Publications

 
  1. Park J., Lee W. Y. & Han C.S. (2024): Individual differences in responses to unmanned aerial vehicles among Weddell seals (Leptonychotes weddellii). Animal Behaviour. In press.

  2. Han C.S. & Hyun H. (2024): A variance partitioning approach for assessing mate choice and the sex controlling mating behaviour. Behavioral Ecology. in press.

  3. Han C.S., Lee B., Moon J.Y. (2023): Activity-aggression behavioural syndromes exist in males but not in females of the field cricket Teleogryllus emma. Ecology and Evolution. 13: e10642.

  4. Han C.S. & Dingemanse N.J. (2023): Age-related reductions in within-individual variation increase the repeatability of mating behaviour. Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology. 77: 94.

  5. Hyun H. & Han C.S. (2023): Jekyll and Hyde: Day-night personality differences in the water scorpion Nepa hoffmanni. Behavioral Ecology. 34: 278-286.

  6. Park Y.H., Shin D. & Han C.S. (2022): Polyandrous females but not monogamous females vary in reproductive ageing patterns in the bean bug Riptortus pedestris. BMC Ecology and Evolution. 22: 125.

  7. 한창석. (2022): 동물 성격의 정의 및 올바른 측정법과 분석법. 한국진화학회지. 1(1): 49-62.

  8. Hyun H. & Han C.S. (2021): Morph-specific life-history correlations in a wing-dimorphic water strider. Journal of Evolutionary Biology. 34: 1340-1346.

  9. Han C.S. & Yang G. (2021): Reproductive ageing and pace-of-life syndromes: more active females age faster. Behavioral Ecology. 32: 926-931.

  10. Han C.S. (2020): Density-dependent sex-biased development of macroptery in a water strider. Ecology and Evolution. 10: 9514-9521.

  11. Han C.S., Brooks R.C. & Dingemanse N.J. (2020): Condition-dependent mutual mate preference and intersexual genetic correlations for mating activity. The American Naturalist. 195: 997-1008.

  12. Han C.S., Gosden T.P & Dingemanse N.J. (2019): Protein deprivation facilitates independent evolution of behaviour and morphology. Evolution. 73:1809-1820.

  13. Han C.S. & Jablonski P.G. (2019): Alternative reproductive tactics shape within-species variation in behavioral syndromes. Behavioral Ecology. 30:1234-1241. 

  14. Jäger H.Y.*, Han C.S. * & Dingemanse N.J. (2019): Social experiences shape behavioral individuality and within-individual stability. Behavioral Ecology. 30:1012-1019.  (* Equal contribution)

  15. Han C.S., Tuni C., Ulcik J. & Dingemanse N.J. (2018): Increased developmental density decreases the magnitude of indirect genetic effects expressed during agonistic interactions in an insect. Evolution. 72:2435-2448.

  16. Tuni C.*, Han C.S.* & Dingemanse N.J. (2018): Multiple biological mechanisms result in correlations between pre- and post-mating traits that differ among versus within individuals and genotypes. Proceedings of the Royal Society B. 285: 20180951. (* Equal contribution)

  17. Han C.S. & Jablonski P.G. (2018): Increased female resistance to mating promotes the effect of mechanical constraints on latency to pair. Ecology and Evolution. 8:9152-9157.

  18. Han C.S. & Dingemanse N.J. (2017): Sex-dependent expression of behavioural genetic architectures and the evolution of sexual dimorphism. Proceedings of the Royal Society B. 284: 20171658.

  19. Han C.S. & Dingemanse N.J. (2017): Protein deprivation decreases male survival and the intensity of sexual antagonism in Southern field crickets Gryllus bimaculatus. Journal of Evolutionary Biology. 30:839-847.

  20. Han C.S. & Dingemanse N.J. (2017): You are what you eat: diet shapes body component, personality and behavioural stability. BMC Evolutionary Biology. 17:8.

  21. Han C.S., Jäger H.Y. & Dingemanse N.J. (2016): Individuality in nutritional preferences: a multi-level approach in field crickets. Scientific Reports. 6:20972.

  22. Han C.S., Santostefano F. & Dingemanse N.J. (2016): Do social partners affect same-sex sexual behaviour in male water striders? Animal Behaviour. 116:53-59.

  23. Han C.S., Brooks R.C. & Jablonski P.G. (2016): Fluctuating sexual selection and the evolution of a courtship strategy. Behavioral Ecology. 27:886-894. 

  24. Han C.S. & Jablonski P.G. (2016): Predators induce conditions for size-dependent alternative reproductive tactics in a water strider male. Animal Behaviour. 111:271-279.

  25. Han C.S., Jablonski P.G. & Brooks R.C. (2015): Intimidating courtship and sex differences in predation risk lead to sex-specific behavioural syndromes. Animal Behaviour. 109:177-185. 

  26. Han C.S. & Brooks R.C. (2015): Same-sex sexual behaviour as a by-product of reproductive strategy under scramble male-male competition. Animal Behaviour. 108:193-197.

  27. Han C.S. & Dingemanse N.J. (2015): Effect of diet on the structure of animal personality. Frontiers in Zoology. 12:S5. 

  28. Han C.S. & Brooks R.C. (2015): The interaction between genotype and juvenile and adult density environment in shaping multidimensional reaction norms of behaviour. Functional Ecology. 29:78-87.

  29. Son J.H., Han C.S., Lee S., Jablonski P.G. (2014): Effect of sex, hunger and relative body size on the use of ripple signals in the interactions among water striders Gerris latiabdominisJournal of Asia-Pacific Entomology. 17:653-658. 

  30. Han C.S. & Brooks R.C. (2014): Long-term effect of social interactions on behavioral plasticity and lifetime mating success. The American Naturalist. 183:431-444.

  31. Han C.S. & Brooks R.C. (2013): Correlational selection does not explain the evolution of a behavioral syndrome. Journal of Evolutionary Biology. 26:2260-2270.

  32. Han C.S. & Brooks R.C. (2013): Evolution of individual variation in behaviour and behavioural plasticity under scramble competition. Animal Behaviour. 86:435-442.

  33. Han C.S., Kang C.K., Shin H.S., Lee J.H., Bae M.R., Lee S.I. & Jablonski P.G. (2012): Insects perceive local sex ratio in the absence of tactile or visual sex-specific cues. Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology. 66:1285-1290. 

  34. Han C.S., Jablonski P.G., Kim B & Park F.C. (2010): Size-assortative mating and sexual size dimorphism are predictable from simple kinematics of mate-grasping behavior. BMC Evolutionary Biology. 10:359. 

  35. Han C.S. & Jablonski P.G. (2010): Male water striders attract predators to intimidate females into copulation. Nature Communications. 1: 52. 

  36. Han C.S. & Jablonski P.G. (2010): Role of body size in dominance interactions between male water striders, Aquarius paludumJournal of Ethology. 28: 389-392.

  37. Han C.S. & Jablonski P.G. (2009): Female genitalia concealment promotes intimate male courtship in a water strider. Plos one. 4: e5793.

  38. Han C.S. & Jablonski P.G. (2008): Male mating strategies through manipulation of female-perceived predation risk: a minireview and a hypothesis. Journal of Ecology and Field biology. 31: 1-7.

 

 

Submitted

  1. Han C.S., Robledo-Ruiz D., Dingemanse N.J., Garcia-Gonzalez F. & Tuni C. Unravelling mate choice evolution through indirect genetic effects. Submitted

  2. Heo J. & Han C.S. Age-related plasticity integration in male cicadas Tettigetta isshikii. Submitted

In preparation

  1. Han C.S., Tuni C. & Dingemanse N.J. Both genotype-by-age interactions and disruptive correlational selection explain age-related decreases in the magnitude of among-individual behavioural correlations and their genetic basis.

  2. Park Y.H. & Han C.S. Sex differences in opponent effects on multiple types of aggressive behaviour.

  3. Hyun. H., Lee B. & Han C.S. Repeated copulation and guarding, and their relationship with male and female morphological traits in the water scorpion Nepa hoffmanni.

  4. Lee B. & Han C.S. Sex-specific sublethal effects of clothianidins on non-target water striders Gerris latiabdominis.

  5. Malik M.M, & Han C.S. A variance partitioning approach shows non-coercive mating system and absence of mate choice in a water strider Gerris gracilicornis.