Hattori LabCollege of Comprehensive Psychology, Ritsumeikan University

Curriculum Vitae

Mag

Masasi Hattori, Ph.D.

Professor of Cognitive Psychology
College of Comprehensive Psychology, Ritsumeikan University

Graduate School of Letters (Psychology Field, Major in Informatics of Behavior and Culture)

Research Center for Cognitive Sciences (Research Organization of Open Innovation & Collaboration)

Institute of Human Sciences (Kinugasa Research Organization)

Education

2002
Ph.D. in Human Sciences (Concentration in Psychology), Hokkaido University, Japan
1992
M.A. in Behavioral Sciences, Hokkaido University, Japan
1990
B.A. in Human Sciences (Concentration in Psychology), Hokkaido University, Japan

Academic Appointments

2016–present
Professor of Cognitive Psychology, College of Comprehensive Psychology, Ritsumeikan University, Osaka, Japan.
2008–2015
Professor of Cognitive Psychology, Department of Psychology, College of Letters, Ritsumeikan University, Kyoto, Japan.
2001–2007
Associate Professor of Cognitive Psychology, Department of Psychology, Ritsumeikan University, Kyoto, Japan.
1997–2000
Associate Professor of Cognitive Science, Institute for Human Science, Ritsumeikan University, Kyoto, Japan.

Other Positions

2014
Visiting Scholar, École Pratique des Hautes Études, Paris, France.
2010–2011
Visiting Scholar, Department of Cognitive, Linguistic, & Psychological Sciences, Brown University, RI, USA.
2003–2004
Visiting Scholar, School of Psychology, Cardiff University, Wales, UK.
1996–1997
Researcher, Graduate School of Decision Science and Technology, Tokyo Institute of Technology, Japan.
1995–1996
Researcher, Graduate School of Science and Engineering, Tokyo Institute of Technology, Japan.
1994
Associate Researcher, Institute for Advanced Studies in Artificial Intelligence, Chukyo University, Japan.

Awards

2019
Distinguished Paper Award, Japanese Psychological Association.
2011
Research Encouragement Award, NeuroCreative Lab (NPO).
2009
Distinguished Paper Award, Japanese Cognitive Science Society.

Editorial

2019–present
Editor-in-Chief, Cognitive Studies: Bulletin of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society.
2017–present
Review Editor, Frontiers in Psychology, section Cognition.
2015–2019
Cognitive Studies: Bulletin of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society.
2015–2020
Japanese Journal of Cognitive Psychology.
2007–2011
Japanese Psychological Research and Japanese Journal of Psychology.
2002–2008
Cognitive Studies: Bulletin of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society.

Journal Ad Hoc Reviewer

International
Cognition, Cognitive, Affective, & Behavioral Neuroscience, Frontiers in Psychology, Japanese Psychological Research, Journal of Cognitive Psychology, Journal of Machine Learning Research, Journal of Mathematical Psychology, Memory & Cognition, Psychological Report, Thinking & Reasoning.
Domestic
Cognitive Studies: Bulletin of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society, Japanese Journal of Cognitive Psychology, The Japanese Journal of Psychology, Transactions of the Japanese Society for Artificial Intelligence.

Publications

Books and Translations

  1. Hattori, M. (2021a). “Algorithm”, “Conditional reasoning”, “Confirmation bias”, “Deductive reasoning”, “Frame problem”, “Frame theory”, “Hypothesis testing”, “Inductive reasoning”, “Inference”. In M. Koyasu, Y. Tanno, & Y. Hakoda (General Eds.), Yuhikaku dictionary of psychology. Yuhikaku. ISBN: 978-4-641-00266-1 (In Japanese) (February)
  2. Politzer, G., Baratgin, J., Hattori, I., & Hattori, M. (2020a). Objecting to uncertain conditional sentences: A cross-linguistic study. In S. Elqayam, I. Douven, J. St. B. T. Evans, & N. Cruz (Eds.), Logic and uncertainty in the human mind: A tribute to David E. Over (pp. 133–160, Ch. 9). Routledge. ISBN: 978-1-138-08406-3 (hbk), 978-1-138-08425-4 (pbk) (June)
  3. Hattori, M. (2019b). Language and reasoning. In T. Kusumi (Ed.) Psychology of learning and language (pp. 161–178). Tohmi Shobo. ISBN: 978-4-86616-058-0 (September)
  4. Hattori, M. (2018f). “Deductive reasoning” and “Wason selection task” In T. Sakagami, J. Kawahara, E. Kimura, K. Miura, J. Gyoba, and H. Ishigane (Eds.), Handbook of experimental method in fundamental psychology (pp. 262–263, 266–267). Tokyo, Japan: Asakura-shoten. ISBN: 978-4-254-52023-1 (In Japanese) (June)
  5. Hattori, M., Over, D., Hattori, I., Takahashi, T., & Baratgin, J. (2016a). Dual frames in causal reasoning and other types of thinking. In N. Galbraith, E. Lucas, & D. Over (Eds.), The thinking mind: A festschrift for Ken Manktelow. London: Routledge. ISBN: 978-1-138-93786-4 (hbk), 978-1-138-93787-1 (pbk) (October)
  6. Goryo, K., Kikuchi, T., Egusa, H., Ijuin, M., Hattori, M., & Iseki, R. (2016a). Invitation to cognitive psychology, Rev. Ed. Tokyo, Japan: Saiensu. ISBN: 978-4-7819-1383-4 (In Japanese) (October)
  7. Hattori, M., Kojima, H., & Kitagami, S. (2015a). Introduction to cognitive psychology. Tokyo, Japan: Yuhikaku. ISBN: 978-4-641-15027-0 (In Japanese) (September)
  8. Hattori, M., & Yama, H. (2015a). (Trans.) Manktelow, K. (2012). Thinking and reasoning: An introduction to the psychology of reason, judgment and decision making. Kyoto, Japan: Kitaohji. ISBN: 978-4-7628-2893-5 (In Japanese) (April)
  9. Hattori, M. (2014e). Thinking and reasoning. In T. Sato, A. Kitaoka, & N. Tsuchida (Eds.), Psychology Standard (pp. 141–153). Kyoto, Japan: Minerva. ISBN: 978-4-623-06788-6 (In Japanese) (March)
  10. Hattori, M. (2013c). “Wason's selection task” and “Hypothesis testing.” In Japanese Society for Cognitive Psychology (Ed.), Handbook of Cognitive Psychology (pp. 194–197, 198–199). Tokyo, Japan: Yuhikaku. ISBN: 978-4-641-18416-9 (In Japanese) (December)
  11. Hattori, M. (2012d). Thinking. In T. Tayama & N. Suto (Eds.), Introduction to fundamental psychology (pp. 183–201). Tokyo, Japan: Baifukan. ISBN: 978-4-563-05220-1 (In Japanese) (May)
  12. Hattori (2012c). Reasoning and decision making. In Y. Hakoda (Ed.), Methods of psychology 2: Cognition (pp. 149–195). Kyoto, Japan: Seishin-shobo. ISBN: 978-4-414-30182-3 (In Japanese) (July)
  13. Hattori (2011b). Problem solving (pp. 182–185), Reasoning (pp. 186–189). In M. Koyasu and K. Ninomiya (Eds.), Keyword collection cognitive psychology. Tokyo, Japan: Shinkyo-sha. ISBN: 978-4-7885-1249-8 (July)
  14. Hattori, M. (2010b). Deductive and inductive reasoning. In T. Kusumi (Ed.), Theories and applications of cognitive psychology 3: Thought and language (pp. 2–29). Kyoto, Japan: Kitaohji. ISBN: 978-4-7628-2719-8 (July) (In Japanese)
  15. Hattori, M. (2009a). Reasoning. In A. Mochizuki, T. Nakamura, & T. Sato (Eds.), Keywords in the science of human services (pp. 120–121). Kyoto, Japan: Koyo-shobo. ISBN: 978-4-7710-2065-8 (In Japanese) (April)
  16. Hattori, M. (2007a). Aspects of reasoning. In K. Inagaki, H. Suzuki, & Y. Oura (Eds.), Studies in cognitive processes: Knowledge acquisition and knowledge utilization (pp. 125–139). Tokyo, Japan: The Society for the Promotion of the Open University of Japan. ISBN: 978-4-595-13511-8 (In Japanese) (March)
  17. Hattori, M. (2006a). Deduction. In H. Kaiho, T. Kusumi, et al. (Eds.), Integrated encyclopedia of psychology (pp. 220–225). Tokyo, Japan: Asakura-shoten. ISBN: 978-4-254-52015-6 (In Japanese) (June)
  18. Hattori, M. (2005). Mental models. In The Japanese Society for Artificial Intelligence (Ed.), Encyclopedia of artificial intelligence (pp. 122–123). Tokyo, Japan: Kyoritsu. ISBN: 978-4-320-12107-2 (In Japanese) (December)
  19. Hattori, M. (2001b). Deductive and inductive reasoning (Section 1) / Reasoning for conditionals and hypotheses (Section 2) / Content effects in reasoning (Section 3) / Normativeness and adaptiveness of thinking (Section 4) (partly coauthored with I. Hattori). In Y. Tsuji (Ed.), Encyclopedia of cognitive science of language (pp. 335–360, Chapt. 6: Language and thinking). Tokyo, Japan: Taishukan. ISBN: 978-4-469-01269-9 (In Japanese) (July)
  20. Takahashi, K., & Hattori, M. (1996a). Deductive reasoning. In S. Ichikawa (Ed.), Cognitive psychology 4: Thinking (pp. 15–35). Tokyo, Japan: University of Tokyo Press. ISBN: 978-4-13-015104-7 (In Japanese) (February)

Refereed Journal Articles

  1. Orita, R., & Hattori, M. (2023a). Who takes the clue? Relationships between internal and external factors in creative problem solving. Japanese Psychological Research. Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10.1111/jpr.12470 (August)
  2. Nishida, Y., Hattori, M., & Orita, R. (2023a). What does the Remote Associates Test measure? Japanese Journal of Psychology, 94(5), 392–401. https://doi.org/10.4992/jjpsy.94.22024 (December)
  3. Abe, L., & Hattori, M. (2023a). Effects of ad hoc category recall training on creativity in concept synthesis task. Cognitive Studies: Bulletin of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society, 30(3), 365–369. https://doi.org/10.11225/cs.2023.020(September)
  4. Shimizu, C., & Hattori, M. (2022a). Effect of trust on the Monty Hall problem. Cognitive Studies: Bulletin of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society, 29(1), 125–130. https://doi.org/10.11225/cs.2021.075(March)
  5. Orita, R., & Hattori, M. (2019b). Positive and negative affects facilitate insight problem solving in different ways: A study with implicit hints. Japanese Psychological Research, 61(2), 94–106. https://doi.org/10.1111/jpr.12237 (April). This paper received the 2019 Distinguished Paper Award, Japanese Psychological Association.
  6. Orita, R., Hattori, M., & Nishida, Y. (2018a). Development of a Japanese Remote Associates Task as insight problems. Japanese Journal of Psychology, 89(4), 376–386. https://doi.org/10.4992/jjpsy.89.17201 (October)
  7. Nishida, Y., Orita, R., Hattori, M., Castoldi, V., & Macchi, L. (2018a). Novel idea generation and inhibitory function in insight problem solving. Cognitive Studies: Bulletin of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society, 25(1), 100–114. https://doi.org/10.11225/jcss.25.100 (In Japanese with English abstract) (March)
  8. Orita, R., Hattori, M., & Yagi, Y. (2018a). Mechanism of the effects of ease of retrieval: The influence of cognitive load and need for cognition. Japanese Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 57(2), 67–77. https://doi.org/10.2130/jjesp.1611 (In Japanese with English abstract) (March)
  9. Nishida, Y., Hattori, M., & Orita, R. (2018a). Idea generation in insight problem solving: A review from a viewpoint of inhibitory mechanism. Ritsumeikan Journal of Human Sciences, 37, 91–102. Institute of Human Sciences, Ritsumeikan University. https://doi.org/10.34382/00004379 (In Japanese with English abstract) (February)
  10. Miyakawa, N., & Hattori, M. (2017a). Effects of disfluency of letters on memorizing words: A perspective from working memory capacity. Cognitive Studies: Bulletin of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society, 24(3), 450–456. https://doi.org/10.11225/jcss.24.450 (In Japanese with English abstract) (September)
  11. Hattori, I., Hattori, M., Over, D. E., Takahashi, T., & Baratgin, J. (2017a). Dual frames for causal induction: The normative and the heuristic. Thinking & Reasoning, 23(3), 292–317. https://doi.org/10.1080/13546783.2017.1316314 (June)
  12. Hattori, M. (2016c). Probabilistic representation in syllogistic reasoning: A theory to integrate mental models and heuristics. Cognition, 157, 296–320. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cognition.2016.09.009 (December)
  13. Hattori, M. (2016d). Model fitting data from syllogistic reasoning experiments. Data in Brief, 9, 850–875. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dib.2016.09.053 (December)
  14. Orita, R., Hattori, M., & Yagi, Y. (2015a). Indirect effects of ease of retrieval on prediction of other's behaviors: Moderating influence of trait expectancy. Japanese Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 55(1), 28–39. https://doi.org/10.2130/jjesp.1501 (In Japanese with English abstract) (October)
  15. Hattori, M., Sloman, S. A., & Orita, R. (2013a). Effects of subliminal hints on insight problem solving. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review, 20(4), 790–797. https://doi.org/10.3758/s13423-013-0389-0 (August)
  16. Nishida, Y., & Hattori, M. (2011a). Illusions of base rate neglect and natural frequency: An empirical examination based on the equiprobability hypothesis. Cognitive Studies: Bulletin of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society, 18(1), 173–189. https://doi.org/10.11225/jcss.18.173 (In Japanese with English abstract) (March)
  17. Minato, M. & Hattori, M. (2011a). A critical evaluation of the mood induction technique using music. Japanese Journal of Cognitive Psychology, 8(2), 89–98. https://doi.org/10.5265/jcogpsy.8.89 (In Japanese with English abstract) (February)
  18. Tamura, M., Hattori, M., & Miwa, K. (2010a). Belief updating and test sequences in hypothesis testing: An examination based on an information gain model. Cognitive Studies: Bulletin of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society, 17(1), 180–195. https://doi.org/10.11225/jcss.17.180 (In Japanese with English abstract) (March)
  19. Hattori, M., & Nishida, Y. (2009b). Why does the base rate appear to be ignored? The equiprobability hypothesis. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review, 16(6), 1065–1070. https://doi.org/10.3758/PBR.16.6.1065 (December)
  20. Hattori, M. (2008b). The equiprobability hypothesis of reasoning and judgment: Symmetry in thinking and its adaptive implications. Cognitive Studies: Bulletin of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society, 15(3), 408–427. https://doi.org/10.11225/jcss.15.408 (In Japanese with English abstract) (September). This paper received the 2009 Distinguished Paper Award, Japanese Cognitive Science Society.
  21. Hattori, M., & Oaksford, M. (2007a). Adaptive non-interventional heuristics for covariation detection in causal induction: Model comparison and rational analysis. Cognitive Science, 31(5), 765–814. https://doi.org/10.1080/03640210701530755 (September)
  22. Yoshida, Y., & Hattori, M. (2006a). An analysis of creativity and its subordinate concepts using the idea search space model. Japanese Journal of Psychonomic Science, 24(2), 181–190. https://doi.org/10.14947/psychono.KJ00004347111 (In Japanese with English abstract) (March)
  23. Hattori, M. (2005a). The tendency of data selection in the Wason selection task: Human fallacy and rationality in reasoning. Ritsumeikan Journal of Human Sciences, 9, 13–22. Institute of Human Sciences, Ritsumeikan University. (In Japanese with English abstract) (March)
  24. Yoshida, Y., Hattori, M., & Oda, M. (2005a). The relationship between idea search space and creativity. Japanese Journal of Psychology, 76(3), 211–218. https://doi.org/10.4992/jjpsy.76.211 (In Japanese with English abstract) (September)
  25. Hattori, M. (2002d). A quantitative model of optimal data selection in Wason's selection task. The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology A, 55(4), 1241–1272. https://doi.org/10.1080/02724980244000053 (October)
  26. Hattori, M. (2002b). Directionality in conditional reasoning. Ritsumeikan Journal of Human Sciences, 3, 1–13. Institute of Human Sciences, Ritsumeikan University. (In Japanese with English abstract) (March)
  27. Yoshida, Y., & Hattori, M. (2002a). Effects of metacognitive processing on creative problem solving. Cognitive Studies: Bulletin of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society, 9(1), 89–102. https://doi.org/10.11225/jcss.9.89 (In Japanese with English abstract) (March)
  28. Hattori, M. (2001d). A dual-factor heuristics model of causal induction. Cognitive Studies: Bulletin of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society, 8(4), 444–453. https://doi.org/10.11225/jcss.8.444 (In Japanese with English abstract) (December)
  29. Hattori, M., & Nakagawa, M. (2001a). Learning processes of conditional reasoning: An experimental investigation towards a learning support system for logical reasoning. Japan Journal of Educational Technology, 25(1), 1–12. https://doi.org/10.15077/jmet.25.1_1 (In Japanese with English abstract) (July)
  30. Hattori, M. (2000a). Logical reasoning as problem solving: An examination on directionality of conditionals. Ritsumeikan Educational Studies, 16, 21–32. Institute of Human Sciences, Ritsumeikan University. (In Japanese) (July)
  31. Hattori, M., & Nakagawa, M. (1996a). A new experimental method to identify the process of logical reasoning. Japanese Psychological Research, 38(2), 74–84. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-5884.1996.tb00010.x (May)

Non-refereed Journal and Other Articles

  1. Hattori, M., Orita, R., & Nishida, Y. (2023, August 19). When a clue is unhelpful: Dynamics of cognitive control and automated processes in insight problem solving. PsyArXiv. https://doi.org/10.31234/osf.io/gv5z3
  2. Hattori, M. (2022a). Rationality meets creativity: Multiple goals, dual processes, and conscious self. Cognitive Studies: Bulletin of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society, 29(3), 371–389. https://doi.org/10.11225/cs.2022.036 (September)
  3. Nishida Y., Hattori, M., & Orita, R. (2021a). Does the Japanese Remote Associates Test measure insight? Cognitive Studies: Bulletin of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society, 28(1), 178–181. https://doi.org/10.11225/cs.2020.067 (March)
  4. Hattori, M. (2018g). What artificial intelligence reveals about creative cognition: A study from the standpoint of duality and rationality of thinking. Artificial Intelligence: Journal of the Japanese Society for Artificial Intelligence, 33, 771–779. https://doi.org/10.11517/jjsai.33.6_771 (In Japanese) (November)
  5. Hattori, M. (2018a). Which is rational, artificial intelligence or human beings? Psychology World, 80, 27–28. https://psych.or.jp/publication/world080/pw10/ (In Japanese) (January)
  6. Hattori, M. (2015a). Symmetry as a heuristic in reasoning. Ritsumeikan Bungaku: The Journal of Cultural Sciences, 641, 83–92. (In Japanese with English abstract) (March)
  7. Hattori, M. (2014d). Figure and ground in thinking: The affirmation–negation asymmetry as a consequence of framing. Ritsumeikan Bungaku: The Journal of Cultural Sciences, 636, 131–147. https://doi.org/10.34382/00006478 (In Japanese with English abstract) (March)
  8. Hattori, M. (2009b). Theories and logics. Cognitive Studies: Bulletin of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society, 16(4), 471–472. https://doi.org/10.11225/jcss.16.471 (In Japanese) (December)
  9. Hattori, M., & Yamazaki, Y. (2009a). Issues and implications of symmetry in Cognitive Science: Introduction to the debate. Cognitive Studies: Bulletin of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society, 16(1), 120–121. https://doi.org/10.11225/jcss.16.120 (In Japanese) (March)
  10. Hattori, M. (2008a). Symmetry in reasoning, and reasoning in symmetry. Gengo, 37(3), 4–5.(In Japanese) (February)
  11. Hattori, M., & Yamazaki, Y. (2008a). Symmetry and bidirectionality in Cognitive Science: Introduction to the feature “Symmetry: The search for the foundation of thinking, language, and communication”. Cognitive Studies: Bulletin of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society, 15(3), 315–321. https://doi.org/10.11225/jcss.15.315 (In Japanese) (September)
  12. Hattori, M. (2002e). Probabilistic approach toward logical reasoning. Learning and Conversation, 2002(1), 16–26. Japanese Cognitive Science Society. (In Japanese) (October)
  13. Hattori, M., Nakajima, K, & Nakagawa, M. (2002a). Directionality in rule induction. Japanese Cognitive Science Society Technical Report, 43, 1–11. (In Japanese) (March)
  14. Hattori, M. (1992a). A review of the studies on logical reasoning. T. Teraoka, M. Nakagawa, & S. Hosoda (Eds.), Current Trends in the Behavioral Theories (I). Hokkaido Behavioral Science Report, HBSR-P(S)-59, 23–35. Department of Behavioral Science, Hokkaido University. (In Japanese) (February)

Book Reviews, Essays, Videos, and others

  1. CS 30th Anniversary Feature Committee (2023a). Introduction to the feature: The 30th Anniversary of Cognitive Studies. Cognitive Studies: Bulletin of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society, 30(1), 5–7. https://doi.org/10.11225/cs.2022.068 (March)
  2. CS 30th Anniversary Feature Part II Committee (2023a). Introduction to Part II of the feature: Thinking about the future of Cognitive Studies. Cognitive Studies: Bulletin of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society, 30(1), 81–82. https://doi.org/10.11225/cs.2022.078 (March)
  3. CS 30th Anniversary Feature Part II Committee (2023b). Cognitive Studies from the user's perspective: Results of the survey. Cognitive Studies: Bulletin of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society, 30(1), 83–88. https://doi.org/10.11225/cs.2022.079 (March)
  4. Asano, M., Bono, M., Kawai, N., Kobashi, Y., Morita, J., Nakamura, K., Shirouzu, H., & CS 30th Anniversary Feature Part II Committee (2023a). Round-table talk on the past, present, and future of Cognitive Studies. Cognitive Studies: Bulletin of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society, 30(1), 89–93. https://doi.org/10.11225/cs.2022.080 (March)
  5. Hattori, M., & Hidaka, S. (2020a). Introduction to the feature: Research by young cognitive scientists. Cognitive Studies: Bulletin of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society, 27(3), 248–249. https://doi.org/10.11225/cs.2020.042 (September)
  6. Hattori, M. (2018b). Academicism of cognitive studies. Cognitive Studies: Bulletin of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society, 25(1), 1–2. https://doi.org/10.11225/jcss.25.1 (In Japanese) (March)
  7. Hattori, M. (2017a). Japanese writing education: An opinion from a third party. ITLNews, 38, 4. Institute for Teaching and Learning, Ritsumeikan University. February. (In Japanese)
  8. Hattori, M. (guide) (2015e). Vol. 6: Thinking 1 (Problem solving and reasoning), Vol. 7: Thinking 2 (Judgment and decision making). Y. Takano (Ed.), DVD: Cognitive psychology. Tokyo, Japan: Sun Educational. (In Japanese) (November)
  9. Hattori, M. (2002a). “Sperber, D. (1996). Explaining culture: A naturalistic approach. Oxford: Blackwell”. Gengo, 31(3), 131. Tokyo: Taishukan. February. (In Japanese)

Invited Talks

  1. Hattori, M. (2021a). What artificial intelligence reveals about creative cognition. The 16th RIKEN Innovation Design Oiffice Forum. Online. November 19.
  2. Hattori, M. (2018h). Deep + Meta + alpha: Some thoughts over rationality, creativity, and consciousness. The 22nd AI, Art, and Aesthetics Research Meeting. Bigakko, Tokyo. December 23.[YouTube]
  3. Hattori, M. (2018c). Rationality and duality of human reasoning. The 21st Lecture of Whole Brain Architecture Initiative: Reasoning. Lazona Kawasaki Toshiba Building. March 15, 2018.
  4. Hattori, M. (2017a). Confirmation bias: Its merits and demerits, and the cognitive basis. The 15th Annual Meeting of the Japanese Society of Cognitive Psychology. Keio University. June 3, 2017.
  5. Hattori, M. (2017b). Rationality and goal-multiplicity: Beyond bounded rationality and dual rationality. Organized Session: (Ir)Rationality in J.D.M. The 34th Annual Meeting of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society. Kanazawa University. September 13, 2017.
  6. Hattori, M. (2016b). Cognitive science of thinking: Consciousness and rationality of thoughts. The 3177th Ritsumeikan Saturday Lecture Series. Suekawa Memorial Lecture Hall, Ritsumeikan University. September 10, 2016.
  7. Hattori, M. (2014a). Symmetry and asymmetry of thinking: Causality, figure–ground framing, and biases in reasoning and judgment. The 8th Workshop on Illusions. Meiji University. March, 12, 2014.
  8. Hattori, M. (2013a). Subliminal problem solving: Duality of cognition and their interaction. The 7th Workshop on Internal Measurement. RIKEN BSI. March 2, 2013.
  9. Hattori, M. (2012b). Probabilistic approached to reasoning and thinking: The significance and limitations of models. The 46th SIG-LAL (Japanese Cognitive Science Society). Tokyo Institute of Technology. March 22, 2012.
  10. Hattori, M. (2011a). Symmetry in thinking and cognition of causality. University of Tokyo. June 16, 2011.
  11. Hattori, M. (2010a). Asymmetry and causality in reasoning: Scope and prospect of the equiprobability hypothesis. The 4th Workshop on Internal Measurement. Tokyo University of Science. March 7, 2010.
  12. Hattori, M. (2009c). The equiprobability hypothesis of reasoning and judgment: Bias toward symmetrical inference from asymmetrical relationship. The 10th Kansai Young Researchers Colloquium on Experimental Psychology. Ritsumeikan University. December 12, 2009.
  13. Hattori, M. (2006e). The search for the common foundation of reasoning, judgment, and concept: A study of rarity, equiprobability, and symmetry. COE21 Public Lecture. Tokyo Institute of Technology. De- cember 8, 2006.
  14. Hattori, M. (2006f). Cognitive Science of chance discovery and insight (Invited Discussant). The 41st SIG-LAL (Japanese Cognitive Science Society). Tamagawa University. December 9, 2006.
  15. Hattori, M. (2004a). An adaptive heuristic in causal reasoning. School of Applied Sciences, University of Wolverhampton, UK. May 11, 2004.
  16. Hattori, M. (1994a). Logicality and illogicality of human reasoning. Public Lecture hosted by Department of Information Science, Chukyo University. Institute for Advanced Studies in Artificial Intelligence. July 9, 1994.

Papers Read at International Professional Meetings

  1. Abe, L., Hattori, M., & Hayashi, Y. (2023a, August 23–25). Differences between human and robot experimenters in creative problem solving: An experimental investigation focusing on fear of negative evaluation. The 13th International Conference on Cognitive Science (ICCS 2023). Seoul National University, Korea. Presended August 24.
  2. Hattori, M., Orita, R., & Nishida, Y. (2021a, June 24). What makes insight problems hard to be solved? Dual processes and their interaction. The 9th International Conference on Thinking (ICT 2020). Teleconference.
  3. Nishida, Y., Hattori, M., & Orita, R. (2021a, June 23). The remote associates test does not measure general insight but correlates with rejecting typical false ideas to solve problems. The 9th International Conference on Thinking (ICT 2020). Teleconference.
  4. Nishida, Y., Hattori, M., Kuroda, T., Ono, I., Kobayashi, T., Koba, R., & Kagami, Y. (2021a, July 19). When handwritten characters improve memory: An examination of moderators of the disfluency effect. The 32nd International Congress of Psychology (ICP 2020+). Teleconference.
  5. Nishida, Y., Orita, R., & Hattori, M. (2019a, August, 24). Recalling can be an obstruction in solving an insight problem: The retrieval-induced impasse hypothesis. ICCS 2019: International Conference on Cognitive Science. Seoul, Korea.
  6. Hattori, M., Orita, R., & Nishida, Y. (2019a, March, 9). A cue can cause an impasse: Paradoxical dynamics of problem solving and creativity. ICPS 2019: International Convention of Psychological Science. Paris, France.
  7. Orita, R., & Hattori, M. (2019a, March, 9). The activated affective state valence alters the way to assimilate helpful cues in insight problem solving. ICPS 2019: International Convention of Psychological Science. Paris, France.
  8. Orita, R, & Hattori, M. (2018a, July 28). Goodness of ideas is judged based on affective valence: A study using the remote associates task. The 40th Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society (CogSci 2018). Madison, Wisconsin, USA.
  9. Orita, R, Nishida, Y., & Hattori, M. (2017a, Mar 24). Paradoxical relationship between exogenous cues and endogenous activity in insight problem solving: The influence of two types of inhibitory controls. The 2nd International Convention of Psychological Science (ICPS 2017). Vienna, Austria. Association for Psychological Science.
  10. Hattori, M., & Hattori, I. (2016a, August 4). Dual frames in causal reasoning and other types of thinking: An empirical test. The 8th International Conference on Thinking (ICT 2016). Brown University, Providence, USA.
  11. Nishida, Y., Orita, R., & Hattori, M. (2016a, July 26). A benefit of “flagging inhibition” in insight problem solving. The 31st International Congress of Psychology (ICP 2016). Pacifico Yokohama, Japan.
  12. Orita, R, & Hattori, M. (2016a, July 27). Malleability and durability of implicit attitude: The influence of approach and avoidance behavior. The 31st International Congress of Psychology (ICP 2016). Pacifico Yokohama, Japan.
  13. Orita, R., & Hattori, M. (2015a, July 23). Individual differences in the use of cues during insight problem solving. The 37th Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society (CogSci 2015). Pasadena, USA.
  14. Hattori, M. (2014f, May 16). Probabilistic representation in syllogistic reasoning. Reasoning, Cognition and Life: A Conference in Honour of Professor Ken Manktelow. University of Wolverhampton, Wolverhampton, UK.
  15. Hattori, M. (2014g, June 5). Subliminal problem solving: Dual processes of cognition and their interaction. The Second New Paradigm Psychology of Reasoning Conference. École Pratique des Hautes Études, Paris, France.
  16. Hattori, M. (2014h, July 10). Probabilistic representation in syllogistic reasoning and the effects of content and figures. The 8th London Reasoning Workshop (LRW 2014). Birkbeck College, University of London, UK.
  17. Hattori, I., Hattori, M., Takahashi, T., & Over, D. (2014a, May 16). The impact of non-occurrent events in causal induction: AB frames. Reasoning, Cognition and Life: A Conference in Honour of Professor Ken Manktelow. University of Wolverhampton, Wolverhampton, UK.
  18. Orita, R., & Hattori, M. (2014a, July 26). Effects of a mood and an unrecognized hint on insight problem solving. The 36th Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society (CogSci 2014). Quebec City, Canada.
  19. Orita, R., & Hattori, M. (2013a, August 28). Unrecognized hints facilitate insight problem solving performance under dual task load. The 9th International Conference on Cognitive Science (ICCS 2013). Kuching, Sarawak, Malaysia.
  20. Hattori, M., Sloman, S. A., & Orita, R. (2012a, July 26). Effects of unrecognized hints and metacognitive control in insight problem solving. The 30th International Congress of Psychology (ICP 2012). Cape Town, South Africa.
  21. Hattori, I., & Hattori, M. (2012a, July 26). The effects of attention and working memory on causal judgment. The 30th International Congress of Psychology. Cape Town, South Africa.
  22. Hattori, I., & Hattori, M. (2012b, August 2). Is past information useful for evaluating present covariation information? Effect of irrelevant information on causal judgment. The 34th Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society (CogSci 2012). Sapporo, Japan.
  23. Orita, R., & Hattori, M. (2012a, August 3). Effects of supraliminal and subliminal hint priming on insight problem solving. The 34th Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society (CogSci 2012). Sapporo, Japan.
  24. Hattori, M., & Nishida, Y. (2009a, November 22). Not the base rate but the imbalanced structure does matter. The 30th Annual Conference of the Society for Judgment and Decision Making (SJDM 2009). Sheraton Boston Hotel, Boston, MA.
  25. Hattori, M., & Nishida, Y. (2007b, November 18). Why does the base rate appear to be neglected? The equiprobability hypothesis. The 28th Annual Conference of the Society for Judgment and Decision Making (SJDM 2007). The Westin Long Beach, Long Beach, CA.
  26. Hattori, M. (2006b, July 26). Observations vs. interventions in causal induction. Proceedings of the 5th International Conference on Cognitive Science (ICCS 2006), 105–106. Sheraton Vancouver Wall Centre, Vancouver, Canada.
  27. Hattori, I., Hattori, M., & Buehner, M. (2006a, July 26). Causal strength and reliability: Two processes in causal reasoning. Proceedings of the 5th International Conference on Cognitive Science (ICCS 2006), 107–108. Sheraton Vancouver Wall Centre, Vancouver, Canada.
  28. Hattori, M., & Oaksford, M. (2004a, July 24). Discriminating multiple causes from a number of candidates: An adaptive heuristic in covariation detection. Conference Proceedings of the Fifth International Conference on Thinking (ICT 2004), 10. Kathorieke Universiteit Leuven, Belgium. British Psychological Society.
  29. Hattori, M. (2003a, July 16). Adaptive heuristics of covariation detection: A model of causal induction. Proceedings of the 4th International Conference on Cognitive Science and the 7th Australasian Society for Cognitive Science Joint Conference (ICCS/ASCS 2003), Vol. 1, 163–168. The University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia.
  30. Yoshida, Y., Hattori, M., & Oda, M. (2003b, June 21). Evaluation of creativity and the area of search space. The 2003 International Symposium on Cognitive Approaches to Creative Processes. 学習と対話,2003(1), 81. 多治見市セラミックパーク MINO.
  31. Hattori, M. (2000b, August 24). Selection tendencies and strategies in Wason's selection task. Programme and Abstracts of the Fourth International Conference on Thinking (ICT 2000), 14. University of Durham. British Psychological Society.
  32. Hattori, M. (1999a, July 27). The effects of probabilistic information in Wason's selection task: An analysis of strategy based on the ODS model. Proceedings of the 2nd International Conference on Cognitive Science and the 16th Annual Meeting of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society Joint Conference (ICCS/JCSS 99), 623–626. International Conference Center, Waseda University, Tokyo, Japan.

Papers Read at Domestic (Japanese) Professional Meetings

  1. Nakamura, S., & Hattori, M. (2023b, December 1–3). Does unconscious thinking favor relationally similar stories? A replication of Li et al. (2020). The 42nd Annual Meeting of the Japanese Psychonomic Society. Toyohashi University of Technology. (Presented December 3).
  2. Zhu, W., Abe, L., & Hattori, M. (2023a, December 1–3). Influence of emotional state on the incubation effect of creative problem solving. The 42nd Annual Meeting of the Japanese Psychonomic Society. Toyohashi University of Technology. (Presented December 3).
  3. Abe, L, Hattori, M., & Hayashi, Y. (2023b, September 7–9). Does the robot experimenter facilitate human creative cognition? Focusing on fear of negative evaluation, trust, and impressions of the robot. The 40th Annual Meeting of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society. Future University Hakodate. (Presented September 7).
  4. Nakamura, S. & Hattori, M. (2023a, September 7–9). Does intention on analogical retrieval promote to retrieve superficially dissimilar analogs? The 40th Annual Meeting of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society. Future University Hakodate. (Presented September 7).
  5. Hattori, M. (2022b, September 8–10). Causality behind Monty's closed doors: A study based on the figure-and-ground in thinking. The 39th Annual Meeting of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society. Online. (Presented September 8).
  6. Abe, L., & Hattori, M. (2022a, September 8–10). Effect of the associations between concepts on creativity: Alternative categories task improves originality. The 39th Annual Meeting of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society. Online. (Presented September 8).
  7. Shibakita, H., Hattori, M., Hirata, M., & Miwa, K. (2022a, September 8–10). The impact of death threats on self's hypothesis validity assessment: The process of hypothesis testing from terror management theory. The 39th Annual Meeting of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society. Online. (Presented September 8).
  8. Tanaka, Y., Nagai, M., & Hattori, M. (2022a, September 8–10). Influence of the visual image style on impressions of narrative sentences: Differences according to the way they are read. The 39th Annual Meeting of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society. Online. (Presented September 9).
  9. Tanaka, Y., & Hattori, M. (2022a, October 15–16). Mood changes and individual differences due to story reading. The 20th Annual Meeting of the Japanese Society of Cognitive Psychology. Kobe University and Kwansei Gakuin University. (Presented October 15).
  10. Nishida, Y., & Hattori, M. (2022a, December 22–23). Does conscious memory retrieval hinder insight problem solving? THIP2022-61 (2022-12): The Institute of Electronics, Information and Communication Engineers, Human Information Processing. Tohoku University. (Presented December 22).
  11. Abe, L., & Hattori, M. (2021a, March 3–4). The influence of noun's attributes on understanding adjective–noun phrases. The 18th Annual Meeting of the Japanese Society of Cognitive Psychology. Teleconference.
  12. Abe, L., & Hattori, M. (2021b, December 3–5). When "dictionary plus teeth" turns into a creative product: Effects of connection between concepts and non-typicality on creativity. The 40th Annual Meeting of the Japanese Psychonomic Society. Online.
  13. Kuroda, T., Nishida, Y., & Hattori, M. (2020a, September 17–19). When difficulty in reading characters facilitates and hinders memory: Examination of disfluency effect in terms of working memory capacity. The 37th Annual Meeting of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society. Teleconference.
  14. Nishida, Y., Hattori, M., & Orita, R. (2020a, September 17–19). (TBA). The 37th Annual Meeting of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society. Teleconference.
  15. Nishida, Y., Hattori, M., & Orita, R. (2020b, September 8 –November 2). Do hints hinder solving insight problems due to inhibition? An examination by correct answer rate and reaction time. The 84th Annual Convention of the Japanese Psychological Association. Teleconference.
  16. Shimizu, C., & Hattori, M. (2020a, September 17–19). The impact of trust on the Monty Hall problem. The 37th Annual Meeting of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society. Teleconference.
  17. Nishida, Y., Hattori, M., Kuroda, T., Izumi, O., Kobayashi, T., Koba, R., & Kagami, Y. (2019a, December 1). Does the depth of hand-written words help memorizing? An examination of the (reverse) effect of disfluency. The 38th Annual Meeting of the Japanese Psychonomic Society. Kobe University.
  18. Hattori, M. (2019a, September 11). Creativity and spontaneity: Beyond dual-process and dual-rationality. Symposium: Rethinking creativity from the viewpoint of psychology and medical practice: Consciousness, unconsciousness, and spontaniety. The 83rd Annual Convention of the Japanese Psychological Association. Ritsumeikan University.
  19. Hattori, I., & Hattori, M. (2019a, September 5). Two-way control of the two types of thinking. The 36th Annual Meeting of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society. Shizuoka University.
  20. Nishida, Y., Orita, R. , & Hattori, M. (2019b, September 11). Spontaneous memory retrieval and subliminal cues in insight problem solving. Symposium: Rethinking creativity from the viewpoint of psychology and medical practice: Consciousness, unconsciousness, and spontaniety. The 83rd Annual Convention of the Japanese Psychological Association. Ritsumeikan University.
  21. Hattori, M., Orita, R., & Nishida, Y. (2018a, August 30). The paradox of problem solving: Adverse priming and beneficial noise. The 35th Annual Meeting of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society. Ritsumeikan University.
  22. Hattori, I., & Hattori, M. (2017a, September 13). Dual frames in causal induction. The 34th Annual Meeting of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society. Kanazawa University.
  23. Hattori, I., Politzer, G., Hattori, M., & Baratgin, J. (2017a, September 22). How do we negate conditional sentences? Negating conditional sentences in natural language. The 81st Annual Convention of the Japanese Psychological Association. Kurume City Plaza.
  24. Nishida, Y., Castoldi, V, Orita, R., Hattori, M., Macchi, L., & Copelli, M. (2017a). Subliminal priming effect and cognitive resources in insight problem solving. The 81st Annual Convention of the Japanese Psychological Association. Kurume City Plaza.
  25. Orita, R., Hattori, M., & Nishida, Y. (2017a, September 21). Development of a Japanese remote associates test as insight problems. The 81st Annual Convention of the Japanese Psychological Association. Kurume City Plaza. September 20.
  26. Orita, R., & Hattori, M. (2017a, July 17). The influence of affects on the use of implicigt hints in insight problem solving. SIG P&P, Japanese Cognitive Science Society. Ritsumeikan University.
  27. Nishida, Y., Orita, R., & Hattori, M. (2016b, October 29). How conscious efforts enable us to choose invisible cues: An examination of insight problem solving using subliminal priming. The 35th Annual Meeting of the Japanese Psychonomic Society. Tokyo Woman's Christian University.
  28. Miyakawa, N., & Hattori, M. (2016a, June 19). The effect of letter disfluency on performance in memory: An examination on personal traits. The 14th Annual Meeting of the Japanese Society of Cognitive Psychology. Hiroshima University.
  29. Hattori, M. (2015d, September 24). Implicit meta-cognition: Non-conscious control of non-conscious information in problem solving. In M. Hattori & H. Suzuki (organized), Symposium: Consciousness and unconsciousness in thinking. The 79th Annual Convention of the Japanese Psychological Association. Nagoya Congress Center.
  30. Hattori, M., Orita, R., & Nishida, Y. (2015a, June 5). When implicit cues suppress ideas: Negative priming effect in remote associate tests. The 13th Annual Meeting of the Japanese Society of Cognitive Psychology. University of Tokyo.
  31. Orita, R., & Hattori, M. (2015b, September 20). Instability of the effects of implicit hints in problem solving. The 32nd Annual Meeting of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society. Chiba University.
  32. Nishida, Y., Orita, R., & Hattori, M. (2015a, January 17). Endogenous and exogenous facilitation in insight problem solving. The 2014 General Meeting of the Institute of Human Sciences. Ritsumeikan University.
  33. Nishida, Y., Orita, R., & Hattori, M. (2015b, November 8). Implicit cues and cognitive inhibition in remote associates tests. The 127th Annual Meeting of Kansai Psychological Association. Kwansei Gakuin University.
  34. Nishida, Y., Castoldi, V, Orita, R., Hattori, M., & Macchi, L. (2015a, September 24). Response inhibition and suppression of idea generation in insight problem solving. The 79th Annual Convention of the Japanese Psychological Association. Nagoya Congress Center.
  35. Hattori, M., & Orita, R. (2014a, June 29). Unconscious use of information and conscious control. The 12th Annual Meeting of the Japanese Society of Cognitive Psychology. Sendai International Center.
  36. Orita, R., & Hattori, M. (2014b, September 20). Mood effects on the use of hints in insight problem solving. The 31st Annual Meeting of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society. Nagoya University.
  37. Sato, A., Hattori, M., & Karasawa, Y. (2014a, September 11). Effects of cognitive resources and motivation on attitude change. The 78th Annual Convention of the Japanese Psychological Association. Doshisha University.
  38. Nishida, Y., Orita, R., & Hattori, M. (2014a, December 6). Effect of cognitive resource and divergent processing mode in insight problem solving. The 35th Annual Meeting of the Japanese Psychonomic Society. Tokyo Metropolitan University.
  39. Hattori, M. (2013b, September 12). Affirmation–negation asymmetry: An empirical examination of the figure–ground framing in probability inference tasks. The 30th Annual Meeting of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society. Tamagawa University.
  40. Hattori, M., & Orita, R. (2013a, September 21). When cognitive load yields insights: Effects of priming and dual-tasking in insight problem solving. The 77th Annual Convention of the Japanese Psychological Association. Sapporo Convention Center.
  41. Hattori, I., Hattori, M., & Takahashi, T. (2013a, September 21). The impact of non-occurrent events in causal induction. The 77th Annual Convention of the Japanese Psychological Association. Sapporo Convention Center.
  42. Jo, I., & Hattori, M. (2013a, June 29). The brand can interfere with retrospective interpretations: Effects of labels and conceptual information on preference. The 11th Annual Meeting of the Japanese Society of Cognitive Psychology. International Congress Center Epochal Tsukuba.
  43. Hattori, M., & Suzuki, H. (2012a, December 15). Projecting a symposium: “Automaticity and control in higher order cognitive processes.” The 29th Annual Meeting of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society. Sendai International Center.
  44. Hattori, M., & Orita, R. (2012b, December 15). Relationship between conscious and unconscious processes in insight problem solving. The 29th Annual Meeting of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society. Sendai International Center.
  45. Hattori, M. (2012e, December 15). Probability sampling model of categorical syllogistic reasoning: Content effects and equiprobability hypothesis. Proceedings of the 29th Annual Meeting of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society, 164–170. Sendai International Center.
  46. Hattori, M., & Orita, R. (2012a, September 13). The subliminal priming effect to insight problem solving. The 76th Annual Convention of the Japanese Psychological Association. Senshu University.
  47. Hattori, M., Hattori, I, & Yama, H. (2012a, September 11). Projecting a symposium: “Beyond truth and falsity (2): The void value in causal inferences and abduction.” The 76th Annual Convention of the Japanese Psychological Association. Senshu University.
  48. Hattori, I., Hattori, M, & Yama, H. (2012a, September 11). Projecting a symposium: “Beyond truth and falsity (1): The new paradigm psychology of reasoning.” The 76th Annual Convention of the Japanese Psychological Association. Senshu University.
  49. Kajiwara, W., & Hattori, M. (2012a, September 13). Effects of act and personality descriptions to moral judgments. The 76th Annual Convention of the Japanese Psychological Association. Senshu University.
  50. Hattori, M. (2011d, September 24). Probability sampling model of categorical syllogistic reasoning. Proceedings of the 28th Annual Meeting of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society, 74–83. University of Tokyo.
  51. Hattori, M., & Orita, R. (2011a, May 28). Insight cued in by implicit hints and inhibition by metacognition. Proceedings of the 9th Annual Meeting of the Japanese Society of Cognitive Psychology, 7. Gakushuin University.
  52. Hattori, M. (2010c, September 19). Equiprobability and causality in the Monty Hall problem. The 27th Annual Meeting of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society. Kobe University.
  53. Sakamoto, K., & Hattori, M. (2009a, August 26). Projecting a symposium: Thinking and reasoning: Implications and issues from the viewpoints of cognition, sociality, evolution, and brain. The 73rd Annual Convention of Japanese Psychological Association. Ritsumeikan University.
  54. Hattori, M. (2008c, September 21). Looking for a needle in a haystack? A heuristic for discriminating probable causes. Symposium: Causal induction and contingency learning: Cognitive vs. associative approaches. The 72nd Annual Convention of Japanese Psychological Association. Hokkaido Uni- versity.
  55. Hattori, M. (2008d, September 20). Probabilistic models for deduction and induction. Workshop: Model construction and experimental study in reasoning and decision making. The 72nd Annual Convention of the Japanese Psychological Association. Hokkaido University.
  56. Hattori, M., & Shibata, Y. (2008a, September 5). Interaction between implicit cognition and meta-cognition in insight problem solving: In the case of the nine-dot problem. Proceedings of the 25th Annual Meeting of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society, 156–159. Doshisha University.
  57. Nishida, Y., & Hattori, M. (2008a, September 6). The value of base rate and the representativeness of the likelihood in the base rate fallacy. Proceedings of the 25th Annual Meeting of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society, 238–239. Doshisha University.
  58. Nishida, Y., & Hattori, M. (2008b, September 20). The equiprobability hypothesis and independence of events. Proceedings of the 72nd Annual Convention of the Japanese Psychological Association, 959. Hokkaido University.
  59. Nozoe, K, Hattori, M., & Shimada, H. (2008a, September 20). Interaction between the paradoxical effects of suppression of thought and mood. Proceedings of the 72nd Annual Convention of the Japanese Psychological Association, 354. Hokkaido University.
  60. Hattori, M. (2007b, September 5). The equiprobability hypothesis: Symmetry in reasoning and judgment. Proceedings of the 24th Annual Meeting of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society, 565. Seijo University.
  61. Hattori, M., & Nishida, Y. (2007a, September 18). Probability judgment as causal reasoning: An explanation of the base rate fallacy by the equiprobability hypothesis. Proceedings of the 71st Annual Convention of the Japanese Psychological Association, 848. Toyo University.
  62. Hattori, M., & Shinohara, S. (2007a, September 5). Workshop: Symmetry in thinking and language acquisition. Proceedings of the 24th Annual Meeting of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society, 564–569. Seijo University.
  63. Minato, M., & Hattori, M. (2007a, September 20). A critical evaluation of the musical mood induction technique. Proceedings of the 71st Annual Convention of the Japanese Psychological Association, 952. Toyo University.
  64. Nishida, Y., & Hattori, M. (2007a, September 3). The natural frequency hypothesis and the equiprobability hypothesis of the base rate fallacy. Proceedings of the 24th Annual Meeting of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society, 152–153. Seijo University.
  65. Nishida, Y., & Hattori, M. (2007b, September 18). The base rate fallacy and equiprobability in tasks. Proceedings of the 71st Annual Convention of the Japanese Psychological Association, 841. Toyo University.
  66. Sato, A., Maeda, A., Hattori, M., & Hoshino, Y. (2007a, September 19). The effects of planning on prospective memory. Proceedings of the 71st Annual Convention of the Japanese Psychological Association, 777. Toyo University.
  67. Tamura, M., & Hattori, M. (2007a, September 4). Belief updating and changes in testing strategy in hypothesis testing. Proceedings of the 24th Annual Meeting of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society, 296–297. Seijo University.
  68. Hattori, M. (2006b, November 3). Intervention and observation in causal induction: Heuristics in continuous/discrete paradigm. Proceedings of the 70th Annual Convention of the Japanese Psychological Association, 908. Fukuoka Convention Center.
  69. Hattori, M., & Nishida, Y. (2006b, August 3). Beyond illusions of base rate fallacy and frequency: A study in search of a unified framework for reasoning, judgment, and category. Proceedings of the 23rd Annual Meeting of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society, 18–23. Chukyo University.
  70. Nishida, Y., & Hattori, M. (2006a, August 3). The base rate fallacy and the equiprobability hypothesis. Proceedings of the 23rd Annual Meeting of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society, 236–237. Chukyo University.
  71. Nishida, Y., & Hattori, M. (2006b, November 3). The base rate fallacy and the imbalanced probability structure of tasks. Proceedings of the 70th Annual Convention of the Japanese Psychological Association, 910. Fukuoka Convention Center.
  72. Hattori, M. (2005b, September 12). An adaptive heuristic for covariation detection. Workshop: Mathematical Psychology in Japan XIII. The 69th Annual Convention of the Japanese Psychological Association. Keio University.
  73. Hattori, M., & Oaksford, M. (2005a, July 30). How fast and accurately do we find out multiple causal candidates? An adaptive heuristic for covariation detection. Proceedings of the 22nd Annual Meeting of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society, 42–43. Kyoto University.
  74. Ishidzuka, T., & Hattori, M. (2005a, September 10). Effects of information exchange between solvers in cooperative problem solving. Proceedings of the 69th Annual Convention of the Japanese Psychological Association, 906. Keio University.
  75. Tamura, M., Hattori, M., & Oda, M. (2004a, July 30). Relationship between division of the decision process and postponing the decision. Proceedings of the 21st Annual Meeting of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society, 132–133. National Museum of Emerging Science and Innovation.
  76. Ishidzuka, T., & Hattori, M. (2003a, June 6). Effects of roles in collaborative solving of insight problems. Proceedings of the 20th Annual Meeting of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society, 92–93. University of Electro-Communications.
  77. Ishidzuka, T., & Hattori, M. (2003b, September 15). Effects of collaboration in insight problem solving. Proceedings of the 67th Annual Convention of the Japanese Psychological Association, 928. University of Tokyo.
  78. Nakahara, M., Hattori, M., & Oda, M. (2003a, June 7). Context effects of subsequent exposure on under- standability and evaluation of novel metaphors. Proceedings of the 20th Annual Meeting of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society, 160–161. University of Electro-Communications.
  79. Nakahara, M., Hattori, M., & Oda, M. (2003b, June 28). The effects of linguistic context on various evaluations of novel metaphors. Proceedings of the 1st Annual Meeting of the Japanese Society for Cognitive Psychology, 32–33. Nippon University.
  80. Tamura, M., & Hattori, M. (2003a, July 6). Evaluations of alternatives in decision making. Proceedings of the 20th Annual Meeting of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society, 70–71. University of Electro- Communications.
  81. Yoshida, Y., Hattori, M., & Oda, M. (2003a, June 8). The relationship between the breadth of idea search space and creativity. Proceedings of the 20th Annual Meeting of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society, 58–59. University of Electro-Communications.
  82. Imoto, H., & Hattori, M. (2002a, June 15). An examination on qualitative difference between mood inducement methods. Proceedings of the 19th Annual Meeting of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society, 188–189. Japan Advanced Institute of Science and Technology.
  83. Nakahara, M., & Hattori, M. (2002a, June 15). Context effects of metaphor on understandability, unexpectedness, and interest. Proceedings of the 19th Annual Meeting of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society, 102–103. Japan Advanced Institute of Science and Technology.
  84. Tamura, M., Hattori, M., & Oda, M. (2002a, June 15). Effects of justification and externalization in a decision- making process. Proceedings of the 19th Annual Meeting of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society, 178–179. Japan Advanced Institute of Science and Technology.
  85. Tamura, M., Hattori, M., & Oda, M. (2002b, September 27). Effects of decision-making experience on postponing the decision. Proceedings of the 66th Annual Convention of the Japanese Psychological Association, 831. Hiroshima University.
  86. Yoshida, Y., Hattori, M., & Oda, M. (2002a, June 15). The relationship between the idea space and creativity. Proceedings of the 19th Annual Meeting of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society, 158–159. Japan Advanced Institute of Science and Technology.
  87. Yoshida, Y., Hattori, M., & Oda, M. (2002b, September 27). Evaluation patterns of creativity. Proceedings of the 66th Annual Convention of the Japanese Psychological Association, 843. Hiroshima University.
  88. Hattori, M. (2001c, June 9). Adaptive rationality of causal induction: An examination of the dual-factor heuristics model. Proceedings of the 18th Annual Meeting of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society, 140–141. Future University Hakodate.
  89. Hattori, M. (2001a, November 7). Adaptive heuristics of causal induction as covariation detection. Workshop: On causal reasoning: Towards an integration of the studies of learning and reasoningat. The 65th Annual Convention of the Japanese Psychological Association.
  90. Yoshida, Y., & Hattori, M. (2001a, June 9). Self and other estimation of originality. Proceedings of the 18th Annual Meeting of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society, 136–137. Future University Hakodate.
  91. Hattori, M. (2000a, December 2). A dual-factor heuristics model of causal induction. Proceedings of the 19th Annual Meeting of the Japanese Psychonomic Society, 31. Ritsumeikan University.
  92. Hattori, M., & Yoshida, Y. (2000a, November 7). Creativity, implicit cognition, and meta-cognition. Proceedings of the 64th Annual Convention of the Japanese Psychological Association, 818. Kyoto University.
  93. Tamura, M., & Hattori, M. (2000a, July 1). Rationalization in decision-making. Proceedings of the 17th Annual Meeting of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society, 266–267. Shizuoka University and Shizuoka University of Art and Culture.
  94. Yoshida, Y., & Hattori, M. (2000a, July 1). Effects of metacognitive processing on generative problem solving. Proceedings of the 17th Annual Meeting of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society, 190–191. Shizuoka University and Shizuoka University of Art and Culture.
  95. Yoshida, Y., & Hattori, M. (2000b, December 2). Evaluation processes of originality. Proceedings of the 19th Annual Meeting of the Japanese Psychonomic Society, 31–32. Ritsumeikan University.
  96. Hattori, M. (1997b, September 18). An experimental examination of an information model of Wason's selection task. Proceedings of the 61st Annual Convention of the Japanese Psychological Association, 875. Kwansei Gakuin University.
  97. Hattori, M. (1997a, June 20). A Bayesian information model of Wason's selection task as hypothesis testing. Proceedings of the 14th Annual Meeting of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society, 220–221. NTT Atsugi Research & Development Center.
  98. Hattori, M., Nakajima, K, & Nakagawa, M. (1996a, November 4). Directionality in logical rule acquisition. Proceedings of the 12th Annual Meeting of the Japanese Society for Educational Technology, 657–658. Kanazawa University.
  99. Hattori, M., & Nakagawa, M. (1995a, July 16). Learning processes of logical reasoning. Proceedings of the 12nd Annual Meeting of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society, 136–137. Tokyo Institute of Technology.
  100. Hattori, M. (1994c, October 2). Causal reasoning and its probabilistic model. Proceedings of the 58th Annual Convention of the Japanese Psychological Association, 861. Nippon University.
  101. Hattori, M. (1994b, September 4). Distinction between a cause and a condition in causal induction. The Annals of the Hokkaido Psychological Society (Proceedings of the 41st Annual Meeting of Hokkaido Psychological Association), 17, 29–30. Hokkaido University of Education Asahikawa. Hokkaido Psychological Society.
  102. Hattori, M. (1993a, November 21). Conditional reasoning and conditional concept. The Annals of the Hokkaido Psychological Society (Proceedings of the 40th Annual Meeting of Hokkaido Psychological Association), 16, 17–18. Hokkaido University of Education Sapporo. Hokkaido Psychological Society.
  103. Hattori, M., & Nakagawa, M. (1992a, May 18). An experimental study on the processes of logical reasoning as problem solving. Proceeding of the 9th Annual Meeting of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society, 76–77. Chukyo University.
  104. Hattori, M., & Nakagawa, M. (1991a, July 6). An experimental study on the processes of logical problem solving. Proceeding of the 8th Annual Meeting of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society, 92–93. NTT Musashino Kenkyu Kaihatsu Center.