Hiroshi Yama

Hiroshi Yama graduated from Kyoto University in 1982. His major is psychology. He got Master Degree in Pedagogy from Kyoto University in 1985, and Ph.D. in Pedagogy from Kyoto University in 1992. After he worked as a JSPS Post Doctorial Fellow from 1988 to 1990, became a lecturer at Osaka Prefectural College of Nursing. He moved to Kobe College in 1993. He was promoted to associate professor in 1995, and became a professor in 2001. He was adopted as a visiting fellow under the terms between JSPS and British Academy in 2002. He was also adopted as a visiting fellow under the terms between JSPS and KOSEF in 2005. He got a sabbatical and stayed at Birkbeck hosted by Mike Oaksford for a year in 2008. His research theme is how human cognition is adaptive in a culture, and currently focuses on the distinction between rule-based inference of Westerners and dialectic inference of Easterners. He moved to Osaka City University and became a professor in psychology at Graduate School of Literature and Human Sciences in 2011.

Publications

Adapting Human Thinking and Moral Reasoning in Contemporary Society
Hiroshi Yama, Veronique Salvano-Pardieu. © 2020. 330 pages.
Studies on human thinking have focused on how humans solve a problem and have discussed how human thinking can be rational. A juxtaposition between psychology and sociology...
Morality and Contemporary Civilization: A Dual Process Approach
Hiroshi Yama. © 2020. 23 pages.
This chapter investigates if System 2 (analytic system) can revise or suppress the negative outputs of System 1 (intuitive system) by natural experiment in history. Two periods...
Laugh and Laughter as Adaptation in Human Being: Past and Present
Hiroshi Yama. © 2020. 20 pages.
In the process of human evolution, the biggest adaptive problems have been how to maintain a group and how to rise in rank in a group hierarchy. If an adaptive problem is solved...
A Perspective of Cross-Cultural Psychological Studies for Global Business
Hiroshi Yama. © 2016. 22 pages.
Some may still have a stereotypical image that Japanese employees work like a robot, and achieved the industrial development even though they are not logical thinkers. This...
A Perspective of Cross-Cultural Psychological Studies for Global Business
Hiroshi Yama. © 2016. 22 pages.
Some may still have a stereotypical image that Japanese employees work like a robot, and achieved the industrial development even though they are not logical thinkers. This...