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Posts by Seiya Nakata

Front cover of my book, titled "Comparative musicology: Evolution, universals, and the science of the world's music" (published today by Oxford University Press)

Front cover of my book, titled "Comparative musicology: Evolution, universals, and the science of the world's music" (published today by Oxford University Press)

1st of my 4-page essay published in Nature today titled "Music is not a universal language - but it can bring us together when words fail"
Picture caption: "Puerto Rican rapper Bad Bunny (centre) performed in Spanish at the half-time show of the 2026 American Football Super Bowl LX."

1st of my 4-page essay published in Nature today titled "Music is not a universal language - but it can bring us together when words fail" Picture caption: "Puerto Rican rapper Bad Bunny (centre) performed in Spanish at the half-time show of the 2026 American Football Super Bowl LX."

My book is now published! 🌏🎶🧪

You can download it for free at academic.oup.com/book/62353 - I’d be grateful if you do!
I also published an accessible summary with audio/video today in @nature.com: www.nature.com/articles/d41...
Try reading that first, then give the whole book a read if you like it!

2 months ago 112 51 7 6
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🚨 ACE Seminar
We’re excited to host Dr. Christopher Kavanagh in our upcoming ACE Seminar!

🗓 Tuesday, Jan 27, 2026
🕖 7:00 PM JST (UTC+9)
💻 Online via Zoom

🔗 To receive the Zoom link, please send a blank email to ace-seminar+subscribe@googlegroups.com

3 months ago 1 2 0 3
Research Assistant/Associate Research Assistant/Associate

My new lab in Singapore is seeking a full-time RA to help investigate how exploratory cognitive states shape environmental representations (cognitive maps). The position is funded until late 2027, and comes with a postdoc-level salary package. Please forward!

careers.sutd.edu.sg/job/Singapor...

3 months ago 9 12 0 0

In January, I will be recruiting a PhD student (4y/domestic tuition) and a postdoc (4y) to work on a 5y project about the role of beliefs about what in/outgroups value/do/believe in shaping one's climate action. Please keep an eye out for the job advert if you are interested🙏🔥

4 months ago 3 3 0 0

Many thanks to the audience at my talk at the International Research Center for Neurointelligence (IRCcN) at the University of Tokyo today; great feedback 🙏
It was so nice to talk about brain development with so many experts. Impressed by the research range at the IRCN 🧪🧠

4 months ago 6 2 1 0

Really glad to have you at the IRCN today!
Your talk sparked great discussion across the group. Hope to see you again soon

4 months ago 1 0 1 0
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【🚨ACE Seminar Alert🚨】We're excited to have Dr Quentin Atkinson at University of Auckland on Tuesday 18 Nov. at 7pm in Tokyo (6pm in Singapore/11am in Berlin)!

You can sign up for the mailing list to get the zoom link by sending a blank email to ace-seminar+subscribe@googlegroups.com

6 months ago 7 4 0 1
Abstract: Speed–accuracy trade-offs are a fundamental aspect of decision-making, requiring individuals to balance collecting more information against making faster decisions. Although speed–accuracy trade-offs have been studied at the individual level, their role in human decision-making in social settings remains poorly understood—even though faster, and possibly more error-prone, decisions often have more social influence than slower decisions. We examined how individual differences in speed–accuracy trade-off preferences shape decision-making in pairs, using an interactive online experiment and drift–diffusion modelling. Participants first performed a perceptual task alone, allowing us to estimate their individual drift rates and decision thresholds, the key cognitive determinants of speed–accuracy trade-off preferences. They then performed the task in pairs, sharing decisions in real-time. Pair accuracy depended on the faster (and thus more error-prone) member, and not on the slower (but more accurate) member. Social decisions were not worse than individual ones because faster members increased their thresholds in the social condition and became more accurate, while slower members incorporated less social information. These findings show that individuals adjusted their social information use to the speed–accuracy trade-off preferences of their partners, highlighting the importance of such individual differences for understanding social behaviour.

Abstract: Speed–accuracy trade-offs are a fundamental aspect of decision-making, requiring individuals to balance collecting more information against making faster decisions. Although speed–accuracy trade-offs have been studied at the individual level, their role in human decision-making in social settings remains poorly understood—even though faster, and possibly more error-prone, decisions often have more social influence than slower decisions. We examined how individual differences in speed–accuracy trade-off preferences shape decision-making in pairs, using an interactive online experiment and drift–diffusion modelling. Participants first performed a perceptual task alone, allowing us to estimate their individual drift rates and decision thresholds, the key cognitive determinants of speed–accuracy trade-off preferences. They then performed the task in pairs, sharing decisions in real-time. Pair accuracy depended on the faster (and thus more error-prone) member, and not on the slower (but more accurate) member. Social decisions were not worse than individual ones because faster members increased their thresholds in the social condition and became more accurate, while slower members incorporated less social information. These findings show that individuals adjusted their social information use to the speed–accuracy trade-off preferences of their partners, highlighting the importance of such individual differences for understanding social behaviour.

"Individual differences in speed–accuracy trade-off influence social decision-making in dyads"

🚨Our paper has been published in Proceedings of the Royal Society B doi.org/10.1098/rspb...

w/ Alan Tump @alantump.bsky.social, Ralf Kurvers @ralfkurvers.bsky.social

@royalsocietypublishing.org

1/ 🧵👇

9 months ago 36 12 3 0
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` Towards a More Inclusive and Culturally Diversified Cognitive Science Cognitive science is an interdisciplinary field that seeks to understand the nature and mechanisms of intelligence—whether biologi...

📣 Calling early-career cognitive scientists in the Asia-Pacific!

The CogSci Asia-Pacific Meetup Kickoff is coming:

📍 Dec 6–7, 2025 | Tokyo
🌱 Retreat-style event, community building, and cross-cultural exchange.

Details: sites.google.com/view/cogsci-...
#CogSci2025 #CognitiveScience

9 months ago 7 4 0 2
Title:
Motor–environment exploration in the human developmental niche

Absract:
In real behavioral ecologies, adaptive learning requires simultaneous exploration of both motor control and environmental task structure ("world model"), each presenting its own form of open-ended search complexity. We know much about each of these learning domains, but relatively little about their joint exploration space. I propose that this dual motor–environment exploration is crucial for understanding the human evolutionary niche. Human agency prolifically shapes environments that in turn shape our learning trajectories, presumably yielding a reciprocal (niche-constructive) feedback loop that couples mental structures to environmental structures and vice versa. Dual motor–environment exploration helps illuminate the explore–exploit landscape of this deeply collective, near-eusocial epigenetic milieu. It also offers unique computational and teleological perspectives on phenomena like cultural learning, social cognition, and behavioral creativity – complementing the population-level stochastic mechanisms proposed by cultural evolutionary theories.

Title: Motor–environment exploration in the human developmental niche Absract: In real behavioral ecologies, adaptive learning requires simultaneous exploration of both motor control and environmental task structure ("world model"), each presenting its own form of open-ended search complexity. We know much about each of these learning domains, but relatively little about their joint exploration space. I propose that this dual motor–environment exploration is crucial for understanding the human evolutionary niche. Human agency prolifically shapes environments that in turn shape our learning trajectories, presumably yielding a reciprocal (niche-constructive) feedback loop that couples mental structures to environmental structures and vice versa. Dual motor–environment exploration helps illuminate the explore–exploit landscape of this deeply collective, near-eusocial epigenetic milieu. It also offers unique computational and teleological perspectives on phenomena like cultural learning, social cognition, and behavioral creativity – complementing the population-level stochastic mechanisms proposed by cultural evolutionary theories.

【🚨ACE Seminar Alert🚨】We're excited to have Dr Ryutaro @uchiyama.bsky.social joining from Singapore on Tuesday 29th July at 7pm in Tokyo (6pm in Singapore/12am in Berlin)!

You can sign up for the mailing list to get the zoom link by sending a blank email to ace-seminar+subscribe@googlegroups.com

9 months ago 6 6 1 2
Book cover by Simon Kirby

Book cover by Simon Kirby

Delighted to announce the publication of a collaborative effort, co-led by @limorraviv.bsky.social @mpi-nl.bsky.social, showcasing the ways in which researchers have made language evolution an empirical issue: A handbook of experimental approaches to the fascinating problem of language evolution 🧪

10 months ago 128 48 3 3
decision trees in human play in the game of go before and after the arrival of superhuman AI, showing gradual change rather than revolutionary disruption

decision trees in human play in the game of go before and after the arrival of superhuman AI, showing gradual change rather than revolutionary disruption

🚨 New preprint! 🚨

I looked at 400+ years of cumulative cultural evolution in the Game of Go from feudalism to superhuman AI. Did AlphaGo etc. completely disrupt human play? No! More like human-machine convergence, rather than revolution.

Check out these decision trees!

osf.io/preprints/ps...

1 year ago 60 25 3 2
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And check out the lineup of world-leading guest lecturers! We are really excited and thrilled to welcome our new “COSMOnauts” in Tokyo! 🚀🌕

1 year ago 7 3 1 0
COSMOS The Computational Summer school on Modeling Social and collective behavior (COSMOS)

🚀COSMOS is BACK!!!💫 The Computational School on Modeling Social and collective behavior (COSMOS) will take place in RIKEN, Tokyo, between 29 Sept - 3 Oct, organised by me and fantastic @thecharleywu.bsky.social ! Application deadline: 25th April. For more details see 👉️ cosmossummerschool.github.io

1 year ago 26 25 1 4
Statement in support of Stand Up For Science Day

Statement in support of Stand Up For Science Day

Please see below for EHBEA's statement in solidarity with Stand Up For Science Day ✊

1 year ago 31 19 0 3
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CES offers its full support to the Stand Up For Science rallies in the U.S. on March 7 2025.

1 year ago 44 23 1 3

We are excited to advertise the Asian Cultural Evolution (ACE) seminar series! It's organized by Kenji Itao, Xinyue Pan & Wataru Toyokawa, and seminars will take place on the third Tuesday of odd-numbered months at 19:00 JST (18:00 Perth/Singapore/Beijing, 19:00 Tokyo/Seoul, 20:00 Sydney).

1 year ago 20 12 1 2
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Watch lectures from the best researchers. On-demand video platform giving you access to lectures from conferences worldwide.

For those who missed the @culturalevolsoc.bsky.social conference in Durham last September, the recorded talks are now freely available to watch here:

underline.io/events/456/l...

1 year ago 45 35 3 0
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Alberto Acerbi

Website: acerbialberto.com

"Cultural evolution in the digital age" (OUP): bit.ly/2McstmR

"Individual-based models of cultural evolution. A step-by-step guide using R" (Routledge): bit.ly/3MQBjT4

(Free online version: acerbialberto.com/IBM-cultevo/)

Substack (free - in italiano): bit.ly/3lDERMq

1 year ago 17 5 0 0

More about me
🔗 [ResearchMap] researchmap.jp/seiyanakata?...
🔗 [ORCID] orcid.org/0000-0003-27...
🔗 [Website] sites.google.com/view/seiyana...

1 year ago 0 0 0 0

🌿 Hello, Bluesky! I'm Seiya Nakata, a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Tokyo. I study social learning, interaction, and the cultural evolution of technology and language using lab experiments (adults & children) and agent-based modeling.

Looking forward to connecting! 🚀

1 year ago 5 1 1 0