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Dive into the research topics where Yuko Okumura is active.

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Featured researches published by Yuko Okumura.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Rudimentary sympathy in preverbal infants: preference for others in distress.

Yasuhiro Kanakogi; Yuko Okumura; Yasuyuki Inoue; Michiteru Kitazaki; Shoji Itakura

Despite its essential role in human coexistence, the developmental origins and progression of sympathy in infancy are not yet fully understood. We show that preverbal 10-month-olds manifest sympathetic responses, evinced in their preference for attacked others according to their evaluations of the respective roles of victim, aggressor, and neutral party. In Experiment 1, infants viewing an aggressive social interaction between a victim and an aggressor exhibited preference for the victim. In Experiment 2, when comparing the victim and the aggressor to a neutral object, infants preferred the victim and avoided the aggressor. These findings indicate that 10-month-olds not only evaluate the roles of victims and aggressors in interactions but also show rudimentary sympathy toward others in distress based on that evaluation. This simple preference may function as a foundation for full-fledged sympathetic behavior later on.


PLOS ONE | 2010

Bilingualism Accentuates Children's Conversational Understanding

Michael Siegal; Luca Surian; Ayumi Matsuo; Alessandra Geraci; Laura Iozzi; Yuko Okumura; Shoji Itakura

Background Although bilingualism is prevalent throughout the world, little is known about the extent to which it influences childrens conversational understanding. Our investigation involved children aged 3–6 years exposed to one or more of four major languages: English, German, Italian, and Japanese. In two experiments, we examined the childrens ability to identify responses to questions as violations of conversational maxims (to be informative and avoid redundancy, to speak the truth, be relevant, and be polite). Principal Findings In Experiment 1, with increasing age, children showed greater sensitivity to maxim violations. Children in Italy who were bilingual in German and Italian (with German as the dominant language L1) significantly outperformed Italian monolinguals. In Experiment 2, children in England who were bilingual in English and Japanese (with English as L1) significantly outperformed Japanese monolinguals in Japan with vocabulary age partialled out. Conclusions As the monolingual and bilingual groups had a similar family SES background (Experiment 1) and similar family cultural identity (Experiment 2), these results point to a specific role for early bilingualism in accentuating childrens developing ability to appreciate effective communicative responses.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Eye Contact Affects Object Representation in 9-Month-Old Infants

Yuko Okumura; Tessei Kobayashi; Shoji Itakura

Social cues in interaction with others enable infants to extract useful information from their environment. Although previous research has shown that infants process and retain different information about an object depending on the presence of social cues, the effect of eye contact as an isolated independent variable has not been investigated. The present study investigated how eye contact affects infants’ object processing. Nine-month-olds engaged in two types of social interactions with an experimenter. When the experimenter showed an object without eye contact, the infants processed and remembered both the object’s location and its identity. In contrast, when the experimenter showed the object while making eye contact with the infant, the infant preferentially processed object’s identity but not its location. Such effects might assist infants to selectively attend to useful information. Our findings revealed that 9-month-olds’ object representations are modulated in accordance with the context, thus elucidating the function of eye contact for infants’ object representation.


Cognition | 2013

The power of human gaze on infant learning

Yuko Okumura; Yasuhiro Kanakogi; Takayuki Kanda; Hiroshi Ishiguro; Shoji Itakura


Journal of Experimental Child Psychology | 2013

Infants understand the referential nature of human gaze but not robot gaze

Yuko Okumura; Yasuhiro Kanakogi; Takayuki Kanda; Hiroshi Ishiguro; Shoji Itakura


Psychologia | 2010

JAPANESE CHILDREN’S DIFFICULTY WITH FALSE BELIEF UNDERSTANDING: IS IT REAL OR APPARENT?

Yusuke Moriguchi; Yuko Okumura; Yasuhiro Kanakogi; Shoji Itakura


Japanese Journal of Psychology | 2014

[Twelve-month-old infants show social preferences for native-dialect speakers].

Yuko Okumura; Yasuhiro Kanakogi; Sachie Takeuchi; Shoji Itakura


Interaction Studies | 2013

Can infants use robot gaze for object learning?: The effect of verbalization

Yuko Okumura; Yasuhiro Kanakogi; Takayuki Kanda; Hiroshi Ishiguro; Shoji Itakura


language resources and evaluation | 2018

Infant Word Comprehension-to-Production Index Applied to Investigation of Noun Learning Predominance Using Cross-lingual CDI database.

Yasuhiro Minami; Tessei Kobayashi; Yuko Okumura


language resources and evaluation | 2018

Analyzing Vocabulary Commonality Index Using Large-scaled Database of Child Language Development.

Yan Cao; Yasuhiro Minami; Yuko Okumura; Tessei Kobayashi

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Tessei Kobayashi

Nippon Telegraph and Telephone

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Yasuhiro Minami

Nippon Telegraph and Telephone

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Michiteru Kitazaki

Toyohashi University of Technology

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Yasuyuki Inoue

Toyohashi University of Technology

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