is said to be mechanistic, as a spin-off. (shrink)
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  34.  9
    Nishida Kitarō no tetsugaku=zettaimu no basho to wa nani ka.Noboru Nakamura -2019 - Tōkyō-to Bunkyō-ku: Kabushiki Kaisha Kōdansha.
    あの高名な「絶対矛盾的自己同一」とは、いったいどういう意味なのか―。西田哲学の本質をつかみ、その全貌をわかりやすく示す!
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  35.  77
    Note on Entropies of Quantum Dynamical Systems.Noboru Watanabe -2011 -Foundations of Physics 41 (3):549-563.
    We review some techniques and notions for quantum information theory. It is shown that the dynamical entropies is discussed and some numerical computations of these entropies are carried for several states.
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  36.  5
    Strong social anti-reductionism reexamined.ShoheiMatsumoto -2025 -Synthese 205.
    Presumptivism, or so-called anti-reductionism, of testimonial warrant is a controversial yet popular view in epistemology of testimony. Presumptivists argue that a hearer can have prima facie epistemic warrant to believe P if the hearer comprehends as of a speaker as asserting P. Among the defenders, Tyler Burge famously argued for presumptivism a priori, though not without significant challenge. Recently, Mona Simion presented another a priori argument for presumptivism based on the idea that assertions are governed by a social norm of (...) truth-telling, calling her view “strong social anti-reductionism”. Subsequently, J. P. Grodniewicz provided another argument for presumptivism and also named his view “strong social anti-reductionism”, following Simion. The purpose of this paper is to elucidate their “strong social anti-reductionist” arguments, illuminate the problems in their views, and examine which variant(s) of presumptivist positions the “social anti-reductionist” approach may support. I start by clarifying Simion’s commitments and reconstructing her argument, and demonstrate that Simion fails to provide a sound argument for her position. Then I argue that Grodniewicz’s position should be understood as more moderate than Simion’s, and that while his defense of presumptivism is promising, two issues need to be resolved: First, what version of presumptivism is argued for remains unclear; second, it still suffers from what Simion called “the Source Problem”, or what Sanford Goldberg called “the problem of easy entitlements”. To address these challenges, Grodniewicz’s view needs to be integrated with a robust theory of warrant, for which I suggest that Peter Graham’s warrant functionalism is a suitable candidate. Lastly, I will briefly explore presumptivist positions that align with Grodniewicz’s “social anti-reductionist” framework. (shrink)
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  37.  10
    What’s wrong with “Death by Algorithm”? Classifying dignity-based objections to LAWS.MasakazuMatsumoto &Koki Arai -forthcoming -AI and Society:1-12.
    The rapid technological advancement of AI in the civilian sector is accompanied by accelerating attempts to apply this technology in the military sector. This study focuses on the argument that AI-equipped lethal autonomous weapons systems (LAWS) pose a threat to human dignity. However, the precise meaning of why and how LAWS violate human dignity is not always clear because the concept of human dignity itself remains ambiguous. Drawing on philosophical research on this concept, this study distinguishes the multiple meanings of (...) dignity via five components—Agency, End-not-means, Uniqueness, Reciprocal respect, and Specialness—to organize existing dignity-based objections to LAWS. This study also extends the literature by providing empirical evidence of people’s attitudes toward LAWS, based on the results of a social survey conducted by the authors. This study concludes that attention must be directed toward the ontological distinction between humans and machines in advancing the ethical debate on LAWS. (shrink)
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  38.  7
    Graphemic Variation in Morphosyntactic Context: The Syllable u in Classic Maya Hieroglyphic Writing.Mallory E.Matsumoto -forthcoming -Topics in Cognitive Science.
    Throughout the long history of Classic Maya hieroglyphs, a logosyllabic writing system used from the late first millennium BCE through the mid-second millennium CE in southern Mesoamerica, the most commonly recorded phonetic value was the syllable u (/ʔu/). With over a dozen different u hieroglyphs, Classic Maya scribes had more options for recording /ʔu/ than any other syllable or logograph. Cognitive approaches to writing systems typically attribute graphemic variation (i.e., alternation between signs with equivalent linguistic value) to semantic differences like (...) animacy or to non-linguistic factors like identity. Distribution of Classic Maya u hieroglyphs, however, suggests that morphosyntactic context influenced which grapheme scribes wrote and when. This case suggests that scribal knowledge of Classic Maya hieroglyphs included ideas about writing's relationship to language. It also highlights the cognitive relevance of morphosyntax for a writing system's users as they differentiate among graphic signs with identical linguistic denotation. (shrink)
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  39.  27
    Myth and History in Shin Buddhist Thought.DavidMatsumoto -2022 -Buddhist-Christian Studies 42 (1):263-278.
    Abstractabstract:The categories of myth and history do not fit easily within Shinran's "true essence of the Pure Land way." Mythopoetic narratives in Shin Buddhism are circumscribed within the broader themes of teaching, practice, shinjin, and realization, which comprise that path. Pure Land narratives do not play the type of cosmogonic or etiological role accorded generally to myth. Some religious concerns associated with myth and history are addressed in Shinran's understanding of the dynamics of upāya. The retrieval of mythos in Shin (...) Buddhism may yield a surplus of meaning in the realization of shinjin at the coalescence of myth and history. (shrink)
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  40. Jinrui wa sensō o fusegeru ka: Nichi-Bei-Chū kokusai shinpojūmu.Noboru Kojima (ed.) -1996 - Chiyoda-ku [Tokyo]: Bungei Shunjū.
     
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  41.  65
    Introduction to the Special Issue on Strategy, Story, and Emergence: Essays on Scenario Planning.Noboru Konno,Ikujiro Nonaka &Jay Ogilvy -2014 -World Futures 70 (1):2-4.
    (2014). Introduction to the Special Issue on Strategy, Story, and Emergence: Essays on Scenario Planning. World Futures: Vol. 70, Strategy, Story, and Emergence: Essays on Scenario Planning, pp. 2-4.
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  42.  96
    Scenario Planning: The Basics.Noboru Konno,Ikujiro Nonaka &Jay Ogilvy -2014 -World Futures 70 (1):28-43.
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  43.  7
    Gendai Nihon shisō taikei.SannosukeMatsumoto (ed.) -1963
  44. Kinsei Nihon no shisōzō: rekishiteki kōsatsu.SannosukeMatsumoto -1984 - Tōkyō: Kenbun Shuppan.
  45.  6
    Kagaku shakaigaku =.MiwaoMatsumoto (ed.) -2021 - Tōkyō-to Meguro-ku: Tōkyō Daigaku Shuppankai.
    巨大な災害や事故、環境問題、医療、生命倫理など、進歩する科学技術は社会に大きな恩恵をもたらすと同時に深刻な問題を投げかける。これらの問題にアプローチする科学社会学の基本から最前線までがわかる初のテキス ト。.
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  46.  10
    Suika Shintō no hitobito to Nihon shoki.TakashiMatsumoto -2008 - Tōkyō: Kōbundō.
    闇斎門下の個性豊かな諸家の事跡を通して、垂加神道の史的展開を検討すると共に、『日本書紀』神代巻の解釈に見える思想の根幹を明らかにする。.
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  47.  41
    Time: Being or Consciousness Alone?—A Realist View.M.Matsumoto -1975 - In J. T. Fraser & Nathaniel M. Lawrence,The Study of Time II: Proceedings of the Second Conference of the International Society for the Study of Time Lake Yamanaka-Japan. Springer Verlag. pp. 206-215.
    Experience of matter can be described in the context of time and space, whereas, some people say, experience of mind may be described according to time only. Accordingly, though time and space together are regarded as objective forms, one may have a propensity for treating time alone as a particular form of the subjective consciousness. For space is indeed referred to the self-evidence of being, while time is thought to belong rather to the self-evidence of our own consciousness. According to (...) my opinion, however, even the spatial description is indispensable for the state of “mind”. For instance, the contents of our consciousness can be described only in terms of the localized phases of their images. Contrary to Kant, who regarded time and space together as forms of the outer intuition (i.e. as conditions of sensation), and time alone as form of the inner sense, I have a firm intention to assert them both as two forms of objective being because it is the being itself that can be the ultimate object of any of our cognitive powers — sensation, understanding and reason. Time and space are not forms proper to a particular “being” such as conscious existence like ours; they are also, nay, above all, two objective forms of being in general that transcends all such limited existences. It follows that these forms themselves, once abstracted in our mind, must, first of all, be valid for material beings; after that, i.e. derivatively and analogically, they may also be valid for mind-beings. The main aim of this paper is “dialectically” to elucidate that fact on the subject of time in particular. (shrink)
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  48.  43
    Words of Tohkaku Wada: medical heritage in Japan.M.Matsumoto -2001 -Journal of Medical Ethics 27 (1):55-58.
    The origins of Japan's medical ideas, which are deeply rooted in its religion, culture and history, are not widely understood in medical societies of other countries. We have taken up the task of summarising this tradition here so that some insight can be gained into the unique issues that characterise the practice of medicine in Japan. We borrow from the sayings of Tohkaku Wada, a medical philosopher of late eighteenth-century Japan, for a look at Japanese medical tradition. Wada's medical thought (...) was very much reflective of the Buddhism, Zen, and swordsmanship that informed eighteenth-century philosophy in Japan. His central concepts were “chu” and “sei”, that is, complete and selfless dedication to the patient and the practice of medicine. This paper explores Wada's thought, explaining it mainly from the standpoint of Japanese traditional culture. (shrink)
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  49.  37
    N 人囚人のジレンマゲームにおける規範内部化と協調の関係.Matsumoto Mitsutaka -2006 -Transactions of the Japanese Society for Artificial Intelligence 21:167-175.
    In this paper, I discuss the problems of ``order in social situations'' using a computer simulation of iterated N -person prisoners' dilemma game. It has been claimed that, in the case of the 2 -person prisoners' dilemma, repetition of games and the reciprocal use of the ``tit-for-tat'' strategy promote the possibility of cooperation. However, in cases of N -person prisoners' dilemma where N is greater than 2, the logic does not work effectively. The most essential problem is so called ``sanctioning (...) problems''. In this paper, firstly, I discuss the ``sanctioning problems'' which were introduced by Axelrod and Keohane in 1986. Based on the model formalized by Axelrod, I propose a new model, in which I added a mechanism of players' payoff changes in the Axelrod's model. I call this mechanism norm-internalization and call our model `` norm-internalization game ''. Second, by using the model, I investigated the relationship between agents' norm-internalization (payoff-alternation) and the possibilities of cooperation. The results of computer simulation indicated that unequal distribution of cooperating norm and uniform distribution of sanctioning norm are more effective in establishing cooperation. I discuss the mathematical features and the implications of the results on social science. (shrink)
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  50. Plato on what is not.Noboru Notomi -2007 - In Dominic Scott,Maieusis: Essays in Ancient Philosophy. New York: Oxford University Press.
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