2026年やったこと・やることリスト

今年は、自分で自分を管理しないと行けない年になりそうなので、やったこと・やることリストを作成してみました。

やったこと

論文

  1. Kohda, Masanori. “The Evolutionary Origin of Self-Awareness in Vertebrates: The “Self-Awareness Homology Hypothesis”.” Philosophia (2025): 1-8. [Link]1/1
  2. Kohda, Masanori, Shumpei Sogawa, and Will Sowersby. “The ability of teleost fishes to recognize individual faces suggests an early evolutionary origin in vertebrates.” Frontiers in Psychology 15 (2024): 1497386.[Link]1/2
  3. Dunkley, Katie, et al. “Individual identification of bony fishes using unique body markings: Implications and applications.” Journal of Fish Biology (2025).[Link]1/2
  4. Jordan, Alex, et al. “Societies of the shell-dwelling cichlid Neolamprologus multifasciatus.” Animal Behaviour 231 (2026): 123407.[Link]1/3
  5. Ozkan, Kerstin, Jordan M. Langley, and Clinton D. Francis. “Experimental exposure of indirect light at night alters western bluebird parent activity and nestling development.” Animal Behaviour 231 (2026): 123419.[Link]1/4
  6. Ramellini, Samuele, et al. “Non‐breeding social behaviour as an investment in reducing future territoriality costs.” Biological Reviews 100.6 (2025): 2726-2737.[Link]1/7
  7. Madhavan, Malavika, and Pavel Linhart. “Vocal individuality in owls: a taxon-wide review in the context of Tinbergen’s four questions.” Journal of Ornithology 166.2 (2025): 307-319.[Link]1/8
  8. Werba, Jo A., et al. “Stranger danger: A meta-analysis of the dear enemy hypothesis.” Behavioural Processes 194 (2022): 104542.[Link]1/8
  9. Tomihara, Soma, et al. “Sexual receptivity increases in synchrony with the ovulatory cycle in female medaka.” bioRxiv (2024): 2024-08.[Link]1/9
  10. Zhu, Boshan, et al. “When neighbors become family: the dear-enemy effect of swimming crab and the verification of the formation hypothesis.” Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology 78.4 (2024): 49.[Link]1/10
  11. Maya Lastra, Natalia, et al. ““Dear enemies”,“nasty neighbors”, and the strength in numbers: Exploring the behavioral and hormonal responses of mantled howler monkey males to simulated intruder loud calls.” American Journal of Primatology 87.4 (2025): e70032.[Link]1/10
  12. Kudo, Haruka, and Chiaki I. Yasuda. “Aggression, but not familiar recognition, occurs during cohabitation in females of a hermit crab.” Ethology 131.11 (2025): 205-211.[Link]1/10
  13. Kohda, Masanori, et al. “Facial recognition in a group-living cichlid fish.” PLoS One 10.11 (2015): e0142552.[Link]1/10
  14. Satoh, Shun, Hirokazu Tanaka, and Masanori Kohda. “Facial recognition in a discus fish (Cichlidae): experimental approach using digital models.” PloS one 11.5 (2016): e0154543.[Link]1/10
  15. Wasserman, Edward A. “Face facts: Even nonhuman animals discriminate human faces.” Learning & behavior 44.4 (2016): 307-308.[Link]1/11
  16. Hotta, Takashi, et al. “Face recognition in the Tanganyikan cichlid Julidochromis transcriptus.” Animal Behaviour 127 (2017): 1-5.[Link]1/11
  17. Hotta, Takashi, et al. “Fish focus primarily on the faces of other fish.” Scientific reports 9.1 (2019): 8377.[Link]1/11
  18. Kawasaka, Kento, Takashi Hotta, and Masanori Kohda. “Does a cichlid fish process face holistically? Evidence of the face inversion effect.” Animal Cognition 22.2 (2019): 153-162.[Link]1/11
  19. Sogawa, Shumpei, et al. “Male guppies recognize familiar conspecific males by their face.” Zoological science 40.2 (2023): 168-174.[Link]1/11
  20. Three-spined sticklebacks recognize familiar individuals by facial recognition[Link]1/11
  21. Kobayashi, Taiga, et al. “Cleaner fish with mirror self-recognition capacity precisely realize their body size based on their mental image.” Scientific Reports 14.1 (2024): 20202.[Link]1/11
  22. Coss, Richard G., and Carol Lee Tyler. “African jewel fish (Hemichromis bimaculatus) distinguish individual faces based on their unique iridophore patterns.” Animal Cognition 26.4 (2023): 1411-1421.[Link]1/11
  23. Wang, Mu-Yun, and Hideaki Takeuchi. “Individual recognition and the ‘face inversion effect’in medaka fish (Oryzias latipes).” Elife 6 (2017): e24728.[Link]1/11
  24. Kang, Ik Joon, et al. “Sound production in Japanese medaka (Oryzias latipes) and its alteration by exposure to aldicarb and copper sulfate.” Chemosphere 181 (2017): 530-535.[Link]1/12
  25. Zhuo, Mengcheng, et al. “Time-series variation in the locomotor behavior and vocal traits of Japanese medaka (Oryzias latipes) acutely exposed to organophosphorus pesticide chlorpyrifos.” Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part C: Toxicology & Pharmacology 283 (2024): 109954.[Link]1/12
  26. Greenhalgh, Jack A., et al. “The role of freshwater bioacoustics in ecological research.” Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Water 7.3 (2020): e1416.[Link]1/13
  27. Muñoz-Duque, Sebastián, et al. “Bioacoustic characterization of mating calls of a freshwater fish (Prochilodus magdalenae) for passive acoustic monitoring.” Biota colombiana 22.1 (2021): 108-121.[Link]1/13
  28. Cohen, Rebecca, et al. “Sounds of Atlantic sturgeon spawning: first description and opportunities for riverine endangered species conservation with passive acoustic monitoring.” Endangered Species Research 58 (2025): 1-14.[Link]1/13
  29. Parsons, Miles JG, et al. “Sounding the call for a global library of underwater biological sounds.” Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution 10 (2022): 810156.[Link]1/13
  30. Nakahata, Ryohei, and Hideaki Takeuchi. “Social familiarity shapes collective decision-making in response to looming stimuli in Medaka fish.” Scientific Reports 15.1 (2025): 43650.[Link]1/13
  31. Robinson, Trent. “Recognition of Individual Conspecifics: Evidence From a 3‐Chambered Test With Ghost Crab (Ocypode quadrata).” Ethology (2025).[Link]1/14
  32. Sogabe, Atsushi. “Partner recognition in a perennially monogamous pipefish, Corythoichthys haematopterus.” Journal of Ethology 29.1 (2011): 191-196.[Link]1/15
  33. Siebeck, Ulrike E., et al. “A species of reef fish that uses ultraviolet patterns for covert face recognition.” Current Biology 20.5 (2010): 407-410.[Link]1/15
  34. Yorzinski, Jessica L. “The cognitive basis of individual recognition.” Current Opinion in Behavioral Sciences 16 (2017): 53-57.[Link]1/15
  35. von Schmalensee, Menja, et al. “Frenemies in Fur: neighbour–stranger discrimination and the ‘dear enemy’effect in mammals, and how it relates to sociality.” Animal Behaviour (2025): 123162.[Link]1/18

研究関連

  1. AIによる動物行動解析〜動画から動物の心と体[Link]1/2
  2. ソロモンの指環―動物行動学入門[Link]1/5
  3. オールコック・ルーベンスタイン 動物行動学 原書11版[Link]1/10
  4. なぜあなたの研究は進まないのか?[Link]1/10
  5. 生き物をめぐる4つの「なぜ」[Link]1/11
  6. なぜあなたは論文が書けないのか?[Link]1/12
  7. 動物行動の観察入門-計画から解析まで[Link]1/12
  8. デイビス・クレブス・ウェスト 行動生態学 原著第4版[Link]1/16
  9. 研究の育て方: ゴールとプロセスの「見える化」[Link]1/18
  10. ゲーム感覚で身につく論文執筆[Link]1/18
  11. 魚類生態学の基礎[Link]1/19

研究以外

  1. イシューからはじめよ――知的生産の「シンプルな本質」[Link]1/1
  2. 超雑談力 人づきあいがラクになる 誰とでも信頼関係が築ける[Link]1/2
  3. 夢をかなえるゾウ1[Link]1/2
  4. LOVE理論[Link]1/2
  5. マンガでわかる言語化力の鍛え方: 言葉にできない自分が伝える力を手に入れるまで[Link]1/2
  6. 思考の整理学[Link]1/3
  7. 人は聞き方が9割[Link]1/3
  8. 億までの人 億からの人 ゴールドマン・サックス勤続17年の投資家が明かす「兆人」のマインド[Link]1/4
  9. 世界の一流は「雑談」で何を話しているのか[Link]1/4
  10. すごい習慣大百科 人生が変わるテクニック112個集めました[Link]1/4
  11. 覚悟の磨き方 超訳 吉田松陰[Link]1/5
  12. お金持ちになれる黄金の羽根の拾い方[Link]1/5
  13. あした死ぬかもよ? 人生最後の日に笑って死ねる27の質問[Link]1/6
  14. コンサル一年目が学ぶこと[Link]1/7
  15. GRATITUDE 毎日を好転させる感謝の習慣[Link]1/7
  16. 「1日30分」を続けなさい![Link]1/9
  17. 30代を無駄に生きるな[Link]1/10
  18. 人望が集まる人の考え方[Link]1/10
  19. あなたが執着を手放して「幸せ」になる本[Link]1/11
  20. 仕事が速いのにミスしない人は、何をしているのか?[Link]1/12
  21. 考えすぎない練習[Link]1/13
  22. ぜんぶ、すてれば[Link]1/13
  23. 30代にしておきたい17のこと[Link]1/13
  24. 仕事も人間関係もうまくいく放っておく力[Link]1/14
  25. あなたはあなたが使っている言葉でできている[Link]1/14
  26. 多動力[Link]1/19

映像作品

  1. 青春ブタ野郎はバニーガール先輩の夢を見ない[Link]1/5
  2. 青春ブタ野郎はバニーガール先輩の夢を見ない[Link]1/6
  3. 青春ブタ野郎はおでかけシスターの夢を見ない[Link]1/7
  4. 青春ブタ野郎はランドセルガールの夢を見ない[Link]1/8
  5. ひゃくえむ。[Link]1/8
  6. 葬送のフリーレン[Link]1/17

 

やることリスト

 

 

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