Volume 08 – Issue
TARGET ARTICLE
Fodor, J.A.
Précis of The modularity of mind.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 1-5.
OPEN PEER COMMENTARY
Caplan, D.
A neo-Cartesian alternative.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 6-7.
Carroll, J.B.
On Spearman’s “problem of correlation.”
BBS 1985 8 (1): 7.
Fodor, J.D.
Module or muddle?
BBS 1985 8 (1): 7-9.
Forster, K.I.
Special purpose computation: All is
not one.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 9-11.
Gallistel, C.R., Cheng, K.
A modular sense of place?
BBS 1985 8 (1): 11-12.
The centrality of modules.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 12-14.
Glucksberg, S.
Modularity: Contextual interactions
and the tractability of nonmodular systems.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 14-15.
Glymour, C.
Fodor’s holism.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 15-16.
Gross, C.G.
On Gall’s reputation and some recent “new phrenology.”
BBS 1985 8 (1): 16-18.
Grossberg, S.
Cognitive self-organization and neural modularity.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 18-19.
Hunt, E.
Evidence for and against modularity.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 19-20.
Jusczyk, P.W., Cohen, A.
What constitutes a module?
BBS 1985 8 (1): 20-21.
Kagan, J.
The mind as a Necker Cube.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 21-22.
The modularity of behavior.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 22-23.
Kinsbourne, M.
Parallel processing explains modular informational encapsulation.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 23.
Combe’s crucible and the music of the modules.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 23-24.
Mattingly, I.G., Liberman,
A.M.
Verticality unparalleled.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 24-26.
Morton, J.
Too little and latent.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 26-27.
Rey, G.
Quinity, isotropy, and Wagnerian rapture.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 27-28.
Robinson, D.N.
Faculties, modules, and computers.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 28-29.
Scarr, S.
A rapproachement of biology, psychology, and philosophy.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 29.
Schank, R., Hunter, L.
Encapsulation and expectation.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 29-30.
Schwartz, B.
Organic insight into mental organs.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 30-31.
Seidenberg, M.S.
Lexicon as module.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 31-32.
Sternberg, R.J.
Controlled versus automatic processing.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 32-33.
AUTHOR’S RESPONSE
Fodor, J.A.
Reply module.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 32-39.
TARGET ARTICLE
Rachlin, H.
Pain and behavior.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 43-53.
OPEN PEER COMMENTARY
Ainslie, G.
Behavior is what can be reinforced.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 53-54.
Atkinson, J.H., Kremer,
E.F.
Behavioral definition of pain: Necessary
but not sufficient.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 54-55.
Bernstein, D.J.
Internal events as behavior, not causes.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 55-56.
Pain is three-dimensional, inner, and occurrent.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 56-57.
Clark, W.C.
Heuristically, “pain” is mainly in the brain.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 57-58.
Fordyce, W.E.
On Rachlin “Pain and Behavior”: A
lightening of the burden.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 58-59.
Foss, J.
Radical behaviorism is a dead end.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 59.
Genest, M.
On kicking the behaviorist: or, Pain
is distressing.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 59-60.
Graham, G.
Pain’s composite wheel of woe.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 60-61.
Harman, G.
Is pain overt behavior?
BBS 1985 8 (1): 61.
Jaynes, J.
Sensory pain and conscious pain.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 61-63.
Kitcher, P.
Chronic sensory pain.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 63-64.
Lacey, H.
Pain behavior: How to define the
operant.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 64-65.
Loeser, J.D.
Against dichotomizing pain.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 66.
Logue, A.W.
Functional behaviorism: Where the
pain is does not matter.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 66.
Matson, W.I.
One pain is enough.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 67.
Melzack, R.
Pain and parallel processing.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 67-68.
Merskey, H.
A mentalistic view of “Pain and Behavior.”
BBS 1985 8 (1): 68.
Miles, T.R.
Behavior, cognition, and physiology: Three
horses or two?
BBS 1985 8 (1): 68-69.
Pepeu, G.
Is there always a neurochemical link between pain and behavior?
BBS 1985 8 (1): 69-70.
Place, U.T.
Semicovert behavior and the concept of pain.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 70-71.
Shaver, K.G., Herrman,
J.J.
Pain without behavior: Inhibition of
reactions to sensation.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 71.
Shimp, C.P.
Molar behaviorism, positivism, and pain.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 71-72.
Turk, D.C., Salovey, P.
The reign of pain falls mainly in the brain.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 72-73.
Wall, P.D.
No “pain and behavior” but pain in behavior.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 73.
AUTHOR’S RESPONSE
Rachlin, H.
Ghostbusting.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 73-80.
TARGET ARTICLE
Baker, M.C., Cunningham,
M.A.
The biology of bird-song dialects.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 85-100.
OPEN PEER COMMENTARY
Andrew, R.J.
Questions about the evolution of bird song.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 100.
Baptista, L.F.
Bird-song dialects: Social
adaptation or assortative mating?
BBS 1985 8 (1): 100-101.
Brenowitz, E.A.
Bird-song dialects: Filling in the
gaps.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 101-102.
Chambers, J.K.
Social adaptivity in human and songbird dialects.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 102-104.
Fasold, R.W.
Bird-song dialects and human-language dialects: A common basis?
BBS 1985 8 (1): 104.
Gottlieb, G.
The need to map auditory perception onto vocal production in bird song.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 104-105.
Adaptation and the cause and effect of bird-song dialects.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 105-106.
Grimshaw, A.S.
Human and avian “dialects”: A
cautionary note.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 106-107.
Hill, J.H.
Human dialect and language differentiation.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 107-108.
Jenkins, P.F.
Song learning, competition, and dialects.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 108.
Kroodsma, D.E.
Limited dispersal between dialects?: Hypotheses
testable in the
field.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 108-109.
Lemon, R.E.
Functional-studies in bird song.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 109-110.
Mcgregor, P.K.
Song dialects: What has to be
explained, and with what?
BBS 1985 8 (1): 110.
Moulton, W.G.
Bird-song dialects and human-language dialects.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 110-111.
Mundinger, P.C.
Linguistic applications to avian dialect biology.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 111-112.
Nottebohm, F.
Sound transmission, signal salience, and song dialects.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 112-113.
Petrinovich, L.
An unbalanced survey of bird-song research:
Smoke gets in your
eyes.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 113-114.
Shields, W.M.
Avian song dialects: Genetic
adaptation and deceptive mimicry?
BBS 1985 8 (1): 114-115.
Slater, P.J.B.
White rats and general theories.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 115-116.
Dialects in primates?
BBS 1985 8 (1): 116-117.
Waser, P.M.
Are dialects epiphenomena?
BBS 1985 8 (1): 117.
West, M.J., King, A.P.
Studying dialects in songbirds: Finding
the common ground.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 117-118.
Zink, R.M.
Genetic population structure and song dialects in birds.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 118-119.
AUTHORS’ RESPONSE
Baker, M.C., Cunningham,
M.A.
Comparative dialectology.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 119-128.
TARGET ARTICLE
Nashner, L.M., Mccollum,
G.
The organization of human postural movements: A formal basis and experimental synthesis.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 135-150.
OPEN PEER COMMENTARY
Boylls, C.C. Jr.
Postural control analysis: Adopting
a stance.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 150-151.
Carello, C., Turvey, M.T.,
Kugler, P.N.
The informational support for upright stance.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 151-152.
Chapple, W.D.
Position-space and motor
synergies: A comparative perspective.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 152-153.
Delcomyn, F.
The control of sets of muscles: A
general principle?
BBS 1985 8 (1): 153.
Goldberg, G., Kwan, H.C.
Bernsteinian physiology and computational modeling: East meets
West at the “boundary.”
BBS 1985 8 (1): 153-154.
Greene, P.H.
Task-analysis of a style of behavior.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 154.
Grossberg, S.
The role of learning in sensory-motor control.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 155-157.
Gurfinkel, V.S., Popov,
K.E.
Constraints and some capabilities of the postural control system.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 157.
Hollerbach, J.M.
Dynamics in posture.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 157-158.
Jaeger, R.
Standing posture: Qualitative versus
quantitative perspectives.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 158.
Should dynamic and passive properties be considered in analyses
of human postural control?
BBS 1985 8 (1): 158-159.
Kuipers, B.
Is this a theory of competence or performance?
BBS 1985 8 (1): 159.
Peterson, B.W.
Suggestions for extending the domain of the Nashner-McCollum theory.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 160.
Roberts, T.D.M.
Torque and sway.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 160-161.
Saltzman, E., Kelso,
J.A.S.
Synergies: Stabilities,
instabilities, and modes.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 161-163.
Schmidt, R.A.
Identifying units of motor behavior.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 163-164.
Stelmach, G.E.,
Worringham, C.
Anatomical asymmetry and boundary crossing in postural control.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 164-165.
Thelen, E.
Simplifying assumptions: Can
development help?
BBS 1985 8 (1): 165-166.
Thom, R.
Less cybernetics, more geometry . . .
BBS 1985 8 (1): 166-167.
Zajec, F.E.
Postural control: A further look at
neural control strategies set by boundaries in space.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 167.
AUTHORS’ RESPONSE
Nashner, L.M., Mccollum, G.
Elements of a sensorimotor theory compatible with experiments.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 167-169.
CONTINUING COMMENTARY on Wise, R.A.
Neuroleptics and operant
behavrior: The anhedonia hypothesis.
BBS
1982
Ahlenius, S.
A functional consideration of anatomical connections between the basal ganglia
and the thalamus suggests that antipsychotic drugs inhibit the initiation of
movement.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 173-174.
Crow, T.J.
The anhedonic hypothesis for neuroleptics and operant behavior.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 174.
Fouriezos, G.
Sedation-induced jumping?
BBS 1985 8 (1): 174-175.
Greenshaw, A.J.
Dopamine and circling, or décalag?
BBS 1985 8 (1): 175-176.
Kornetsky, C.
Neuroleptic drugs may attenuate pleasure in the operant chamber, but in the
schizophrenic’s head they may simply reduce motivational arousal.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 176-177.
Kostarczyk, E.
The role of arousal in hedonic evaluations.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 177-178.
Schallert, T.
Brain-stimulation and catecholaminergic drugs: A focus on self-selected response durations versus interresponse
intervals.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 178.
AUTHOR’S RESPONSE
Wise, R.A.
The anhedonia hypothesis: Mark III.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 178-184.
CONTINUING COMMENTARY on Smith, P.K.
Does play matter?
Functional and evolutionary aspects of animal and human play.
BBS
1982 5: 139-184.
Moran, G.
Behavioral description and its impact on functional inference.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 186-187.
AUTHOR’S RESPONSE
Smith, P.K.
Functional hypotheses and their impact on behavioral description.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 187-188.
CONTINUING COMMENTARY on Haber, R.N.
The impending demise of
the icon: A critique of the concept of iconic storage in visual information
processing.
BBS
1983 6: 1-54.
Mustillo, P.
Iconic memory: Problems of definition,
assessment, and functional role.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 189-190.
AUTHOR’S RESPONSE
Haber, R.N.
The icon as persistence of a brief stimulus—unnecessary and silly.
BBS 1985 8 (1): 190-192.
Volume 08 – Issue
TARGET ARTICLE
Jensen, A.R.
The nature of the black-white difference on various psychometric tests: Spearman’s hypothesis.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 193-219.
OPEN PEER COMMENTARY
Bardis, P.D.
Jensen, Spearman’s g, and Ghazali’s
dates: A commentary on interracial
peace.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 219-220.
Baron, J.
Reliability and g.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 220-221.
Borkowski, J.G., Maxwell,
S.E.
Looking for Mr. Good-g: General intelligence and processing
speed.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 221-222.
Brand, C.
Jensen’s compromise with componentialism.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 222-223.
Callaway, E.
Event-related potentials and the biology of human information processing.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 223-224.
Carlson, J.S.
The issue of g: Some relevant questions.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 224-225.
Carr, T.H., McDonald, J.L.
Different approaches to individual differences.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 225-227.
Cattell, R.B.
Intelligence and g: An imaginative treatment of
unimaginative data.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 227-228.
Das, J.P.
Interpretations for a class on minority assessment.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 228.
Eysenck, H.J.
The nature of cognitive differences between blacks and whites.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 229.
Gordon, R.A.
The black-white factor is g.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 229-231.
Gustafsson, J.-E.
Measuring and interpreting g.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 231-232.
Johnson, R.C., Nagoshi,
C.T.
Do we know enough about g to be able
to speak of black-white differences?
BBS 1985 8 (2): 232-233.
Jones, L.V.
Golly g: Interpreting Spearman’s general factor.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 233.
Kline, P.
The nature of psychometric g.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 234.
Macphail, E.M.
Comparative studies of animal intelligence:
Is Spearman’s g really
BBS 1985 8 (2): 234-235.
Nettelbeck, T.
What reaction times time.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 235.
Nichols, R.C.
Intelligence and its biological substrate.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 236.
Poortinga, Y.H.
Empirical evidence of bias in choice reaction time experiments.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 236-237.
Posner, M.I.
Chronometric measures of g.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 237-238.
Rabbitt, P.M.A.
Oh g Dr. Jensen! or, g-ing up cognitive psychology.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 238-239
Rushton, J.P.
Differential K theory and group differences in g.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 239-240.
Schafer, E.W.P.
Neural adaptability: A biological
determinant of g factor intelligence.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 240-241.
Schönemann, P.H.
On artificial intelligence.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 241-242.
Stanovich, K.E.
The black-white differences are real: Where
do we go from here?
BBS 1985 8 (2): 242-243.
Sternberg, R.J.
The black-white differences and spearman g: Old wine in new bottles that still
doesn’t taste good.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 244.
Interpretation of black-white differences in g.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 244-245.
Whimbey, A.
Focusing on trainable g.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 245-246.
Wilson, J.R.
Jensen support for Spearman’s hypothesis is support for a circular argument.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 246.
AUTHOR’S RESPONSE
Jensen, A.R.
The black-white difference in g: A phenomenon in search of a theory.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 246-258.
TARGET ARTICLE
Feldman, J.A.
Four frames suffice: A provisional
model of vision and space.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 265-288.
OPEN PEER COMMENTARY
Andersen, R.A.
Head-centered coordinates and the stable feature frame.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 289.
Browse, R.A.,
Could three frames suffice?
BBS 1985 8 (2): 290.
Dodwell, P.C.
Theories of perception as experimental epistemology.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 291-292.
Glassman, R.B.
Linking features in dimensions of mind and brain.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 293.
Grossberg, S.
Four frames do not suffice.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 294.
Haber, R.N.
Three frames suffice: Drop the
retinotopic frame.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 295.
Hinton, G.E.
Three frames suffice.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 296.
Kosslyn, S.M.,
Connectionism: There’s something to
it.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 297.
Kuipers, B.
The cognitive map overlaps the environmental frame, the situation, and the
real-world formulary.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 298.
Oatley, K.
Reliable computation in parallel networks.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 299.
On computer-science, visual science, and the physiological utility of models.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 300.
Zucker, S.W.
Does connectionism suffice?
BBS 1985 8 (2): 301.
AUTHOR’S RESPONSE
Feldman, J.A.
Tunnel vision will not suffice.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 302.
TARGET ARTICLE
Fantino, E., Abarca, N.
Choice, optimal foraging, and the delay-reduction hypothesis.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 315-329.
OPEN PEER COMMENTARY
Barnard, C.J.
Skinner box ecology: Rules to forage
by.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 330.
Bovet, P.
The adaptive fitness of randomness in choice and foraging behavior.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 331.
Branch, M.N.
Preference for a hypothesis: Is the
case “closed”?
BBS 1985 8 (2): 332.
Brown, B.L.
Pavlovian factors in choice behavior.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 332-333.
Caraco, T.
Encounter processes, prey densities, and efficient diets.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 333.
Castonguay, T.W.
Studies of food choice: The nutritional
challenge.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 334.
Davison, M.
Foraging for a science of behavior.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 335.
Dinsmoor, J.A.
The integrative power of the CS-US interval in other contexts.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 336.
Gass, C.L.
Reaching for an integrated science of behavior.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 337.
Green, R.F.
An interdisciplinary approach to foraging behavior.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 338.
Hanson, J.
On the nature of support for optimal foraging theory.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 338.
Houston, A.I.
Choice and preference—you can’t always want what you get.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 339.
Kacelnik, A., Krebs, J.R.
Rate of reinforcement matters in optimal foraging theory.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 340.
Delay reduction: A field guide for
optimal foragers?
BBS 1985 8 (2): 341.
Kruse, J.M.
Alternative approaches to the psychology of foraging.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 342.
Lea, S.E.G.
Optimality: Sequences, variability,
learning.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 343.
Mcnair, J.N.
Optimal foraging for operant conditioners.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 343-344.
Mellgren, R.L.
Outcome and mechanism in foraging.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 344.
Peden, B.F.
Foraging and feeding in operant simulations.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 345.
Rowland, N.
Of rats and men.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 346.
Sato, M., Sakagami, T.
Is simulated foraging similar to natural foraging?
BBS 1985 8 (2): 346.
Shettleworth, S.J.
Questions about foraging.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 347.
Snyderman, M.
Levels of explanation.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 348.
Sokolowski, M.B.
Genetic aspects to differences in foraging behavior.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 348-349.
Wilkie, D.M.
The validation problem.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 349.
AUTHORS’ RESPONSE
Fantino, E., Abarca, N.
The delay-reduction hypothesis: A
choice solution.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 350-352.
CONTINUING COMMENTARY on Bradshaw, J.L.,
The nature of hemispheric
specialization in man.
BBS
1981
Coltheart, M.
Right-hemisphere reading revisited.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 363-364.
Zaidel, E., Schweiger, A.
Right-hemisphere reading: A case of “déjà
lu.”
BBS 1985 8 (2): 365-366.
AUTHOR’S RESPONSE
Bradshaw, J.L.
Reading and the right hemisphere.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 367.
CONTINUING COMMENTARY on Anisman, H., Zacharko, R.M.
Depression: The
predisposing influence of stress.
BBS
1982 5:89-137.
Algarabel, S.
Learned helplessness, human depression, and perhaps endorphins?
BBS 1985 8 (2): 368.
Baenninger, R.
Neurochemistry and psychological “diseases.”
BBS 1985 8 (2): 369.
Friedhoff, A.J., Platt,
J.E.
Stress and depression: Definitional
problems.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 370.
Izard, C.E.
The role of emotions in a systems view of depression.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 371.
Lloyd, C., Swann, A.
Depression and adaptation to stress: Toward
a systems model.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 371.
Post, R.M.
Stress sensitization, kindling, and conditioning.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 372-373.
Steele, T.E.
Stress and depression: Anything new?
BBS 1985 8 (2): 373-374.
AUTHORS’ RESPONSE
Anisman, H., Zacharko,
R.M.
More stress.
BBS 1985 8 (2): 374.
Volume 08 – Issue
TARGET ARTICLE
Ader, R., Cohen, N.
CNS-Immune system interactions: Conditioning
phenomena.
BBS 1985 8 (3): 379-395.
OPEN PEER COMMENTARY
Anisman, H., Zacharko,
R.M.
Brain and the immune system: Multiple
sites of interaction.
BBS 1985 8 (3): 395-396.
Ballieux, R.E., Heijnen,
C.J.
The seven veils of immune conditioning.
BBS 1985 8 (3): 396-397.
Cunningham, A.J.
Conditioned immunosuppression: An
important but probably nonspecific phenomenon.
BBS 1985 8 (3): 397.
Dworkin, B.
More evidence for the role of learning in homeostasis.
BBS 1985 8 (3): 397-398.
Elkins, R.L.
Taste aversion proneness: A selective
breeding strategy for studies of immune system conditionability.
BBS 1985 8 (3): 398-399.
Engel, B.T.
Immune behavior.
BBS 1985 8 (3): 399-400.
Fox, B.H.
Disease is a stepchild in psychoneuroimmunology.
BBS 1985 8 (3): 400.
Friedman, S.B.
CNS-immune system interaction: A
psychosomatic model.
BBS 1985 8 (3): 400-401.
Glaser, R., Kiecolt-Glaser,
J.K.
“Relatively mild stress” depresses cellular immunity in healthy adults.
BBS 1985 8 (3): 401-402.
Green, L.
Pavlovian conditioned
responses: Some elusive results and an indeterminate explanation.
BBS
1985 8 (3): 402.
Hinson, R.E.
Conditioned immunosuppression and the adaptive function of Pavlovian
conditioning.
BBS 1985 8 (3): 403.
Kimmel, H.D.
Conditioning of immunosuppression in the treatment of transplant tissue
rejection.
BBS 1985 8 (3): 404.
Klosterhalfen, W.,
Klosterhalfen, S.
On demonstrating that conditioned immunomodulation is conditioned.
BBS 1985 8 (3): 404-405.
Krank, M.D.
Conditioning the immune-system: New
evidence for the modification of physiological responses by drug-associated
cues.
BBS 1985 8 (3): 405-406.
Melnechuk, T.
Progress toward a general theory of health.
BBS 1985 8 (3): 406-407.
Revusky, S.
Questions about conditioned immunosuppression and biological adaptation.
BBS 1985 8 (3): 407.
Riley, A.L.
The meaning of learning.
BBS 1985 8 (3): 407-408.
The condition of immunology.
BBS 1985 8 (3): 408.
Roszman, T.
Behavioral conditioning of immunomodulation.
BBS 1985 8 (3): 408-409.
Siegel, S., Scoles, M.T.
Psychoneuroimmunology, psychopharmacology, and synthetic physiology.
BBS 1985 8 (3): 409-410.
Smotherman, W.P.
Pituitary-adrenal system involvement in conditioned immune changes: Perhaps suppressions are playing a role.
BBS 1985 8 (3): 410.
Solomon, G.F.
The emerging field of psychoneuroimmunology.
BBS 1985 8 (3): 411.
Veldhuis, H.D., Dewied, D.
Is conditioned immunosuppression an adequate research strategy?
BBS 1985 8 (3): 411-412.
Weiss, J.M.
Conditioned immune-responses: How
are they mediated and how are they related to other classically conditioned
responses?
BBS 1985 8 (3): 412-413.
AUTHORS’ RESPONSE
Ader, R., Cohen, N.
The brain and the immune-system: Conditional
responses to commentator stimuli.
BBS 1985 8 (3): 413-421.
TARGET ARTICLE
Gualtieri, T., Hicks, R.E.
An immunoreactive theory of selective male affliction.
BBS 1985 8 (3): 427-441.
OPEN PEER COMMENTARY
Adinolfi, M.
Immunoselection and male diseases.
BBS 1985 8 (3): 441-442.
Beatty, W.W., Beatty,
P.A., Goodkin, D.E.
Testing the immunoreactive theory.
BBS 1985 8 (3): 442.
Benbow, C.P.
Intellectually gifted students also suffer from immune disorders.
BBS 1985 8 (3): 442.
Berglin, C.-G.
Male antigenicity and parity.
BBS 1985 8 (3): 442-443.
Bixler, R.H.
The sex ratio at conception: Male
biased or 100?
BBS 1985 8 (3): 443-444.
Boklage, C.E.
Undistributed middle term in the logic of Gualtieri and Hick’s immunoreactive
model.
BBS 1985 8 (3): 444-445.
Bukovsky, A., Presl, J.
Possible involvement of maternal alloreactivity in negative parity effects.
BBS 1985 8 (3): 445-446.
Costeff, H.
Is the H-Y antigen a malefactor?
BBS 1985 8 (3): 446-447.
Diamond, M.C.
A possible role of sex steroid hormones in determining immune deficiency
differences between the sexes.
BBS 1985 8 (3): 447-448.
Short and sweet: The classic male
life?
BBS 1985 8 (3): 448-449.
Gillberg, C.
The immunoreactive theory: One for
all?
BBS 1985 8 (3): 449-450.
Gorczynski, R.M.
Does maternal-fetal incompatibility lead to neurodevelopmental impairment?
BBS 1985 8 (3): 450-451.
Hoyenga, K.B.
Some implications of the immunoreactive theory for evolution and sex ratios.
BBS 1985 8 (3): 451-453.
James, W.H.
The alleged antecedent brother effect in sex ratio.
BBS 1985 8 (3): 453.
Hensen, A.R.
Immunoreactive theory and the genetics of mental ability.
BBS 1985 8 (3): 453-454.
Loke, Y.W.
A reproductive immunologist’s view on the role of H-Y antigen in
neurological disorders.
BBS 1985 8 (3): 454-455.
Mackey, W.C.
Selective immunoreaction as an adaptive trait.
BBS 1985 8 (3): 455-456.
Money, J.
Eve first, then Adam.
BBS 1985 8 (3): 456-457.
Ounsted, C.
The Y chromosome message.
BBS 1985 8 (3): 457.
Petersen, A.C., Hood, K.E.
Immunoreactive theory: A
conceptually narrow theory reflecting
androcentric bias.
BBS 1985 8 (3): 457-458.
Searleman, A.
Immunoreactive theory and pathological left-handedness.
BBS 1985 8 (3): 458-459.
Development rate is the major differentiator between the sexes.
BBS 1985 8 (3): 459-460.
Taylor, E., Rutter, M.
Sex-differences in neurodevelopmental and psychiatric disorders: One
explanation or many?
BBS 1985 8 (3): 460.
Possible pathogenic effects of maternal anti-RO (SS-A) autoantibody on the male
fetus.
BBS 1985 8 (3): 460-461.
AUTHORS’ RESPONSE
Gualtieri, T., Hicks, R.E.
The immunoreactive theory: What it
is, what it is not, what it
might be: Response.
BBS 1985 8 (3): 461-469.
TARGET ARTICLE
Rawlins, J.N.P.
Associations across time: The
hippocampus as a temporary memory store.
BBS 1985 8 (3): 479-497.
OPEN PEER COMMENTARY
Branch, M.N.
Another hippocampal theory.
BBS 1985 8 (3): 497-498.
Minding the general memory store: Further
consideration of the
role of the hippocampus in memory.
BBS 1985 8 (3): 498-499.
Dale, R.H.I.
The hippocampus as episodic encoder: Does
it play tag?
BBS 1985 8 (3): 499-500.
A physiological basis for hippocampal involvement in coding temporally
discontiguous events.
BBS 1985 8 (3): 500-501.
Gray, J.A.
Memory buffer and comparator can share the same circuitry.
BBS 1985 8 (3): 501.
Hughey, D.J.
Temporal discontiguity: Alternative
to, or component of, existing theories of hippocampal function.
BBS 1985 8 (3): 501-502.
James, D.T.D.
Does our behavioral methodology conceal the deficit caused by hippocampal
damage?
BBS 1985 8 (3): 502-503.
Jarrard, L.E.
On the hippocampus, time, and interference.
BBS 1985 8 (3): 503-504.
Kimble, D.P.
Sharpening the focus on functions of the hippocampus.
BBS 1985 8 (3): 504-505.
Maki, W.S.
Three-store theories of memory.
BBS 1985 8 (3): 505-506.
Markowitsch, H.J.
Memory processing by the brain: Subregionalization,
species-dependency, and network character.
BBS 1985 8 (3): 506-507.
McNaughton, B.L.,
The hippocampus, synaptic enhancement, and intermediate-term memory.
BBS 1985 8 (3): 507-508.
McNaughton, N.
Is the hippocampus a store, intermediate or otherwise?
BBS 1985 8 (3): 508-509.
Meck, W.H.
Hippocampus and “general” mnemonic function:
Only time will tell.
BBS 1985 8 (3): 509-510.
Olton, D.S.
Discontiguity and memory.
BBS 1985 8 (3): 510-511.
Shimp, C.P.
The development of theory: Logic of
method or underlying processes?
BBS 1985 8 (3): 511-512.
Winocur, G.
The hippocampus and time.
BBS 1985 8 (3): 512-513.
Woodruff, M.L.,
Whittington, D.L.
Effects of hippocampal lesions on some operant visual discrimination tasks.
BBS 1985 8 (3): 513-514.
AUTHOR’S RESPONSE
Rawlins, J.N.P.
Time and hippocampal lesion effects: Tempus edax rerum?
BBS 1985 8 (3): 514-522.
Volume 08 – Issue
TARGET ARTICLE
Libet, B.
Unconscious cerebral initiative and the role of conscious will in voluntary
action.
BBS 1985 8 (4): 529-539.
OPEN PEER COMMENTARY
Breitmeyer, B.G.
Problems with the psychophysics intention.
BBS 1985 8 (4): 539-540.
Bridgeman, B.
Free will and the functions of consciousness.
BBS 1985 8 (4): 540.
Danto, A.C.
Consciousness and motor control.
BBS 1985 8 (4): 540-541.
Doty, R.W.
The time course of conscious processing:
Vetos by the uninformed?
BBS 1985 8 (4): 541-542.
Eccles, J.C.
Mental summation: The timing of
voluntary intentions by cortical activity.
BBS 1985 8 (4): 542-543.
Jasper, H.H.
Brain mechanisms of conscious experience and voluntary action.
BBS 1985 8 (4): 543-544.
Jung, R.
Voluntary intention and conscious selection in complex learned action.
BBS 1985 8 (4): 544-545.
Latto, R.
Consciousness as an experimental variable:
Problems of definition, practice, and interpretation.
BBS 1985 8 (4): 545-546.
MacKay, D.M.
Do we “control” our brains?
BBS 1985 8 (4): 546.
Marks, L.E.
Toward a psychophysics of intention.
BBS 1985 8 (4): 547.
Merikle, P.M., Cheesman,
J.
Conscious and unconscious processes: Same
or different?
BBS 1985 8 (4): 547-548.
Näätänen, R.
Brain physiology and the unconscious initiation of movements.
BBS 1985 8 (4): 548.
Mortensen, C.
Conscious decisions.
BBS 1985 8 (4): 548-549.
Nelson, R.J.
Libet’s dualism.
BBS 1985 8 (4): 550.
Ringo, J.L.
Timing volition: Questions of what
and when about
BBS
Rollman, G.B.
Sensory events with variable central latencies provide inaccurate clocks.
BBS 1985 8 (4): 551-552.
Rugg, M.D.
Are the origins of any mental process available to introspection?
BBS 1985 8 (4): 552.
Scheerer, E.
Conscious intention is a mental fiat.
BBS 1985 8 (4): 552-553.
Stamm, J.S.
The uncertainty principle in psychology.
BBS 1985 8 (4): 553-554.
Underwood, G., Niemi, P.
Mind before matter?
BBS 1985 8 (4): 554-555.
Vanderwolf, C.H.
Nineteenth-century psychology and twentieth-century electrophysiology do not
mix.
BBS 1985 8 (4): 555.
Van Gulick, R.
Conscious wants and self-awareness.
BBS 1985 8 (4): 555-556.
Wasserman, G.S.
Neural mental chronometry and chronotheology.
BBS 1985 8 (4): 556-557.
Wood, C.C.
Pardon, your dualism in showing.
BBS 1985 8 (4): 557-558.
AUTHOR’S RESPONSE
Libet, B.
Theory and evidence relating cerebral processes to conscious will.
BBS 1985 8 (4): 558-566.
TARGET ARTICLE
Goldberg, G.
Supplementary motor area structure and function: Review and hypotheses.
BBS 1985 8 (4): 567-588.
OPEN PEER COMMENTARY
Brown, J.W.
A prelude to the Goldberg variations on motor organization.
BBS 1985 8 (4): 588-589.
Damasio, A.R.
Understanding the mind’s
will.
BBS
1985 8 (4): 589.
Fuster, J.M.
The path to action.
BBS
1985 8 (4): 589.
Gray, J.A.
Systems and system
interactions.
BBS
1985 8 (4): 591.
Kornhuber, H.H., Deecke,
L.
The starting function of
the SMA.
BBS
1985 8 (4): 591.
Libet, B.
Volitional processes
(planned, spontaneous, and conscious) in relation to the SMA.
BBS
1985 8 (4): 592.
Neafsey, E.J.
Preparation yes, intention
no.
BBS
1985 8 (4): 594.
Pandya, D.N., Barbas, H.
Architecture and
connections of the premotor areas in the rhesus monkey.
BBS
1985 8 (4): 596.
Porter, R.
Participation of SMA
neurons in a “self-paced” motor act.
BBS 1985
8 (4): 596.
Rizzolatti, G.
Free will and motor
subroutines: Too much for a small area.
BBS
1985 8 (4): 597.
Schultz, W.
Neuronal processes involved in initiating a behavioral act.
BBS 1985 8 (4): 599.
Tanji, J.
New findings on the behavior of supplementary motor area neurons recorded from
task-performing monkeys.
BBS 1985 8 (4): 599-600.
Weinrich, M.
Medial versus lateral
motor control.
BBS
1985 8 (4): 599.
Wiesendanger, M.
The SMA: A “supplementary
motor” or a “supramotor” area?
BBS
1985 8 (4): 599.
AUTHOR’S RESPONSE
Goldberg, G.
Where there is a “will,”
there is a way (to understand it).
BBS
1985 8 (4): 601.
TARGET ARTICLE
Harrington, A.
Nineteenth-century ideas
on hemisphere differences and “duality of mind.”
BBS
1985 8 (4): 617.
OPEN PEER COMMENTARY
Bradshaw, J.L.
Reinventing hemisphere
differences.
BBS 1985
8 (4): 635.
Černáček, J.
Hemisphere asymmetry: Old
views in new light.
BBS
1985 8 (4): 636.
Corballis, M.C.
Right and left as symbols.
BBS
1985 8 (4): 636.
Eling, P.
Laterality as a means and
laterality as an end.
BBS
1985 8 (4): 637.
Greenblatt, S.H.
Brain theory and the uses
of history.
BBS
1985 8 (4): 637.
Gruzelier, J.
Nineteenth-century views
on madness and hypnosis: A 1985 persepective.
BBS
1985 8 (4): 638.
Harris, L.J.
The ambidextral culture society and the “duality of mind.”
BBS 1985 8 (4): 638.
???, H., Regard, M.
The case for applied
history of medicine, and the place of
BBS
1985 8 (4): 640.
Leary, D.E.
Scientific amnesia.
BBS
1985 8 (4): 641.
Lokhorst, G.-J.
Hemisphere differences
before 1800.
BBS
1985 8 (4): 642.
The many-mind problem:
Neuroscience or neurotheology?
BBS 1985
8 (4): 642.
Milner, A.D.
Two hemispheres do not
make a dichotomy.
BBS 1985
8 (4): 643.
Mittwoch, U.
Lateralization and sex.
BBS 1985
8 (4): 644.
Murray, D.J.
What textbooks between
1887 and 1911 said about hemisphere differences.
BBS 1985
8 (4): 644.
Oppenheimer, J.M.
Continuity of thought on
duality of brain and mind?
BBS 1985
8 (4): 645.
Puccetti, R.
Experiencing two selves:
The history of a mistake.
BBS
1985 8 (4): 646.
Smith, A.
Do we have one brain or
two?
BBS 1985
8 (4): 647.
AUTHOR’S RESPONSE
Harrington, A.
Historical and scientific
issues en route from
BBS 1985
8 (4): 648.
TARGET ARTICLE
Hartung, J.
Matrilineal inheritance:
New theory and analysis.
BBS 1985
8 (4): 661
OPEN PEER COMMENTARY
Berstein, I.S.
Sociobiological metaphor,
the rules of evidence, and matrilineal inheritance.
BBS 1985
8 (4): 670.
Borgia, G.
Do we need cultural
inertia to explain matrilineal inheritance?
BBS 1985
8 (4): 670.
Buss, D.M.
Inheritance strategies,
resource allocation, and causal alternatives for individual traits.
BBS 1985
8 (4): 671.
Ellison, P.T.
Lineal inheritance and
lineal extinction.
BBS 1985
8 (4): 672.
Essock-Vitale, S.M.,
Vitale, R.A.
Assessment of paternity.
BBS 1985
8 (4): 672.
Flinn, M.V.
How can evolutionary
theory help explain inheritance practices?
BBS 1985
8 (4): 673.
???, R.
Paternity irrelevance and
matrilineal descent.
BBS 1985
8 (4): 674.
???, P.A.
Low probability of
paternity or . . . something else?
BBS 1985
8 (4): 675.
Mother knows best?
BBS 1985 8 (4): 675.
Matrilineal inheritance:
Sociobiological vs. ethnological interpretations.
BBS 1985 8 (4): 675.
Mulder,
M.B.
Resource
certainty or paternity uncertainty?
BBS 1985 8 (4): 677.
Shields, W.M.
Uncertain paternity, matrilineality, and cross-cousin marriage: Hidden connections?
BBS 1985 8 (4): 678-679
Thornhill, N.W.,
Thornhill, R.
Matriliy and sexual
selection and conflict.
BBS 1985 8 (4): 679.
Vining,
D.R. Jr.
Sociobiological
theory and contemporary humans.
BBS 1985 8 (4): 680.
AUTHOR’S RESPONSE
Hartung,
J.
Lineal
extinction—A bridge to ecology?
BBS 1985 8 (4): 681.
TARGET ARTICLE
Humphreys,
G.W., Evett, L.J.
Are
there independent lexical and nonlexical routes in word processing? An
evaluation of the dual-route theory of reading.
BBS 1985 8 (4): 689.
OPEN PEER COMMENTARY
Balota,
D.A.
Bringing
together some old and new concerns about dual-route theory.
BBS 1985 8 (4): 705.
Baron,
J.
Back
to Basics.
BBS 1985 8 (4): 706.
Bub, D., Kertesz, A.
Dual versus single routes: What we
need to know before constructing a model.
BBS 1985 8 (4): 706-707.
Carr, T.H.
The psychology of the four-letter word, plus or minus: Humphreys and Evett’s evaluation of the dual-route theory of
reading.
BBS 1985 8 (4): 707-708.
Chastain, G.
The phonological route to the mental lexicon: Some unconsidered evidence.
BBS 1985 8 (4): 708-709.
Coltheart, M.
In defense of dual-route models of reading.
BBS 1985 8 (4): 709-710.
Cooper, W.E.
Specifying the loci of context effects in reading.
BBS 1985 8 (4): 710-711.
Forster, K.I.
The mechanisms of naming.
BBS 1985 8 (4): 711-712.
Glushko, R.J.
Further complications for dual-route theory.
BBS 1985 8 (4): 712-713.
Henderson, L.
Oral reading: Duel but not rout.
BBS 1985 8 (4): 713-714.
Inhoff, A.W.
Phonological effects in the visual processing of words: Some methodological considerations.
BBS 1985 8 (4): 714-715.
Juola, J.F.
Perceptual units in word recognition.
BBS 1985 8 (4): 715.
Kay, J.
Size and salience of
spelling-sound correspondences.
BBS 1985 8 (4): 715-716.
Lesgold, A.,
Do we look for independence or near decomposability?
BBS 1985 8 (4): 716-717.
Access to the lexicon: Are there 3
routes?
BBS 1985 8 (4): 717-718.
Morton, J.
Criticizing dual-route theory: Missing
the point.
BBS 1985 8 (4): 718.
Norris, D.
So the “strong” theory
loses. But are there any winners?
BBS 1985
8 (4): 718.
Olson, R.K., Keenan, J.M.
Segmentation in models of reading.
BBS 1985 8 (4): 719.
Parkin, A.J.
Dual-route theory and the consistency effect.
BBS 1985 8 (4): 720-721.
Patterson, K.
The pitfalls of selective attention.
BBS 1985 8 (4): 721.
Some reasons to save the grapheme and the phoneme.
BBS 1985 8 (4): 721-722.
Pollatsek, A.
Only the simplest dual-route theories are unreasonable.
BBS 1985 8 (4): 722-723.
Rosson, M.B.
Throw out the bath water, but keep the baby: Issues behind the dual-route
theory of reading.
BBS 1985 8 (4): 723-724.
Seidenberg, M.S.
Explanatory adequacy and models of word recognition.
BBS 1985 8 (4): 724-726.
Shallice, T.
The acquired dyslexias and normal reading.
BBS 1985 8 (4): 726.
Taft, M.
The lexical account of word naming considered further.
BBS 1985 8 (4): 727.
Underwood, G.
Interactive processes in word recognition.
BBS 1985 8 (4): 727-728.
AUTHORS’ RESPONSE
Humphreys, G.W., Evett,
L.J.
Visual word processing: Procedures,
representations, and routes.
BBS 1985 8 (4): 728-735.
CONTINUING COMMENTARY on Searle, J.R.
Minds, brains, and
programs.
BBS
1980 3:417-457.
On the nature of programs, simulations, and organisms.
BBS 1985 8 (4): 741-742.
AUTHOR’S RESPONSE
Searle, J.R.
Patterns, symbols, and understanding.
BBS 1985 8 (4): 742-743.
CONTINUING COMMENTARY on Peters, D.P., Ceci, S.J.
Peer-review practices of
psychological journals: The fate of published articles, submitted again.
BBS
1982 5: 187-255.
Administrative freedom vs. academic freedom and peer reviews.
BBS 1985 8 (4): 743-744.
Boice, R., Pecker, G.,
Zaback, E., Barlow, D.H.
A challenge to Peters and Ceci’s conclusions with an examination of editorial
files for reviewer appropriateness.
BBS 1985 8 (4): 744-745.
Cofer, C.N.
Some reactions to manuscript review from a questionnaire study.
BBS 1985 8 (4): 745-746.
Sternberg, R.J.
Tacit agreements between authors and editors.
BBS 1985 8 (4): 746-747.
AUTHORS’ RESPONSE
Peters, D.P., Ceci, S.J.
Peer review: Beauty is in the eye of
the beholder.
BBS 1985 8 (4): 747-749.
CONTINUING COMMENTARY on Kyburg, H.E., Jr.
Rational belief.
BBS
1983 6:231-273.
Falmagne, R.J.
Normative theory and the human mind.
BBS 1985 8 (4): 750-751.
Sahlin, N.E.
Three decision rules for generalized probability representations.
BBS 1985 8 (4): 751-753.
AUTHOR’S RESPONSE
Kyburg, H.E. Jr.
Probability intervals and rational norms.
BBS 1985 8 (4): 753-754.
CONTINUING COMMENTARY on Campion, J., Latto, R., Smith, Y.M.
Is blindsight an effect of
scattered light, spared cortex, and near-threshold vision?
BBS
1983 6: 423-486.
Lutzemberger, L.,
On inferring blindsight from normal vision.
BBS 1985 8 (4): 754-755.
AUTHORS’ RESPONSE
Campion, J., Latto, R.
What is blindsight?
BBS 1985 8 (4): 755.
CONTINUING COMMENTARY on
Intentional systems in
cognitive ethology: The “Panglossian paradigm” defended.
BBS
1983 6: 343-390.
Ben-Zeev, A.
Aristotle, final cause, and the intentional stance.
BBS 1985 8 (4): 758-759.
Bogdan, R.J.
The intentional stance reexamined.
BBS 1985 8 (4): 759-760.
Dahlbom, B.
Dennett on cognitive ethology: A
broader view.
BBS 1985 8 (4): 760-762.
Gray, T.
Beyond Burrhus and behaviorism: Dennett
defused.
BBS 1985 8 (4): 762-763.
AUTHOR’S RESPONSE
When does the intentional stance work?
BBS 1985 8 (4): 763-765.