Takashi Tsuchida
 
                            Cognitive intelligence                                                        
Kyoto University
                                                        Japan
                        
Biography
Prof. Takashi Tsuchida has received his PhD in Tohoku University in 2001. Currently, he is working as Professor in Kyoto University. His research has included Cognitive Neuroscience, Neuropsychology, Cognitive Psychology. Based on this research and fellowship training he has received several awards and honors such as Japan psychological Association International Award, Education, Culture, Sports, Science Minister's commendation young scientist Award. He has authored several research articles and books. He is a member of Society for Neuroscience, Cognitive Neuroscience Society, Organization for Human Brain Mapping, Japan Neuroscience Society, Japan Psychological Association, Japan Society of Neuropsychology, Japan Society of Higher Brain Dysfunction, Japan Society of Human Brain Function Mapping, Japan Society of Cognitive Psychology.
Research Interest
fMRI, memory, emotion, age, social cognition, face
Publications
- 
                            Shigemune Y, Tsukiura T, Kambara T, Kawashima R. Remembering with gains and losses: Effects of monetary rewards and punishments on successful encoding activation of source memories. Cerebral Cortex. 2014;24:1319-1331. 
- 
                            Shingaki H, Park P, Ueda K, Murai T, Tsukiura T. Disturbance Of Time Orientation, Attention And Verbal Memory In Amnesic Patients With Confabulation. Journal Of Clinical And Experimental Neuropsychology. 2016;38:171-182. 
- 
                            Sugimoto H, Shigemune Y, Tsukiura T. Competing Against A Familiar Friend: Interactive Mechanism Of The Temporo-Parietal Junction With The Reward-Related Regions During Episodic Encoding. NeuroImage. 2016;130:261-272Â 
- 
                            Yamawaki R, Nakamura K, Aso T, Shigemune Y, Fukuyama H, Tsukiura T. Remembering my friends: Medial prefrontal and hippocampal contributions to the self-reference effect on face memories in a social context. Human Brain Mapping. 2017;38:4256-4269. 

