Volume 02 – Issue
TARGET ARTICLE
Eibl-Eibesfeldt,
Human ethology: concepts and implications for the
sciences of man.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 1.
OPEN PEER COMMENTARY
Barash, D.P.
Human ethology and human sociobiology.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 26.
Barkow, J.H.
Human ethology: empirical wealth, theoretical dearth.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 27.
Benedict, B.
The dangers of analogy in human ethology.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 27.
Block, N.
A confusion about innateness.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 27.
Bolles, R.C.
The functional significance of behavior.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 29.
Borgia, G.
Levels of selection and human ethology.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 30.
Charlesworth, W.R.
“It’s true, but we don’t know why”: problems in validating human ethological
hypotheses.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 30.
Delgado, J.M.R.
Cerebral building blocks and behavioral mechanisms.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 31.
Finley, G.E.
Cross-cultural methodology and ethological universals.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 32.
Fraser, P.J.
Analogy and dimensions of behavior.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 33.
Ghiselin, M.T.
Has human ethology rediscovered Darwinsim?
BBS 1979 2 (1): 33.
Gottlieb, G.
Classical ethology’s conception of ontogenetic
development.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 34.
Hailman, J.P.
The ethology behind human ethology.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 35.
Hausfater, G.
An eclectic history of ethological theory and methods.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 36.
Hoffman, H.S.
The problem of human ethology from the perspective of
an experimental psychologist.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 37.
Universality and species specificity.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 38.
Izard, C.E.
Human ethology and the ontogeny of emotional
expressions.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 39.
Klopfer, P.H.
What the ethologist’s eye tells the ethologist’s brain.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 39.
Kovach, J.L.
“It just depends on what one wants to know”: Eibl-Eibesfeldt’s
human ethology.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 40.
Lipp, H.P.
Brain complexity enhances speed of behavioral evolution.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 42.
Montagu, A.
“Insticts,” infants, adults, and behavior.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 42.
On human ethology: some methodological comments.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 43.
Schubert, G.
Classical ethology: concepts and implications for
human ethology.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 44.
van den Berghe,
P.L.
Ethology versus sociobiology: competitive displays.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 46.
Wahlsten, D.
Some logical fallacies in the classical ethological point of view.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 48.
Washburn, S.L.
Ethologists do not study human evolution.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 49.
Wilson, E.O.
Ethology and sociobiology: a point of definition.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 49.
AUTHOR’S RESPONSE
Eibl-Eibesfeldt,
Human ethology: methods and limits.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 50.
TARGET ARTICLE
Gyr, J. Willey, R., Henry, A.
Motor-sensory feedback and geometry of visual space: an attempted replication.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 59.
OPEN PEER COMMENTARY
Bridgeman, B.
Adaptation and the two-visual-systems hypothesis.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 64.
Adaptation to curvature in the absence of contour.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 65.
Craske, B.
A stationary subject does perceive
curvature when wearing a prism in a spotted drum.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 66.
Day, R.H.
What is self-induced motor activity adapting to?
BBS 1979 2 (1): 66
Ebenholtz, S.M.
Insufficiencies in perceptual adaptation theory.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 67.
Finke, R.A.
Nonrandom curvature adaptation to random visual displays.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 68.
Freides, D.
Motor factors in perception: limitations in empirical and hierarchical
analysis.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 68.
Haber, R.N.
When is sensory-motor information necessary, when only useful, and when
superfluous?
BBS 1979 2 (1): 68.
Evalutating nonreplication:
more theory and background necessary.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 70.
Henn, V.
Can the brain be divided into a sensory and a motor part?
BBS 1979 2 (1): 70.
Hochberg, J., Festinger,
L.
Is there curvature adaptation not attributable to purely intravisual
phenomena?
BBS 1979 2 (1): 71.
Jeannerod, M.
Visuomotor experiments: failure to replicate, or
failure to match the theory?
BBS 1979 2 (1): 71.
Kelso, J.A.S.
Motor-sensory feedback formulations: are we asking the right questions?
BBS 1979 2 (1): 72.
Kohler, I.
A provisional sensory/motor “complementarity” model
for adaptation effects.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 73.
Lappin, J.S.
The encoding of spatial position in the brain.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 74.
Mack, A.
Non-visual determinants of perception.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 75.
Mikaelian, H.H.
Adaptation of the distortion of shape is different from adaptation to the
distortion of space.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 76.
Miller, J.M.
Visual-motor conflict resolved by motor adaptation without perceptual change.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 76.
Murthy, K.S.K.
Centrifugal contributions to visual perceptual after effects.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 77.
Paap, K.R.
Position information versus motor programs: two levels of sensorimotor
theory.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 77.
Redding, G.M.
Attention as an explanatory concept in perceptual adaptation.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 77.
Riesen, A.H.
Re-afference in space and movement perception.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 78.
Rock, I.
The problem of adaptation to prismatically altered
shape.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 78.
Roland, P.E.
Voluntary movement and perception in intrapersonal and extrapersonal
space.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 79.
Shebilske, W.L.
Oclomotor hysteresis:
implications for testing sensorimotor and ecological
optics theories.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 80.
Singer, G., Wallace, M., Collins, J.K.
Motor system changes are not necessary for changes in perception.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 80.
Steinbach, M.J.
Methodological considerations in replicating Held and Rekosh’s
perceptual adaptation study.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 81.
Turvey, M.T.
The thesis of the efference-mediation of vision
cannot be rationalized.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 81.
Vonèche, J.J.
Visuomotor feedback: a short supplement to Gyr’s journey around a polka-dotted cylinder.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 83.
Walk, R.D.
Attentional factors in depth perception.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 83.
Wallach, H.
Three functions of motor-sensory feedback in object perception.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 84.
Welch, R.B.
Separating the issues involved in the role of bodily movement in perception and
perceptual-motor coordination.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 85.
AUTHORS’ RESPONSE
Gyr, J, Willey, R., Henry A.
Motor factors in perception.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 86.
TARGET ARTICLE
Toates, F.M.
Homeostasis and drinking.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 95.
OPEN PEER COMMENTARY
Adolph, E.F.
Multiple paths in the control of drinking.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 102.
Beck, R.C.
Roles of taste and learning in water regulation.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 102.
Bolles, R.C.
Toy rats and real rats: nonhomeostatic plasticity in
drinking.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 103.
Booth, D.A.
Is thirst largely an acquired specific appetite?
BBS 1979 2 (1): 103.
Davis, J.D.
Broadening the homeostatic concept.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 104.
Deutsch, J.A.
Intragastric infusion and pressure.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 105.
Fitzsimons, J.T.
Nonregulatory drinking and renal function.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 105.
Hatton, G.I.
Homeostasis, the straw man.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 106.
Hirano, T.
Anticipatory drinking in the eel.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 106.
Horrell,
Motivational control: homeostatic systems or decision making strategies?
BBS 1979 2 (1): 107.
Replacing homeostasis by optimization: preaching to the converted.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 107.
Johnson, A.K.
The analysis of drinking behavior: the need for defining physiological
parameters and not for proliferating constructs.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 107.
Kutscher, C.L.
On recognizing nonhomeostatic behaviors.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 108.
Lea, S.E.G.
Homeostasis, elasticity, and reinforcer interactions.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 109.
Le Magnen, J.
What is water regulation?
BBS 1979 2 (1): 109.
The importance of temporal coupling between feeding and drinking – simulations
prompted by Toates’ paper.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 110.
McCleery, R.H.
Homeostatic motivational function and theory.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 111.
Milgram, N.W.
On the inadequacy of a homeostatic model: where do we go from here?
BBS 1979 2 (1): 111.
Nicolaidis, S.
Thirst is controlled by regulatory stimuli, but drinking may partly escape
them.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 112.
O’Kelly, L.I.
Internal and external regulatory process and the ecology of motivation.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 112.
Overstreet, D.H.
Homeostatsis is insufficient to account for subtlety
of behavior.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 113.
Pankseep, J.
Cost-benefits of computer modelling.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 114.
Peck, J.W.
Thirst, homeostasis, and bodily fluid deficits.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 114.
Powers, W.T.
Cause/effect metaphors versus control theory.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 115.
Ramsay, D.J.
A defence of homeostasis.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 116.
Rolls, B.J., Wood, R.J.
Homeostatic control of drinking: a surviving concept.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 116.
Rowland, N.
Natural drinking, interactions with feed, and species differences – three data
deserts.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 117.
Schallert, T., Hsiao, S.
Homeostasis and life.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 118.
Severs, W.B.
Homesostatic versus nonhomeostatic
drinking behavior: an observation, criticism, and hypothesis for discussion.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 118.
Neither homeostasis nor simulation.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 119.
Staddon, J.E.R.
Thirst a static analysis.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 120.
Steffens, A.B.
Is a mathematical concept of homeostasis adequate to explain more complex
behavior?
BBS 1979 2 (1): 121.
VanderWelle, D.A.
Lack of “fixed set-points” in fluid homeostasis does not argue for learned
satiety factors in drinking.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 121.
Vincent, J.D.
Behavioral and neuro-endocrine influences in
homeostasis.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 122.
Wiepkema, P.R.
The fallacy of oversimple homeostatic models.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 122.
Wong, R.
Experiential and circadian influences on drinking.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 123.
Woods, S.C.,
Alternatives to homeostasis.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 123.
Wright, J.W.
What is “nonregulatory” drinking?
BBS 1979 2 (1): 124.
Wyrwicka, W.
Sensory regulation of water intake.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 125.
AUTHOR’S RESPONSE
Toates, F.M.
The psychobiology and biocybernetics of thirst:
invaluable data and concepts for future theory and model construction.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 125
CONTINUING
COMMENTARY on Brainerd, C.J.
The
stage question in cognitive-developmental theory.
BBS 1978 1(2): 173-213.
Bart, W.M.
The need for synthetic cognitive development theory.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 137.
Bates, E.
Brainerd versus Aristotle with Piaget looking on.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 138.
Buss, A.R.
On the four kinds of causality.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 139.
Chevalier-Skolnikoff,
S.
A primatological perspective.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 139.
Cornell, E.H.
The stage heuristic in the study of sensorimotor
intelligence.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 140.
On preserving and extending Piaget’s contributions.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 141.
Gallagher, J.M.
Equilibration – the central concept of Piaget’s theory.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 141.
Gyr, J.W.
Scaling, uniqueness, and integration.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 141.
Hooper, F.H.
Brainerd on the cognitive structure and integration criteria.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 142.
Koslowski, B.
Environmental factors and the organization of developmental changes.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 143.
Human understanding: a question of description.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 144.
Lerner, R.M.
The stage concept in developmental theory: a dialectic alternative.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 144.
Moshman, D.
Horizontal structure and the concept of stage.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 145.
Nelson, K.E.
On stages and stage-building.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 146.
Pollack, R.H.
Task structure versus cognitive structure.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 147.
Roodin, P.A.
Interpretation of stage as structure.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 148.
Siegel, I.E.
A structuralist response to a skeptic.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 148.
AUTHOR’S RESPONSE
Brainerd, C.J.
Further replies on invariant sequences, explanation, and other stage criteria.
BBS 1979 2 (1): 149.
Volume 02 – Issue
TARGET ARTICLE
Eysenck, H.J.
The conditioning model of neurosis.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 155.
OPEN PEER COMMENTARY
Bindra, D.
Conditioning theory and neurosis.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 166.
Bolles, R.C.
The nonextinction of fear: operation bootstrap.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 167.
Borkovec, T.D.
Incubation and the relevance of functional CS exposure.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 168.
Dykman, R.A.
The Gantt and Eyenck conditioning models for neurosis.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 168.
Gray, J.A.
Is there any need for conditioning in Eysenck’s
conditioning model of neurosis?
BBS 1979 2 (2): 169.
Kimmel, H.D.
Eysnck’s model of neurotigenesis.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 171.
Krasner, L.
Eysenck on Watson: paying lip service to lip service.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 172.
A reconsideration of Eysenck’s conditioning model of
neurosis.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 172.
Lyons, W.
On some key concepts in Eysenck’s conditioning theory
of neurosis.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 174.
Mahoney, M.J.
Reflections on the conditioning model of neurosis.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 174.
Marks,
Conditioning models for clinical syndromes are out of date.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 175.
McAllister, W.R., McAllister, D.E.
Are the concepts of enhancement and preparedness necessary?
BBS 1979 2 (2): 177.
Mineka, S.
New perspectives on conditioning models and incubation theory.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 178.
Notterman, J.M.
Toward an updated model of neurosis.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 178.
Öhman, A, Ursin, H.
On the sufficiency of a Pavlovian conditioning model
for coping with the complexities of neurosis.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 179.
Rachlin, H.
Journey into the interior of the organism.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 180.
Rosenthal, T.L.
Thesis and antithesis: S-R levers or meaning-perceivers.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 181.
Salzinger, K.
Modeling neurosis: one type of learning is not enough.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 181.
Soltysik, S.
Conditioned alpha fear responses and protection from extinction.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 182.
Terry, W.S.
Implications of recent research in conditioning for the conditioning model of
neurosis.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 183.
Wolpe, J.
The Eysenck and the Wolpe
theories of neurosis.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 183.
Wong, P.T.P.
A critique of Eysenck’s theory of neurosis.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 185.
Wyrwicka, W.
“Prepared fears” and the theory of conditioning.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 186.
Zieliński, K.
Short-latency avoidance responses.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 186.
Zuckerman, M.
What and where is the unconditioned (or conditioned) stimulus in the
conditioning model of neurosis?
BBS 1979 2 (2): 187.
AUTHOR’S RESPONSE
Eysenck, H.J.
The conditioning theory of neurosis: criticisms considered.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 188.
TARGET ARTICLE
Brain mechanisms for offense, defense, and submission.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 201.
OPEN PEER COMMENTARY
Albert, D.J.
The consociate modulator.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 213.
Andrew, R.J.
Avian data on aggression.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 213.
Baenninger, R.
Limits of neurophysiological approaches to
aggression.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 214.
Berntson, G.G.
Cerebellar contributions to response selection.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 214.
Blanchard, R.J.,
Neurobehavioral systems for attack and defense.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 215.
Brain, P.F.
Dividing up aggression and considerations in studying the physiological
substrates of these phenomena.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 216.
Decsi, L., Nagy, J.
Neurotransmitter organization of aggressive behavior.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 216.
Delgado, J.M.R.
Cerebral play of forces in offensive-defensive mechanisms.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 217.
Eichelman, B.
Brain mechanisms of aggression: dilemmas of perspective.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 218.
Fentress, J.C.
Motives: metaphors in motion.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 219.
Fraczek, A.
Is there anything new in the neurophysiology of aggression for social
psychologists?
BBS 1979 2 (2): 219.
Gandelman, R.
Androgens and aggression.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 220.
Isaacson, R.L.
Are we ready to localize motivational systems?
BBS 1979 2 (2): 221.
Karli, P.
Emotional responsiveness and relevant history of reinforcement are important
determinants of social behavior.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 222.
Koolhaas, J.M.
The risks of using descriptive ethological models in brain research.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 222.
Laborit, H.
Action-inhibiting system (AIS) vs. submission system.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 223.
Leyhausen, P.
Are neurophysiological techniques adequate to account
for agonistic behavior?
BBS 1979 2 (2): 223.
Miczek, K.A.
What are the chemical characteristics of brain mechanisms for aggression?
BBS 1979 2 (2): 224.
Panksepp, J.
Offense and defense vs. rage and fear: a matter of semantics?
BBS 1979 2 (2): 225.
Rodgers, R.J.
Changing methodology in aggression research.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 226.
Senault, B.
Tentative analysis of apomorphine-induced intraspecific aggressive behavior in the rat according to
Adam’s classification.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 226.
Ursin, H.
Aggression and the brain: reflex chains or network?
BBS 1979 2 (2): 227.
Waldbillig, R.J.
Offense, defense, submission, and attack: problems of logic and lexicon.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 227.
Wiepkema, P.R.
On the specification of motivational systems.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 228.
Yutzey, D.A.
Neural circuitry for motivational systems.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 229.
AUTHORS’ RESPONSE
Motivational systems, motivational mechanisms, and aggression.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 230.
TARGET ARTICLE
Wasserman, G.S., Kong, K.-L.
Absolute timing of mental activities.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 243.
OPEN PEER COMMENTARY
Babkoff, H.
Deviations from intensity-duration reciprocity as possible indicators of
pathology.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 255.
Blumenthal, A.L.
A Limulus eye on cognitive psychology.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 257.
Bridgeman, B.
Events and processes in neural stimulus coding: some limitations and an
application to metacontrast.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 257.
Coltheart, M.
Critical duration and visibility persistence.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 258.
Donchin, E.
Processes and strategies in mental chronometry.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 259.
Feth, L.L.
Temporal summation in the auditory system.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 260.
Frumkes, T.E.
Temporal summation in frogs and men.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 261.
Haber, R.N.
Are we ready to bootstrap neurophysiology into an understanding of perception?
BBS 1979 2 (2): 263.
Järvilehto, M.
Adaptation time constants and on-off wave form in neural summation.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 264.
Kahneman, D.
Mechanisms that produce critical durations.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 265.
Kietzman, M.L.
How many characteristics of temporal summation?
BBS 1979 2 (2): 266.
Kulikowski, J.J.
What have we learned about mental activities from temporal summation?
BBS 1979 2 (2): 268.
Laughlin, S.
The correlation of peripheral performance with visual behavior.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 268.
Leibovic, K.N.
What are the links between neural activity and mental processes?
BBS 1979 2 (2): 268.
Levick, W.R.
The significance of neural noise for the concept of a mental event.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 269.
Levinson, J.Z.
A critique of critical duration experiments.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 269.
Libet, B.
Can a theory based on some cell properties define the timing of mental
activities?
BBS 1979 2 (2): 270.
Lillywhite, P.G.
An alternative perspective on mental activity: Fourier filtering.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 271.
Cellular analysis of behavior and cognition.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 272.
Marks, L.E.
Invariance, richness, recoding.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 272.
Marriott, F.H.C.
A simple analyzer for nerve-impulse trains.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 272.
Massaro, D.W.
The role of storage and processing time in temporal-summation phenomena.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 273.
McGuigan, F.J.
A neuromuscular circuit model of mental activities.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 274.
Penchev, A., Kurtev, A., Vassilev, A.
Some possible limitations of the temporal summation tool.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 276.
Posner, M.I.
Comparing chronometric methods.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 276.
Pylyshyn, Z.W.
Do mental events have durations?
BBS 1979 2 (2): 277.
Raab, D.H.
On Bloch’s Law and “ideal observers.”
BBS 1979 2 (2): 278.
Reed, A.V.
Relative timing of sensory transduction.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 278.
Sperling, G.
Critical duration, supersummation, and the narrow
domain of strength-duration experiments.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 279.
Sternberg, R.J.
Is absolute time relatively interesting?
BBS 1979 2 (2): 281.
Sternberg, S.
Sensory variables and time stages of human information processing.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 282.
Hard times for mental activities.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 283.
Townsend, J.T.
Modeling physiological-behavioral correlations.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 284.
Treisman, M.
Difficulties in defining “mental” in mental chronometry.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 284.
Ueno, T.
Is the temporal summation function a tool for analyzing mechanisms of visual
behavior?
BBS 1979 2 (2): 285.
Uttal, W.R.
Do central nonlinearities exist?
BBS 1979 2 (2): 286.
On peripheral and central explanations of temporal summation.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 286.
Wandell, B.A.
On taxonomies of neural coding.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 287.
From neurophysiology to perception.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 288.
Weale, R.A.
Photoreceptor response parameters: what is a criterion?
BBS 1979 2 (2): 288.
Wolbarsht, M.L.
Supersummation and afterimages.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 289.
Yeandle, S.
Can the CNS resolve a delta function?
BBS 1979 2 (2): 289.
Zacks, J.L.
Analysis signatures depend both upon the analysis used and the data analyzed.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 289.
Bibikov, N.G.
Temporal summation in the auditory system.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 303.
The new doctrine of signatures.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 303.
AUTHOR’S RESPONSE
Wasserman, G.S.
Task-dependent intensity/duration effects in mental chronometry.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 290.
CONTINUING
COMMENTARY on Roland, P.E.
Sensory
feedback to the cerebral cortex during voluntary movement in man.
BBS 1978 1: 129-171.
Kugler, P.N., Turvey, M.T.
Two metaphors for neural afference and efference.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 305.
AUTHOR’S RESPONSE
Roland, P.E.
Degrees of freedom between somatosensory and somatomotor processes; or, One nonsequiture
deserves another.
BBS 1979 2 (2): 307.
Volume 02 – Issue
TARGET ARTICLE
Olton, D.S., Becker, J.T., Handelmann, G.E.
Hippocampus, space, and memory.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 313.
OPEN PEER COMMENTARY
Adey, W.R.
Hippocampal theta and organism-environment
interaction.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 322.
Bennett, T.L.
A gating function for the hippocampus in working memory.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 322.
Berger, T.W.
The hippocampus and “general” mnemonic function.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 323.
Buhr, R.D.
Comparative memory and the hippocampus.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 324.
Bureš, J.
Spatial working memory – significance of intramaze
and extramaze cues.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 325.
How much work should the hippocampus do?
BBS 1979 2 (3): 325.
Divac, I.
A neuropsychological theory of hippocampal function: Procrustrean treatment of inconvenient data.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 326.
Working memory, interference, and inhibition.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 327.
Ellen, P.
Limitations of unitary theories of hippocampal
functions.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 328.
Gambarian, L.S.
The hippocampus, behavioral optimization, and working memory.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 329.
Halgren, E.
The human amnesic syndrome and homologies in cross-species hippocampal
function.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 330.
Hirsh, R.
Working memory redefined in terms of organizational processes.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 332.
Honig, W.K.
Spatial aspects of working memory.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 332.
Horel, J.A.
The hunting of the engram.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 333.
Isaacson, R.L. & Bohus,
B.
Multiple memories?
BBS 1979 2 (3): 334.
Jarrad, L.E.
On the role of the hippocampus in memory: information processing versus memory
system.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 334.
Kimble, D.P.
Some working notes on working memory.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 335.
Livesey, P.J.
The hippocampus: a system for coping with environmental variability.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 336.
Mahut, H.
Nonunitary function of the hippocampus in the monkey.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 337.
Morris, R.G.M.
Absolute capacity and the functional implications of spatial and working
memory.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 338.
Nadel, L.
Working memory won’t work.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 338.
Nonneman, A.J.
Hippocampus, maps, and memory: toward a rapprochement.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 339.
O’Keefe, J.
Hippocampal function: does the working memory hypothesis
work? Should we retire the cognitive map theory?
BBS 1979 2 (3): 339.
Oscar-Berman, M.
Bait in arms: what happens when the wind blows?
BBS 1979 2 (3): 343.
Rawlins, J.N.P.
Advancing memorial theories of hippocampal function.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 344.
Sinnamon, H.M.
Recent reward value of places.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 345.
Squire, L.R.,
Hippocampal lesions: reconciling the findings in
rodents and man.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 345.
Stein, D.G.
The ghost in the machine is still there.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 346.
Thompson, R.F., Hoehler,
F.K.
Hippocampal activity as a temporal template for
learned behavior.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 348.
Walker, J.A.
Support for a memory – not spatial – deficit after hippocampal
system damage.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 348.
Winocur, G.
A comment on hippocampal function in working and
reference memory systems.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 349.
Woodruff, M.L.
Hippocampal function in learned and unlearned
behaviors.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 350.
Zimmer, J.
Lesion size in hippocampal studies.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 351.
Zornetzer, S.F., Abraham, W.C.
The working-memory/reference-memory theory of hippocampal
function: darts and laurels.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 351.
AUTHOR’S RESPONSE
Olton, D.S., Becker, J.T., Handelmann, G.E.
A re-examination of the role of hippocampus in working memory.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 352.
TARGET ARTICLE
Parker, S.T., Gibson, K.R.
A developmental model for the evolution of language and intelligence in early
hominids.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 367.
OPEN PEER COMMENTARY
Brainerd, D.J.
Recapitulationism, Piaget, and the evolution of
intelligence: déjà vu
BBS 1979 2 (3): 381.
Chevalier-Skolnikoff,
S.
The gestural abilities of apes.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 382.
Dingwall, W.O.
Reconstruction of the Parker/Gibson “model” for the evolution of intelligence.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 383.
Ettlinger, G.
Does development tell us about evolution?
BBS 1979 2 (3): 384.
Fishbein, H.D.
An evolutionary perspective of the family.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 384.
Gould, S.J.
Panselectionist pitfalls in Parker & Gibson’s
model for the evolution of intelligence.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 385.
Gruber, H.E.
Protocultural factors in a constructionist approach
to intellectual evolution of language.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 386.
Hewes, G.W.
Some complexities in the evolution of language.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 387.
Isaac, G.L.
Evolutionary hypotheses.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 388.
Ivanov, V.V.
On the development of sign systems in primates.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 388.
Jolly, A.
Feeding versus social factors in cognitive evolution: can’t we have it both
ways?
BBS 1979 2 (3): 389.
Kitahara-Frisch, J.
The evolution of intelligence: making assumptions explicit and hypotheses
testable.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 390.
Konner, M.
Origins of language: a proposed moratorium.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 391.
Lamendella, J.T.
Assumptions about hominid “intelligence” and “language.”
BBS 1979 2 (3): 391.
Lurçat, L.
Graphic skills, posture, and the evolution of intelligence.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 392.
McGrew, W.C.
Habitat and the adaptiveness of primate intelligence.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 393.
Macnamara, J.
Doubts about the form of development.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 393.
Marshack, A.
Data for a theory of language origins.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 394.
Savage-Rumbaugh,
S., Rumbaugh, D.M., Boysen,
S.
Chimpanzees and protolanguage.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 396.
Smith, E.O.
An alternative model for language acquisition.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 397.
Ontogeny does not always recapitulate phylogeny.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 397.
Wind, J.
The evolution of intelligence: rehabilitation of recapitulation?
BBS 1979 2 (3): 398.
AUTHORS’ RESPONSE
Parker, S.T., Gibson, K.R.
How the child got his stages.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 399.
TARGET ARTICLE
Dismukes, R.K.
New concepts of molecular communication among neurons.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 409.
OPEN PEER COMMENTARY
Arch, S.
Terminology, modes of communication, and a command neurohormone.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 416.
Arluison, M.
The problem of nonsynaptic transmission in the neostriatum.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 416.
Barker, J.L.
Intercellular communication in the CNS.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 417.
Boulton, A.A.
The trace amines: neurohumors (cytosolic,
pre- and/or postsynaptic, secondary, indirect)?
BBS 1979 2 (3): 418.
Branton, W.D., Mayeri, E.
Nonsynaptic interactions in Aplysia and their relation to
vertebrate systems.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 419.
Brown, D.A.
Neuromodulators.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 419.
Bullock, T.H.
Communication among neurons includes new permutations of molecular, electrical,
and mechanical factors.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 419.
Butcher, L.L.
What’s in a name? A neuromodulator by any other name
would function just as well.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 420.
Chute, D.L.
Do new concepts of molecular communication rejuvenate old concepts of
behavioral “states” in learning and memory?
BBS 1979 2 (3): 420.
Coscinca, D.V.
No real alternative to existing definitions of neuronal communication.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 421.
Dreifuss, J.J., Harris, M.C.
Hypothalamic neurohumors as neurohormones
and neurotransmitters.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 421.
Dunn, A.J.
Molecular signals released by neurons.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 422.
Elliott, G.R., Barchas,
J.D.
Neuroregulators: neurotransmitters and neuromodulators.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 423.
Evans, P.D.
Modulatory actions of an identified octopaminergic neurone at the
locust neuromuscular junction.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 424.
Florey, E.
Modulation of neuronal function – a not so new concept.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 424.
Freedman, R.
Electrophysiology is not sufficient to determine neuromodulatory
function.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 425.
Hatton, G.I.
Neuronal communication: don’t forget the glia!
BBS 1979 2 (3): 426.
Hoyle, G.
Classification of communications between neurons.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 427.
Ito, M.
What is the primary contribution of the proposed types of communication to
neuronal networks?
BBS 1979 2 (3): 429.
Iversen, L.L.
Co-transmitters, modulation and the peripheral nervous system.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 430.
Kupferman,
Thank goodness we do not need a definition of modulation.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 430.
Lembeck, F.
Defining neuromodulation.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 430.
Libet, B.
Neuronal communication and synaptic modulation: experimental evidence vs.
conceptual categories.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 431.
Ochs, S.
Aspects of communication related to axoplasmic
transport.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 433.
Osborne, N.N.
Axonal varicosities, variable thresholds, and Dale’s Principle.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 433.
Palay, S.L.
Modes of interneuronal communication.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 434.
Phillis, J.W.
Neurotransmitters versus neuromodulators.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 434.
Ryall, R.W.
What is a synapse?
BBS 1979 2 (3): 435.
Smith, B.H.
Polarity and modality of neuronal information transfer.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 436.
Trömböl, T.
Modulation and neurotransmitters.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 436.
Traczyk, W.Z.
Neurohypophyseal hormone release.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 437.
Truman, J.W.
Hormones as modulators of neuronal activity.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 437.
Weight, F.F.
Communication at synapses.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 438.
Restricted extracellular pathways for modlecular communication?
BBS 1979 2 (3): 439.
Woodward,
D.J., Moises, H.C., Waterhouse, B.D.
Re-evaulation of norepinephrine
function: a potential neuromodulatory role?
BBS 1979 2 (3): 440.
York, D.H.
A note of caution in neurohumor nomenclature.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 440.
AUTHOR’S RESPONSE
Dismukes, R.K.
Discussing new neurocommunication concepts:
complements, counterdefinitions and counterexamples.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 441.
TARGET ARTICLE
Arbib, M.A., Caplan, D.
Neurolinguists must be computational.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 449.
OPEN PEER COMMENTARY
Blumstein, S.E.
Phrenology, “boxology,” and neurology.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 460.
Buckingham, H.W., Jr.
Must neurolinguists be computational?
BBS 1979 2 (3): 461.
Cohen, G.
Are computational models like HEARSAY psychologically valid?
BBS 1979 2 (3): 462.
Frazier, L.
Constraining models in neurolinguists.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 464.
Freemon, F.R.
Computers are dumb.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 464.
Computational neurolinguistics: promises, promises.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 464.
Garrett, M., Zurif,
E.
Neurolinguistics must be more experimental before it
can be effectively computational.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 465.
Goodglass, H.
Is model building advancing neurolinguistics?
BBS 1979 2 (3): 466.
Greenblatt, S.H.
Is neurolinguistics ready for reductionism?
BBS 1979 2 (3): 467.
Halwes, T.
An embarrassment of riches in nascent neurolinguistics.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 467.
What is computational neurolinguistics anyway?
BBS 1979 2 (3): 468.
Kean, M.-L., Smith, G.E.
Issues in core linguistic processing.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 469.
Langendoen, D.T.
Linguistics must be computational too.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 470.
Locke, S.
Localizational, representation, and re-representation
in neurolinguistics.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 471.
The sense of computation.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 472.
Reiss, R.F.
A neurolinguistic computation: how must “must” be
understood?
BBS 1979 2 (3): 473.
Richards, B.
Neurolinguistics: grammar and computation.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 473.
Schank, R.C.
Process models and language.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 474.
Schnitzer, M.L.
Computational neurolinguistics and the
competence-performance distinction.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 475.
ONE AUTHOR’S RESPONSE
Arbib, M.A.
Cooperative computation as a concept for brain theory.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 475.
CONTINUING
COMMENTARY on Pylyshyn,
Z.W.
Computational
models and empirical constraints.
BBS 1978 1: 93-127.
Otto,
H.R.
Models in cognitive psychology: contrast and constraint.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 485.
Pask, G.
A broader view of psychology and of computation.
BBS 1979 2 (3): 486.
Volume 02 – Issue
TARGET ARTICLE
O’Keefe, J., Nadel,
L.
Précis: The hippocampus as a
cognitive map.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 487.
OPEN PEER COMMENTARY
Amsel, A.
Hippocampus, memory and movement.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 494.
Berger, T.W.
Selective activation of hippocampal neurons.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 495.
Behavioral analysis of the hippocampal syndrome.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 496.
Bliss, T.V.P.
O’Keefe & Nadel’s three-stage model for hippocampal representation of space.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 496.
Bureš, J.
The “neuroethological revolution” in unit studies.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 497.
The hippocampus and its apparent migration to the parietal love.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 498.
On the nature of cognitive maps.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 499.
Ellen, P.
The hippocampus and operant behavior.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 500.
Gray, J.A.
Spatial mapping only a special case of hippocampal
function.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 501.
Greene, E.
On panspatial theories of brain and behavior.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 503.
Hécaen, H.
Cortical areas involved in spatial function.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 503.
Hirsh, R., Krajden,
J.
Hippocamapl function: logic, logic, and more logic.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 504.
Holmes, J.E.
Waves and cells, maps and memories, space and time.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 505.
Horel, J.A.
Lost maps and memories.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 506.
Isaacson, R.L.
Hippocampal lesions and intermittent reinforcement.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 507.
Jackendoff, R.
What is a cognitive maps?
BBS 1979 2 (4): 507.
Jarrard, L.E.
Considerations in evaluating the cognitive mapping theory of hippocampal function.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 509.
Kesner, R.P.
Hippocampus and memory.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 509.
The hippocampus and informational salience.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 510.
Nonneman, A.J.
Time: a forth dimension for the hippocampal cognitive
map.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 511.
Olton, D.S.
Inner and outer space: the neuroanatomical bases of
spatially organized behavior.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 511.
Pinker, S.
Mental maps, mental images, and intuitions about space.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 513.
Ranck, J.B. Jr.
On O’Keefe, Nadel, space and brain.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 513.
Squire, L.R.
The hippocampus, space, and human amnesia.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 514.
Swanson, L.W.
The anatomy of a cognitive map.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 515.
Thomas, G.J.
Cognition, memory, and the hippocampus.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 515.
Thompson, R.F., Solomon, P.R., Weisz, D.J.
“Model systems” versus “neuroethological” approach to
hippocampal function.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 517.
Ursin, H.
Anatomical units in psychology.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 518.
Vanderwolf, C.H.
Is hippocampal rhythmical slow activity specifically
related to movement through space?
BBS 1979 2 (4): 518.
Vonéche, J.J.
Cognitive maps: dimensionality and development.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 519.
AUTHORS’ RESPONSE
O’Keefe, J., Nadel,
L.
The cognitive map as a hippocampus.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 520.
TARGET ARTICLE
Kosslyn, S.M., Pinker, S., Smith, G.E., Shwartz, S.P.
On the demystification of mental imagery.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 535.
OPEN PEER COMMENTARY
Abelson, R.P.
Imagining the purpose of imagery.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 548.
Antrobus, J.S.
Matters of definition in the demystification of mental imagery
BBS 1979 2 (4): 549.
Bridgeman, B.
Neurologizing mental imagery: the physiological
optics of the mind’s eye.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 550.
Cooper,
Modeling the mind’s eye.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 550.
de Vega, M.
On interpretative processes in imagery.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 551.
Feldman, J.A.
So many models – So little time.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 551.
Hannay, A.
Images, memory, and perception.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 552.
Hayes-Roth, F.
Understanding mental imagery: interpretive metaphors versus explanatory models.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 553.
Heil, J.
Mental imagery and mystification.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 554.
Hinton, G.
Imagery without arrays.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 555.
Hunter, I.M.L.
Mental visualization in nonlaboratory situations.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 556.
Johnson-Laird, P.N.
The “thoughtless imagery” controversy.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 557.
Keenan, J.M., Olson, R.K.
The imagery debate: a controversy over terms and cognitive styles.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 558.
Luce, R.D.
A conceptual, an experimental, and a modeling question about imagery research.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 559.
Moran, T.P.
The imprecision of mental imagery.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 560.
Neisser, U.
Images, models, and human nature.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 561.
Paivio, A.
Copmputational versus operational approaches to
imagery.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 561.
Pylyshyn, Z.
Imagery theory: not mysterious – just wrong.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 561.
Richardson, A.
Conscious and nonconscious imagery.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 563.
Richman, C.L., Mitchell, D.B., Resnick, J.S.
The demands of mental travel: demand characteristics of mental imagery
experiments.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 564.
Sankowski, E.
On demystifiying the mental for psychology.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 565.
Schank, R.C.
AI, imagery, and theories.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 566.
Shanon, B.
The image-like and the quasi-verbal.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 566.
Sheehan, P.W.
Metaphor versus reality in the understanding of imagery: the path from function
to structure.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 567.
Smythe, W.E., Kolers, P.A.
On spatial symbols.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 568.
AUTHORS’ RESPONSE
Kosslyn, S.M., Pinker, S., Smith, G.E., Shwartz, S.P.
The how, what and why of mental imagery.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 570.
TARGET ARTICLE
Haber, R.N.
Twenty years of haunting eidetic imagery: where’s the ghost?
BBS 1979 2 (4): 583.
OPEN PEER COMMENTARY
Ahsen, A.
Eidetics: redefinition of the ghost and its clinical
application.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 594.
Ashton, R.
Eidetic imagery and stimulus control.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 596.
Barber, T.X.
Eidetic imagery and the ability to hallucinate at will.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 596.
Blanc-Garin, J.
Is eidetic imagery still eidos?
BBS 1979 2 (4): 597.
Bridgeman, B.
Toward a neurological theory of eidetic imagery.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 598.
Bugelski, B.R.
Eidetic possession: is exorcism necessary?
BBS 1979 2 (4): 598.
Breeding cognitive strategies.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 599.
Doob, L.W.
The cross-cultural approach to eidetic images.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 600.
Ericsson, K.A., Chase, W.G., Simon, H.A.
Phenomenological reports as data.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 601.
Furst, C.J.
The inside and outside of eidetic imagery.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 602.
Hannay, A.
Eidetic imagery: theories and ghosts.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 603.
Heinerth, K.
Autochthonous and phenomenal eidetic capacity.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 604.
Holding, D.H.
Does being “eidetic” matter?
BBS 1979 2 (4): 604.
Hunter, I.M.L.
The easel procedure and eidetic characteristics.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 605.
Jaynes, J.
Palaeolithic cave paintings as eidetic images.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 605.
Julesz, B.
Random-dot correlogram test for eidetic imagery.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 607.
Lieblich,
Eidetic imagery: do not use ghosts to hunt ghosts of the same species.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 608.
Lindauer, M.S.
Exorcising the ghosts in the study of eidetic imagery.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 609.
Marks, D.
Eidetic imagery: Haber’s ghost and Hatakeyama’s ghoul.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 610.
Merritt, J.O.
None in a million: results of mass screening for eidetic ability using
objective tests published in newspapers and magazines.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 612.
Neisser, U.
Tracing eidetic imagery.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 612.
Eidetic imagery, occipital EEG activity, and palinopsia.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 613.
Roberts-Gray, C.
The visualization continuum.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 614.
Roodin, P.A., Giray, E.F.
Eidetic imagery is not a ghost.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 614.
Sheehan, P.W.
Eidetic imagery: continuing to be an enigmatic phenomenon.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 615.
Siegel, M.H.
Eidetic imagery: where’s the ghost?
BBS 1979 2 (4): 616.
Siipola, E.M.
The search for neurological correlates of eidetic imagery.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 617.
Smith, G.
The need for strict differentiation between eidetics
and noneidetics.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 617.
Wallace, B.
Eidetic imagery need not haunt us: a supportive example for the use of
phenomenological reports.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 618.
AUTHOR’S RESPONSE
Haber, R.N.
Eidetic imagery still lives, thanks to twenty-nine exorcists.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 619.
CONTINUING
COMMENTARY on Bindra,
D.
How
adaptive behavior is produced: a perceptual-motivational alternative to
response-reinforcement.
BBS 1978
Asratyan, E.A.
Pavlov’s concept of reinforcement.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 631.
AUTHOR’S RESPONSE
Bindra, D.B.
A nonPavlovian view of Pavlovian
conditioning.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 632.
CONTINUING
COMMENTARY on Haugeland,
J.
The
nature and plausibility of Cognitivism.
BBS 1978 1: 215-260.
Royce, J.R.
The conceptual range of “cognitivism”
BBS 1979 2 (4): 634.
AUTHOR’S RESPONSE
Haugeland, J.
[Author’s response]
BBS 1979 2 (4): 634.
CONTINUING
COMMENTARY on 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: 417-467
Baerends, G.P.
Programmed development.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 635.
Bindra, D.
What next? A perceptual-motivational approach to attachment.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 636.
Bornstein, M.H.
Two questions for a general theory of infantile attachment.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 636.
Bowlby, J.
The Bowlby-Ainsworth attachment theory.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 637.
Greenberg, G.
Approach/withdrawl theory and infantile social
bonding.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 638.
Kramer, D.A.,
Ethology: the natural model.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 639.
Lewis, M.
Cognitive factors in attachment.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 640.
The ultimate causation of some infant attachment phenomena: further answers, further
phenomena, and further questions.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 640.
Weinraub, M.
Separation distress in human infants.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 643.
AUTHORS’ RESPONSE
Rajecki, D.W., Lamb, M.E.
Infant attachment: some final thoughts about theory and method.
BBS 1979 2 (4): 644.