Participation:
- 28th Meeting, 1985: “Historical Significance of the Biography of Jaya Paṇḍita“
- 29th Meeting, 1986: The Kalmyk Taishas in the early seventeenth century
- 30th Meeting, 1987: “On the Oyirad Khanship”
- 31st Meeting, 1988: (together with H. P. Vietze) On the status of work concerning computer programs capable of processing Mongolian script.
- 32nd Meeting, 1989: “Qi Yunshi, Chinese Altaist of the Eighteenth Century”
- 33rd Meeting, 1990: “Background of the Volga-Kalmyk Khanship. The Case of Ayouki Khan of the Torguts “
- 34th Meeting, 1991: “The birth of the khong tayiji viceroyalty in the Mongol-Oirad world“
- 35th Meeting, 1992: “The Nomadic Kingship Based on Marital Alliances: The Case of the 17th–18th Century Oyirad”
- 37th Meeting, 1994: When did Inner and Outer Mongolia originate as geographical terms?
- 38th Meeting, 1995: “Oyirad Family Trees Discovered in Kazan”
- 39th Meeting, 1996: “The Khoyid Chief Amursana in the Fall of the Dzungars: The Importance of the Oyirad Family Trees Discovered in Kazan”
- 40th Meeting, 1997: “Women’s Property in the History of Nomadic Societies”
- 41st Meeting, 1998: “Was Galdan Boshoqtu Khan’s mother a Khoshut or a Torgut?”
- 43rd Meeting, 2000: “Galdan Boshoqtu Khan’s mother was not a Torghuud: Mongghol-un ugh eki-yin teüke“
- 44th Meeting, 2001: “The Role of Women in the Imperial Succession of the Nomadic Empire”
- 46th Meeting, 2003: “The Location of a Mobile Monastery and the Chiefs’ Camps in the 17th-Century Central Asia: In the Biography of Zaya Pandida”
- 47th Meeting, 2004: The Japanese Origin of the Chinggis Khan Legends
- 49th Meeting, 2006: “My Work, The Manchu Empire in World History”
- 50th Meeting, 2007: “The Oyirad Family Trees Discovered in Kazan, Tatarstan: With a Special Reference to Amursanaa, the Khoyid Chief”
- 61st Meeting, 2018: The Kyrgyz People in the Dzungar Empire
- 62nd Meeting, 2019: “Tibetan Buddhism and the governments of Mongolian nomads“
- 63rd Meeting, 2021: “ Were there nomad soldiers in the Mongolian army when they invaded Japan twice?“
- 65th Meeting, 2023: Galdan Boshoqtu Khan’s Mother was a Khoshuud, not a Torghuud
- 66th Meeting 2024: For the Japanese translation of the Biography of Zaya Pandita