Volume
01 – Issue
TARGET
ARTICLE
Kupfermann,
The command neuron concept.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 3.
OPEN
PEER COMMENTARY
Hoyle,
G.
Where did the notion of “command neurons” come from?
BBS 1978 1 (1): 10.
Andreae,
J.H.
Descriptive and prescriptive names.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 11.
Balaban, P.
“General” or “general assembly”? On command
neuron systems.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 12.
Bennett,
M.V.L.
Command neurons: know and say what you mean.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 13.
Bullock,
T.H.
“Command” is heuristic until we know better.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 15.
Burke,
R.E.
“Command” as functional concept rather than cellular label.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 15.
Chapple,
W.D.
Do we need “command” neurons?
BBS 1978 1 (1): 16.
On the train of the command neuron.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 17.
Envoy,
W.H.
Functional descriptions of neurons that influence behavior.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 19.
Fentress,
J.C.
On the sufficiency of command neurons.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 20.
Fraser,
P.
Vector coding and command fibres.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 22.
Grillner,
S.
Command neurons or central program controlling system?
BBS 1978 1 (1): 23.
Hermann,
A.
Command fibers: only strategic points in neuronal communication systems.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 24.
Horridge,
G.A.
Nouns, neurons, and parallel pathways.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 25.
Iles,
J.F.
The command neurone concept in mammalian neurophysiology.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 25.
Kater,
S.B., Granzow, B.
Is “command” at the top of the hierarchy?
BBS 1978 1 (1): 26.
Krasne,
F.
The crayfish giant fibers as decision and command neurons.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 28.
Kristan,
Jr., W.B., Weeks, J.
Difficulties in applying a functional definition of command neurons.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 28.
Larimer,
J.L.
Command neuron, an evolving concept.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 29
Lewis,
E.R.
Causally oriented devices.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 30.
Lleinas,
R., Bunge, M.
Restricted applicability of the concept of command in neuroscience: dangers of
metaphor.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 30.
Lynch,
J.C.
The command function concept in studies of the primate nervous system.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 31.
McCarthy,
J.
Command neurons and unitary behavior.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 32.
Rosenbaum,
D.A.
Command neurons and effects of movement contexts.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 32.
Stein,
P.S.G.
Defense of the Wiersma-Kennedy concept of the command neuron.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 33.
Tsukada,
Y.
Ambiguity of the proposed definition.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 34.
Wiersma,
C.A.G.
The original definition of command neuron.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 34.
Wine,
J.J.
Triggering and organizing functions of command neurons in crayfish escape
behavior.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 35.
Zucker,
R.S.
Command neurons: a more precise definition reveals gaps in our evidence and
limits to our models.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 35.
Hoyle,
G.
Who believes in “command neurons”?
BBS 1978 1 (1): 36.
AUTHORS’
RESPONSE
Kupfermann,
Quis imperat? A panorama of perspectives.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 37.
TARGET
ARTICLE
Bindra,
D.
How adaptive behavior is produced: a perceptual-motivational alternative to
response reinforcement.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 41.
OPEN
PEER COMMENTARY
Bindra’s S-S contiguity theory of instrumental learning.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 52.
Black,
A.H.
Is Bindra’s theory og adaptive behavior radical enough?
BBS 1978 1 (1): 53.
Bolles,
R.C.
The more things change …
BBS 1978 1 (1): 53.
Booth,
D.A.
A long stride towards sense in psychology.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 54.
What constitutes explanation in psychology.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 55.
Requisition for a pexgo.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 56.
Epstein,
R.
Reinforcement, explanation, and B.F. Skinner.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 57.
Fentress,
J.C.
Defining behavioral representations.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 58.
Flynn,
J.P.
Sensory vs. motor effects of brain stimulation.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 58.
Gallistel,
C.R.
The irrelevance of past pleasure.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 59.
Gilbert,
R.M.
Misconceptions about the origins of behavior.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 60.
Hilgard,
E.R.
With reinforcement in trouble, what about motivation?—Bindra’s alternative.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 61.
Hulse,
S.H.
The problem of serial order in adaptive behavior: why not some formal cognitive
sturcture.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 62.
Irwin,
F.W.
Some comparisons of Bindra’s theory with a situation-act-outcome system.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 63.
Jenkins,
H.M.
Signal learning and response learning.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 64.
Kendler,
H.H.
Decision rules, decision rules.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 64.
Pexgo: a plausible construct in need of data.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 65.
Klingsporn,
M.J.
On explanation, familiarity, and response sequencing.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 66.
Logan,
F.A.
Intelligent vs. stupid behavior, or learning concepts vs. responses.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 67.
Mackintosh,
N.J.
Limits on reinterpreting instrumental conditioning in terms of classical
conditioning.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 67.
Mazur,
J.E.
Reinforcement is dead: long live reinforcement theories
BBS 1978 1 (1): 68.
Menzel,
Jr., E.W.
Reinforcement theory: an experimenter-oriented rather than a subject-oriented
philosophy.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 68.
Mowrer,
O.H.
Learning theory, a will-o-the-wisp?
BBS 1978 1 (1): 69.
Implications for clinical behavior modification.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 70.
Navarick,
D.J.A.
A framework with no foundation: comments on Bindra’s perceptual-motivation
theory of response production.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 71.
Notterman,
J.M.
Feedback systems invite tautological constructs.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 71.
Pribram,
K.H.
Stimulus theory and response theory: their complementarity and neurobehavioral
basis.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 72.
Rosenblatt,
J.S.
Behavioral evolution and indiviual development.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 73.
Ryan,
T.A.
Bindra’s theory from the perspective of human motivation: unit size, stimulus
centering, and the value of neural theory.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 74.
Salzinger,
K.
A death too soon reported.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 75.
Soltysik,
S.S.
Omnipotent pexgos and the goddess parsimony.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 76.
Staats,
A.W.
Bindra’s perceptual-motivational theory and social behaviorism’s emotional-motivational
theory: separatism exemplified.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 77.
Stein,
D.G.
Perception as response.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 77.
Teevan,
R.C.
Skinner, Maslow, and common sense.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 79.
von
Glasersfeld, E.
Another minor revision, or the disregard for control theory and the analysis of
inductive feedback systems.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 79.
Warren,
J.M.
Neural mechanisms and Occam’s razor.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 80.
Wasserman,
E.A.
Bindra’s theory: some successes and precursors.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 80.
Wong,
R.
Behavioral flexiblity in learning situations: adaptive or adaptable behavior?
BBS 1978 1 (1): 81.
Wood,
W.S.
In defense of descriptive behaviorism, or theories of learning still aren’t
necessary.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 82.
AUTHOR’S
RESPONSE
Bindra,
D.
A behavioristic, cognitive-motivational, neuropsychological approach to
explaining behavior.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 83.
TARGET
ARTICLE
Pylyshyn,
Z.
Computational models and empirical constraints.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 93.
OPEN
PEER COMMENTARY
Andreae,
J.H.
AI: another defense of the field.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 100.
Arbib,
M.A.
The halting problem for computation cognitive psychology.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 100.
Atherton,
M.
The artificiality of computer models.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 100.
Cohen,
L.J.
Rational reconstruction of inferential processes—a task straddling the AI-CS
boundaries.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 101.
Cushing,
S., Hornstein, N.
Software systems, language, and empirical constraints.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 102.
Why not the whole iguana?
BBS 1978 1 (1): 103.
Domotor,
Z.
AI: model-theoretic aspects.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 104.
Dreyfus,
H.L.
Empirical evidence for a pessimistic prognosis for cognitive science.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 105.
Goodluck,
H.
Levels of evolution and psycholinguistic evidence.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 105.
Harmon,
L.D.
Introspection, black boxes, and machine equivalence.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 106.
Haugeland,
J.
The problem of generality.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 107.
Hayes,
P.J.
Doing AI but saying CS.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 108.
Johnson-Laird,
P.N.
The correspondence and coherence theories of cognitive truth.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 108.
Leibovic,
K.N.
The problem of validation.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 109.
Lenat,
D.B.
On astrophysics and superhuman performance.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 109.
Longuet-Higgins,
C.
On describing cognitive processes.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 110.
McDermott,
J.
On A.I. as psychology: now and then.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 110.
Newell,
A.
State-of-the-art constraints.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 111.
Ortony,
A.
Cognitive psychology, artificial intelligence, and cognitive simulation.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 112.
Pascual-Leone,
J.
Computational models for metasubjective processes.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 112.
Pribram,
K.H.
On behalf of the neurosciences.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 113.
Rodger,
R.S.
Computer-specific methods.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 113.
Schank,
R.C.
AI vs. CS: a methodological distinction.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 114.
Simon,
T.W.
The AI/CS distinction and theory evaluation.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 114.
Sloman,
A.
Artificial intelligence and empirical psychology.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 115.
Sutherland,
N.S.
Task constraints and process models.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 116.
Treisman,
M.
On the relation between AI and CS: the heart of the problem.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 117.
Ullman,
S.
A.I. systems and human cognition: the missing link.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 117.
Weimer,
W.B.
A.I. and the methodology of scientific research: some cautions and limitations.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 119.
Wilks,
Y.
Artificial intelligence and real constraints.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 120.
AUTHOR’S
RESPONSE
Pylyshyn,
Z.
The A.I. debate: generality, goals, and methodological parochialism.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 121.
TARGET
ARTICLE
Roland,
P.E.
Sensory feedback to the cerebral cortex during voluntary movement in man.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 129.
OPEN
PEER COMMENTARY
Chapple,
W.D.
Consciousness and the limitations of psychophysical approaches.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 148.
Dickinson,
J.
The function of sensory feedback.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 148.
Duysens,
J., Loeb, G.
Precortical processing of somatosensory information.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 149.
Dyhre-Poulsen,
P.
Possible sources of discriminitive kinaesthetic information.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 150.
Freund,
H.-J.
The role of extrapyramidal structures.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 150.
Goodwin,
G.M.
The neural mechanisms subserving kinesthesia.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 151.
Granit,
R.
Breaking down open doors.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 152.
Grigg,
P.
On the attribution of a functional role to joint afferent neurons.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 152.
Iannone,
A.M.
What constitutes “proof” in the study of neural control of movement?
BBS 1978 1 (1): 153.
Kelso,
J.A.S.
Changing views of feedforward and feedback in voluntary movement.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 153.
Levitt,
M.
On the rle of mental set in voluntary movement.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 154.
Libet,
B.
What is conscious sensory experience, operationally?
BBS 1978 1 (1): 156.
McCloskey,
D.I.
Snese of effort and sense of muscular tension.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 156.
Millar,
J.
Lab strategy vs. life strategy.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 157.
Mpitsos,
G.J.
Musculotendinous receptors in conscious human behavior: experimental factors.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 157.
Pribram,
K.H.
Movements and acts: distinguishing their neurophysiology.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 158.
Pubols,
L.M.
On intellecutal compensation and deafferentation.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 159.
Roberts,
T.D.M.
The transmission of parameters by neural messages.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 159.
Shebilske,
W.L.
Senseory feedback during eye movements reconsidered.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 160.
Somjen,
G.G.
What muscle spindles and Golgi tendon organs could and could not signal to the
brain.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 161.
Sontag,
K.-H.
Conscious and unconscious motor decisions.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 162.
Stein,
J.
The interaction of motor and sensory signals in proprioception.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 162.
Stevens,
J.K.
The corollary discharge: is it a sense of position or a sense of space?
BBS 1978 1 (1): 163.
Trevarthen,
C.
Cortical collaboration and consciousness.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 165.
Walsh,
E.G.
Sensing springiness.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 166.
Wells,
M.J.
Invertebrate stretch receptors and consciousness.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 166.
Wiesendanger,
M.
Toward contextual instead of either/or thinking.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 167.
AUTHOR’S
RESPONSE
Roland, P.E.
The cerebral cortex and conscious kinaesthetic and tensional information.
BBS 1978 1 (1): 167.
Volume 01 – Issue
TARGET
ARTICLE
Brainerd,
C.J.
The stage question in cognitive-developmental theory.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 173.
OPEN
PEER COMMENTARY
Baldwin,
J.D., Baldwin, J.I.
Stages resulting from continuous underlying variables.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 182.
Berndt,
T.J.
Stages as descriptions, explanations, and testable constraints.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 183.
Ennis,
R.H.
Description, explanation, and circularity.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 184.
Epstein,
H.T.
Some additional data relevant to considerations about the existence of
cognitive-developmental stages.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 185.
Fisher,
K.W.
Structural explanation of developmental change.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 186.
Flavell,
J.H.
Developmental stage: explanans or explanandum?
BBS 1978 1 (2): 187.
Gibson,
K.R.
Cortical maturation: an antecedent of Piaget’s behavioral stages.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 188.
Karmiloff-Smith,
A.
On stage: the importance of being a nonconserver.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 188.
Kendler,
T.S.
On falsifying descriptions.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 190.
Kinsbourne,
M.
Maturational succession vs. cumulative learning.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 191.
Klahr,
D.
Rages over stages.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 191.
Kurtines,
W.M.
Measurability, description, and explanation: the explanatory adequacy of stage
models.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 192.
Lipsitt,
L.P.
“Stages” in developmental psychology.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 194.
Markman,
E.M.
Problems of logic and evidence.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 194.
Neimark,
E.D.
Improper questions cannot be properly answered.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 195.
Nelson,
K.
Structural and developmental explanations: stages in theoretical development.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 196.
Olson,
D.R.
A structuralist view of explanation: a critique of Brainerd.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 197.
Parker,
S.T.
Species-specific acquisition vs. universal sequence of acquisition.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 199.
Pascual-Leone,
J.
Piaget’s two main stage criteria: a selective reply to Brainerd.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 200.
Rosenthal,
T.L.
Agnostic gauges and Genevan stages.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 201.
Scandura,
J.M.
“Measurement sequences,” Piagetian structures, and high-order rules.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 201.
Siegler,
R.S.
Is Piaget a Pied Piper?
BBS 1978 1 (2): 202.
Smedslund,
J.
Measurement sequences, logical necessity, and common sense.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 203.
Uzgiris,
I.C.
Holistic aspects of the stage notion.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 204.
Wetherick,
N.E.
In defense of circularity.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 205.
White,
S.H.
Which comes first—describing or explaining?
BBS 1978 1 (2): 205.
Yonas,
A., Carelton, L.R.
Conjoint construct validation.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 206.
AUTHOR’S
RESPONSE
Brainerd,
C.J.
Invariant sequences, explanation, and other stage criteria: reflections and
replies.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 207.
TARGET
ARTICLE
Haugeland,
J.
The nature and plausibility of Cognitivism.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 215.
OPEN
PEER COMMENTARY
Andreae,
J.H.
On inference from input/output.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 226.
Arbib,
M.A.
On making distinctions that are not maintained.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 227.
Atherton,
M.
The scope of cognitivism.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 228.
Baron,
R.J.
On explanation, holograms, moods, and skills.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 229.
Charniak,
E.
How to register dissatisfaction with A.I.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 230.
Cummins,
R.
Systems and cognitive capacities.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 231.
Co-opting holograms.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 232.
Domotor,
Z.
Cognitive problems and problems of cognitivism.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 233.
Dreyfus,
H.L.
Cognitivism vs. hermeneutics.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 233.
Economos,
J.
Mind that last step; I think it’s loose.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 234.
Greeno,
J.G.
Systems and explanations.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 235.
Harré,
R.
Half-way to realism: some sympathetic comments in Haugeland’s defence of
cognitivism.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 236.
Hayes,
P.J.
Cognitivism as a paradigm.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 238.
Matthews,
R.J.
Two remarks on the characterization of IBBs.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 239.
Maxwell,
G.
Cognitivism, psychology, and physics.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 240.
McCarthy,
J.
Competence cognitivism vs. performance cognitivism.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 241.
Monk,
R.
Cognitivism and cognitive psychology.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 242.
Natsoulas,
T.
Haugeland’s first hurdle.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 243.
Otto,
H.R.
A program is not an explanation.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 243.
Pinker,
S.
Mind and brain revisited: forestalling the doom of cognitivism.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 244.
Pribram,
K.H.
Image, information, and fast Fourier transforms.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 245.
Puccetti,
R.
Are right hemisphere activities cognitivistic?
BBS 1978 1 (2): 245.
Rey, G.
Worries about Haugeland’s worries.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 246.
Rorty,
R.
A middle ground between neurons and holograms.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 248.
Schwartz,
R.
Some limits and problems of cognitivism.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 248.
Simon,
T.W.
On Cognitivism’s explanations and limitations.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 249.
Indivisible performances, implicit grasp, and the problem of meaningfulness.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 250.
Tweney,
R.D.
Is making reasonable sense reasonable?
BBS 1978 1 (2): 251.
von
Glasersfeld, E.
Some problems of intentionality.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 252.
Cognitivisms’s contributions: some questions.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 253.
Yevick,
M.L.
The two modes of identifying objects: descriptive and holistic for concrete
objects; recursive and ostensive for abstract objects.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 253.
AUTHOR’S
RESPONSE
Haugeland,
J.
The critical assessment of Cognitivism: a closer look.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 254.
TARGET
ARTICLES
Corballis,
M.C., Morgan, M.J.
On the biological basis of human laterality: I. Evidence for a maturational
left-right gradient.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 261.
Morgan,
M.J., Corballis, M.C.
On the biological basis of human laterality: II. The mechanisms of inheritance.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 270.
OPEN
PEER COMMENTARY
Abler,
W.L.
Asymmetry and evolution.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 277.
Annett,
M.
Throwing loaded and unloaded dice.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 278.
Bakan,
P.
Why left-handedness?
BBS 1978 1 (2): 279.
On testing the maturational left-right gradient hypothesis.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 280.
Berlucchi,
G.
Does bigger equal better, functionally?
BBS 1978 1 (2): 281.
Bertelson,
P.
Interpreting developmental studies of human hemispheric specialization.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 281.
Boklage,
C.E.
On cellular mechanisms for heritably transmitting structural information.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 282.
Bradshaw,
J.L.
Handedness and human cerebral asymmetry: some unanswered questions.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 287.
Bryden,
M.P.
Handedness, heritability, and perceptual laterality studies.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 287.
Bureš,
J.
A fictitious gradient.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 288.
Černáček,
J., Podivinský, F.
Environmental influence on lateralization.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 289.
Chaurasia,
B.D.
Motor asymmetries of the human body other than handedness.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 289.
Collins,
R.L.
In the beginning was the asymmetry gradient, even when it was null: a
propositional framework for a general theory of the inheritance of asymmetry.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 289.
Davidson,
R.J.
Lateral specialization in the human brain: speculations concerning its origins
and development.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 291.
Davis,
T.A.
Reversible and irreversible lateralities in some animals.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 291.
Dimond,
S.J.
Lateralization and unitarianism.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 293.
Ettlinger,
G.
Have we forgotten the infant?
BBS 1978 1 (2): 294.
Fuller,
J.L.
If genes are not right-handed, what is?
BBS 1978 1 (2): 295.
Geffen,
G.
Human laterality: cerebral dominance and handedness.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 295.
Geschwind,
N.
Pathological right-handedness.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 296.
Goodglass,
H.
Objections to a growth gradient theory of cerebral dominance.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 296.
Goodwin,
B.C.
Symmetry-breaking processes and morphogenesis.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 297.
Guerrier,
P.
Evidence for absence of preformed genetic or plasmatic laterality during early
embryonic development.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 297.
Hardyck,
C., and Leiman, A.L.
On the probably genetic basis of human handedness.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 298.
Hicks,
R.E.
On the homogeneity of human handedness.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 299.
Is a unified (cross-species) theory of asymmetries feasible?
BBS 1978 1 (2): 300.
Jantz,
R.L.
Dermatoglyphics, development and human laterality.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 300.
Kasinov,
V.B.
Is there a single basis for biological laterality?
BBS 1978 1 (2): 301.
Kinsbourne,
M.
Pitfalls in the box score approach to evolutionary modelling.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 302.
Kopp,
N.
Possible contribution of neuroanatomy to the comprehension of growth and
inheritance of human cerebral asymmetries.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 302.
The determination of morphological asymmetry.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 303.
Prominence of the right side of the brain.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 304.
Lepori,
N.G.
Asymmetric blastomere movement during gastrulation.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 304.
Meshcheryakov,
V.N.
Are genes left-right agnosic?
BBS 1978 1 (2): 305.
Mittwoch,
U.
Changes in the direction of the lateral growth gradient in human
development—left to right and right to left.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 306.
Molfese,
D.L., Schmidt, A.L.
Human laterality: is it unidimensional?
BBS 1978 1 (2): 307.
Enter the sea-unicorn.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 308.
Neville,
A.C.
On the general problem of asymmetry.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 308.
Nottebohm,
F.
Precocial skills for the precocial hemisphere? Several untested hypotheses.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 309.
Oppenheimer,
J.M.
Gradients and genes.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 310.
Perzigian,
A.J.
The nature and nuture of human laterality.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 310.
Porac,
C., Coren, S.
Relationships among lateral preference behaviors in human beings.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 311.
Preilowski,
B.
Problems with “grand schemes” and handedness.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 312.
Reeve,
E.C.R.
Asymmetry in the narwhal, alpheus, and drosophila.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 313.
Rife,
D.C.
Heredity and handedness.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 313.
Siegel,
M.I.
Microenvironmental effects and fluctuating asymmetry.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 314.
Singh,
Anatomical asymmetries in the limbs of man and other vertebrates.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 315.
Skibinski,
D.O.F.
Is variation in cytoplasmic codes heritable?
BBS 1978 1 (2): 315.
Springer,
S.P.
Handedness and cerebral organization in twins—implications for the biological
basis of human laterality.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 316.
Steklis,
H.D.
Of gonads and ganglia.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 317.
The biases of sex and maturation in lateralisation: “isometric” and
compensatory left-handedness.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 318.
Van
Valen, L.
The control of handedness.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 320.
Vermeij,
G.J.
Left asymmetry in the animal kingdom.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 320.
von
Heyden, H.W.
Cellular laterality.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 322.
The Left Force: homology or analogy.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 322.
Wehrmaker,
A.
Left-handedness: etiological clues from situs inversus.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 322.
Whitaker,
H.A.
Is the problem of directed left-right asymmetry in development.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 324.
AUTHORS’
RESPONSES
Morgan,
M.J.
Genetic models of asymmetry should be asymmetrical.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 325.
Corballis,
M.C.
Brain twisters and hand wringers.
BBS 1978 1 (2): 331.
Volume
01 – Issue
TARGET
ARTICLE
Puccetti,
R., Dykes, R.W.
Sensory cortex and the mind-brain problem.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 337.
OPEN
PEER COMMENTARY
Scheibel,
A.B.
On textural variance and the neocortical mission: a lightning rod for the
obvious.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 344.
Relativistic color coding as a model for quality differences.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 345.
Armstrong,
D.M.
On passing the buck.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 346.
Beloff,
J.
The inevitability of dualism.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 347.
Block,
N.
Straw materialism.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 347.
Booth,
D.A.
Mind-brain puzzle versus mind-physical world identity.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 348.
Bridgeman,
B.
The similarity of the sensory cortices: problem or solution?
BBS 1978 1 (3): 349.
Bunge,
M.
Cytoarchitectonic similarity does not entail functional identity.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 350.
Churchland,
P.M., Churchland, P.S.
The virtuousity of the sensory cortex and the perils of common sense.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 350.
What’s the difference: some riddles?
BBS 1978 1 (3): 351.
Dismukes,
K.
What mind-brain problem?
BBS 1978 1 (3): 351.
Economos,
J.
What is it like, Mr. Puccetti?
BBS 1978 1 (3): 352.
Freemon,
F.R.
Visualizing visual cortex in the mind’s eye.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 353.
Gedye,
J.L.
On accounting for one kind of difference in terms of another kind of
difference.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 353.
Gibson,
K.R.
Asking the right questions: other approaches to the mind-brain problem.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 354.
Globus,
G.G.
What is the sound of one hand clapping, the touch of a still wind, the sight of
a “black hole”?
BBS 1978 1 (3): 355.
Green,
M.B.
Some difference is enough difference.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 356.
Harman,
G.
What is experience made of?
BBS 1978 1 (3): 356.
Hebb,
D.O.
A problem of localization.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 357.
Mackie,
J.L.
Inexplicit dualism.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 357.
Mandler,
G.
Mind (psychology) is not (currently) reducible to body (neurobiology).
BBS 1978 1 (3): 358.
Marks,
L.E.
Does the brain mind?
BBS 1978 1 (3): 358.
Maxwell,
G.
Mind and brain: an arduous task by neuroscience, physics and philosophy.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 359.
Milner,
P.M.
What’s the matter with mind?
BBS 1978 1 (3): 360.
Natsoulas,
T.
What do we know when we know what having auditory experience is like?
BBS 1978 1 (3): 361.
Norman,
D.A.
So what should information look like?
BBS 1978 1 (3): 361.
Perry,
J.R.
Defenses for the mind-brain identity theory: causal differences.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 362.
Ritter,
W.
How completely are the processes that constitute the brain known?
BBS 1978 1 (3): 363.
Rose,
S.P.R.
Mind-brain: Puccetti & Dykes’ non-solution to a non-problem.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 363.
Rosenthal,
D.M.
The insignificance of incommensurate variations.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 364.
Shallice,
T.
Are the properties of cells relevant for understanding consciousness?
BBS 1978 1 (3): 364.
Smart,
J.J.C.
Cortical localization and the mind-brain identity theory.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 365.
Sperry,
R.
Mentalist monism: consciousness as a causal emergent of brain processes.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 365.
Szentágothai,
J.
A false alternative.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 367.
Uttal,
W.R.
Codes, sensations, and the mind-body problem.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 368.
Ward,
M.F.
The mind-body issue unsimplified.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 368.
Wilks,
Y.
Leibniz, location, and distinguishing types of sensation.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 369.
AUTHORS’
RESPONSE
Puccetti,
R., Dykes, R.W.
Localization and dualism: a second look at the paradox.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 369.
TARGET
ARTICLE
Rosenthal,
R., Rubin, D.B.
Interpersonal expectancy effects: the first 345 studies.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 377.
OPEN
PEER COMMENTARY
Adair,
J.G.
The combined probabilities of 345 studies: only half the story?
BBS 1978 1 (3): 386.
Babad,
E.Y.
On the biases of psychologists.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 387.
Barber,
T.X.
Expecting expectancy effects: biased data analyses and failure to exclude
alternative interpretations in experimenter expectancy research.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 388.
Carliner,
M., Gottesdiener, H.
On the misuse of statistics.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 390.
Chubin,
D.E.
Inattention to expectancy: resistance to a knowledge claim.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 390.
Collins,
H.M.
Replication of experiments: a sociological comment.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 391.
Elashoff,
J.D.
Box scores are for baseball.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 392.
Ellsworth,
P.C.
When does an experimenter bias?
BBS 1978 1 (3): 393.
Fiske,
D.W.
The several kinds of generalization.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 394.
Gadlin,
H.
Great expectations . . . big disappointment.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 394.
Glass,
G.V.
In defense of generalization.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 394.
Hilgard,
E.R.
Expectancy effects: valuable or frightening?
BBS 1978 1 (3): 395.
Johnson,
R.F.Q.
Experimenter expectancy effects: alternative explanations.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 396.
Johnson,
R.W.
Interpersonal expectancy effects exist: what do we know beyond that?
BBS 1978 1 (3): 396.
Jung,
J.
Self-negating functions of self-fulfilling prophecies.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 397.
Krippner,
S.
The importance of Rosenthal’s research for parapsychology.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 398.
Kruglanski,
A.W.
Quantifying the interpersonal expectancy effect: on the place of statistical
significance in a program of research.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 399.
Mayo,
R.J.
Statistical considerations in analyzing the results of a collection of
experiments.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 400.
Miller,
A.G.
And in this corner, from
BBS 1978 1 (3): 401.
Nosanchuk,
T.A.
Experimenter expectancy and the effects of academic debates.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 402.
Page,
S.
Toward evaluating the “reality” of interpersonal expectancy effects.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 403.
Rao,
K.R.
Expectancy effects, ESP effects, and replicability.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 404.
Silverman,
Expectancy effects revisted.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 404.
Singer,
J.E.
Once you’ve seen a decade of studies, you’ve seen them all.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 405.
Smale,
G.G.
Artifact or agent of change: the self-fulfilling prophecy redefined.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 405.
Stewart,
C.G.
Progress toward the statistical and psychological significance of expectancy
effects.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 406.
Valsiner,
J.
Expectancy effects: a paradoxical area of research.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 408.
Wilkins,
W.E.
Expectancy research: the question of quality.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 408.
Wilkins,
W.W.
A poor case for causes.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 409.
AUTHORS’
RESPONSE
Rosenthal,
R., Rubin, D.B.
Issues in summarizing the first 345 studies of interpersonal expectancy
effects.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 410.
TARGET
ARTICLE
Rajecki,
D.W., Lamb, M.E., Obmascher, P.
Toward a general theory of infantile attachment: a comparative review of
aspects of the social bond.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 417.
OPEN
PEER COMMENTARY
Ainsworth,
M.D.S.
The Bowlby-Ainsworth attachment theory.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 436.
Bischof,
N.
On the necessity of “appropriate behavior” on the part of the caregiver.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 438.
Is there adaptive significance in the persistence of infantile attachment to
maltreating attachment figures?
BBS 1978 1 (3): 439.
Brown,
R.T.
Three scientists in search of a theorist (apologies to Pirandello).
BBS 1978 1 (3): 440.
Beyond attachment?
BBS 1978 1 (3): 441.
Chalmers,
N.R.
Ethnological theory and infantile attachment.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 441.
Dienske,
H.
The parental bond and the game of theorizing.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 442.
Dolhinow,
P.
Langur monkey mother loss and adoption.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 443.
Eble,
B.A.
Attachment: the two sides of one coin.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 444.
Eiserer,
Maltreatment effects and learning processes in infantile attachment.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 445.
Gibson,
K.R.
Sociobiology, brain, maturation, and infantile filial attachment.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 445.
Gottlieb,
G.
The epigenetic character of development.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 446.
Gunnar,
M.R.
How can we test attachment theories if our subjects aren’t attached?
BBS 1978 1 (3): 447.
Hess,
E.H.
The road to general attachment theory: little headway.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 448.
Hoffman,
H.S.
On the matter of interpretation and judgement in the evaluation of theory.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 448.
Immelmann,
K.
Imprinting and infantile attachment.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 449.
Kaufman,
I.C.
Evolution, interaction, and object relationship.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 450.
Kovach,
J.K.
Infantile attachment: a general theory or a set of loosely-knit paradigms?
BBS 1978 1 (3): 451.
Masters,
J.C.
Implicit assumptions regarding the singularity of attachment: a note on the
validity and heuristic value of a mega-construct.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 452.
Mineka,
S., Rush D.
Attachment theories maltreated?
BBS 1978 1 (3): 453.
Passman,
R.H., Adams, R.E.
Learning theory and infantile attachment: a re-evaluation.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 454.
Rutter,
M.
Attachment: its meaning and consequences.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 455.
Salzen,
E.A.
Orientation and affect in infantile attachment.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 456.
Scott,
J.P.
The systems theoretic approach to social behavior.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 457.
Sluckin,
W.
Infantile attachment and exposure learning.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 458.
Solomon,
R.L.
Further implications of opponent-process theory.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 459.
Suomi,
S.J.
Is a general theory of attachment feasible?
BBS 1978 1 (3): 459.
Wolff,
P.H.
Detaching from attachment.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 460.
AUTHORS’
RESPONSE
Rajecki,
D.W., Lamb, M.E.
Interpretations, reinterpretations, and alleged misinterpretations of theory
and data concerning attachment.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 461.
TARGET
ARTICLE
Steriade,
M.
Corical long-axoned cells and putative interneurons during the sleep-waking
cycle.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 465.
OPEN
PEER COMMENTARY
Ben-Ari,
Y, Naquet, R.
Acetylcholine: synaptic transmitter of the arousal system?
BBS 1978 1 (3): 485.
Berlucchi,
G.
Sleep and waking and two populations of neurons.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 486.
Borbély,
A.A.
Active wakefulness and paradoxical sleep: common mechanisms?
BBS 1978 1 (3): 487.
Corazza,
R.
Electrophysiological differentiation between output cells and interneurons: an
alternate methodological proposal.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 487.
Dewan,
E.M.
Physiological measurements and the “programming” hypothesis for the function of
REM sleep.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 488.
Fishbein,
W.
Cortical interneuron activation, D sleep and memory.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 489.
Freemon,
F.R.
A time for inhibitory neurons to rest.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 489.
Glenn,
L.L., Guilleminault, C.
Neuronal identification and classification strategies.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 490.
Greenberg,
R.
The cortex finds its place in REM sleep.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 490.
Henriksen,
S.J.
The cellular substrates of state.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 491.
Humphrey,
D.R.
On the proportions or identified output cells and putative interneurons in the
precentral arm area of the monkey’s motor cortex.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 492.
Iwama,
K., Fukuda, Y.
Sleep-waking studies on the lateral geniculate nucleus and visual cortex.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 494.
Jones,
B.E.
Toward an understanding of the basic mechanisms of the sleep-waking cycle.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 495.
Jouvet,
M.
Cortical interneurons and paradoxical sleep.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 495.
Krnjević,
K.
Cholinergic control of excitibility in the sleep-waking cycle.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 496.
McCarley,
R.W., Hobson, J.A.
Output neurons, interneurons, and the mechanisms and function of sleep.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 498.
Why do cortical long-axoned clles and putative interneurons behave differently
during the sleep-waking cycle?
BBS 1978 1 (3): 499.
Morrison,
A.R.
The problem of determining selectivity of neuronal firing during different
behavioral states.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 499.
Oniani,
T.N.
Cortical unit activity and the functional significance of the sleep-wakefulness
cycle.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 500.
Oshima,
T.
Intracellular activities of cortical laminae I-III neurones during EEG arousal.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 500.
Pasik,
T., Pasik, P.
On the possibility of a third category of neurons in cortical circuitry.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 501.
Neurophysiologic implications of information processing during D sleep.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 501.
Pribram,
K.H.
Possible functions of sleep—memory consolidation?
BBS 1978 1 (3): 502.
Ramon-Moliner,
E.
Two basic neuronal configurations in the cerebral cortex.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 502.
Ranck,
Jr., J.B.
The importance of neuronal interaction patterns.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 503.
Routtenberg,
A.
The role of interneurons (Golgi type II) in memory.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 503.
Satoh,
T.
Possible reticular mechanism underlying altered activity of cortical neurons
during sleep.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 504.
Schlag,
J.
On the significance of observations about cortical activity during the
sleep-waking cycle
BBS 1978 1 (3): 505.
Segundo,
J.P.
Postsynaptic potential influences upon postsynaptic impulse generation.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 505.
Szentágothai,
J.
Interneurons and memory consolidation.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 506.
Tömböl,
T.
Classification of cortical interneurons on the basis of Golgi impregnation.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 506.
Valleala,
P.
A comment on wakefulness as a reference state in sleep studies.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 507.
Vanderwolf,
C.H.
What does cortical electrical activity have to do with sleep?
BBS 1978 1 (3): 507.
Wagman,
A.M.I.
Memory-consolidation hypothesis of REM sleep.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 508.
Webb,
A.C.
How important is the mean frequency of neuronal discharge?
BBS 1978 1 (3): 509.
Woody,
C.D.
Identification and functional characterization of electrophysiologically
studied cortical neurons.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 510.
AUTHOR’S
RESPONSE
Steriade,
M.
Cell clasification and changes in neuronal activity with shifts in vigilance
state.
BBS 1978 1 (3): 511.
Volume
01 – Issue
A Special Issue on Cognition and
Consciousness in Nonhuman Species
TARGET
ARTICLES
Premack,
D., Woodruff, G.
Does the chimpanzee havea theory of mind?
BBS 1978 1 (4): 515.
Prospects for a coginitive ethology.
BBS 1978 1 (4): 527.
Savage-Rumbaugh,
E.S., Rumbaugh, D.R., Boysen, S.
Linguisitically-mediated tool use and exchange by chimpanzees (Pan
Troglodytes).
BBS 1978 1 (4): 539.
OPEN
PEER COMMENTARY
Experimental cognitive ethology.
BBS 1978 1 (4): 555.
Rumbaugh,
E.S., Rumbaugh, D.R., Boysen, S.
Sarah’s problems of comprehension.
BBS 1978 1 (4): 555.
Beck,
B.B.
Talkers and doers.
BBS 1978 1 (4): 557.
Bennett,
J.
Some remarks about concepts.
BBS 1978 1 (4): 557.
Bernstein,
I.S.
Awareness, intention, expectancy and plausibility.
BBS 1978 1 (4): 560.
Burge,
T.
Concept of mind in primates?
BBS 1978 1 (4): 560.
Burghardt,
G.M.
Closing the circle: the ethnology of mind?
BBS 1978 1 (4): 562.
Candland,
D.K.
How the animals lost their minds.
BBS 1978 1 (4): 563.
Churchland,
P.S., Churchland, P.M.
Internal states and cognitive theories.
BBS 1978 1 (4): 565.
Intentions, awareness, and awareness thereof.
BBS 1978 1 (4): 566.
Animal cognition without human consciousness.
BBS 1978 1 (4): 567.
Dawkins,
M.
The second time around.
BBS 1978 1 (4): 568.
Beliefs about beliefs.
BBS 1978 1 (4): 568.
Dingwall,
W.O.
Animals and the rest of us: Decartes versus
BBS 1978 1 (4): 570.
Farrell,
B.A.
Some considerations in the philosophy of mind.
BBS 1978 1 (4): 571.
A social synthesis.
BBS 1978 1 (4): 572.
Gould,
J.L.
Behavioral programming in honey bees.
BBS 1978 1 (4): 572.
Developmental processes in the language learning of child and chimp.
BBS 1978 1 (4): 573.
Grene,
M.
Basic concepts for cognitive ethnology.
BBS 1978 1 (4): 574.
What does it mean to be conscious?
BBS 1978 1 (4): 575.
Harman,
G.
Studying the chimpanzee’s theory of mind.
BBS 1978 1 (4): 576.
Hebb,
D.O.
Behavioral evidence of thought and consciousness.
BBS 1978 1 (4): 577.
Heffner,
J.
Perception and animal consciousness: the philosophical context.
BBS 1978 1 (4): 577.
Jaynes,
J.
In a manner of speaking.
BBS 1978 1 (4): 578.
Jolly,
A.
The cimpanzees’ tea-party.
BBS 1978 1 (4): 579.
Lewis,
M.
Social knowledge and mental acts.
BBS 1978 1 (4): 580.
Limber,
J.
Good-bye behaviorism!
BBS 1978 1 (4): 581.
Lockhard,
J.S.
Speculations on the adaptive significance of cognition and consciousness in nonhuman
species.
BBS 1978 1 (4): 583.
MacKay,
D.M.
Evaluation as an indicator of intention.
BBS 1978 1 (4): 584.
Mellgren,
R.L., Fouts, R.S.
Mentalism and methodology.
BBS 1978 1 (4): 585.
Menzel,
Jr., E.W., Johnson, M.K.
Should mentalistic concepts be defended or assumed?
BBS 1978 1 (4): 586.
Moravcsik,
J.M.
Can the concept of cognition bear the weight psychologists place on it?
BBS 1978 1 (4): 587.
Morton,
A.
What to look for in comparing species.
BBS 1978 1 (4): 588.
Norman,
D.A.
Stop already, my mind is made up.
BBS 1978 1 (4): 589.
Pribram,
K.H.
Consciousness, classifed and de-classified.
BBS 1978 1 (4): 590.
Pylyshyn,
Z.W.
When is attribution of beliefs justified?
BBS 1978 1 (4): 592.
Rachlin,
H.
Who cares if the chimpanzee has a theory of mind?
BBS 1978 1 (4): 593.
Riesen,
A.H.
Responses versus cognitions.
BBS 1978 1 (4): 594.
Sarles,
H.
One new theme and . . .
BBS 1978 1 (4): 595.
Savage,
C.W.
Isn’t the answer obvious?
BBS 1978 1 (4): 596.
Schubert,
G.
Cooperation, cognition, and communication.
BBS 1978 1 (4): 597.
Scott,
J.P.
Fantasy and communication.
BBS 1978 1 (4): 600.
Segal,
E.F.
Does mind matter?
BBS 1978 1 (4): 601.
Sloman,
A.
What about their internal languages?
BBS 1978 1 (4): 602.
What’s the matter with mind?
BBS 1978 1 (4): 603.
Stich,
S.P.
Cognition and content in non-human species.
BBS 1978 1 (4): 604.
Ullman,
S.
Mental represenations and mental experiences.
BBS 1978 1 (4): 605.
Weiner,
B., Landes, S.
A cognitive psychology for infrahumans.
BBS 1978 1 (4): 606.
Zaidel,
E.
Of apes and hemispheres.
BBS 1978 1 (4): 607.
AUTHORS’
RESPONSE
Helpful “talk” on what to “do.”
BBS 1978 1 (4): 609.
Savage-Rumbaugh
et al.
Describing chimpanzee communication: a communication problem.
BBS 1978 1 (4): 614.
Premack,
D., Woodruff, G.
Chimpanzee theory of mind: casuality, purpose, and the use of symbols.
BBS 1978 1 (4): 616.