Volume 14 – Issue 01 – March 1991

TARGET ARTICLE

Gray, J.A., Feldon, J., Rawlins, J.N.P., Smith, A.D.
The neuropsychology of schizophrenia.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 1-19.

OPEN PEER COMMENTARY

Carlsson, A., Carlsson, M.
A faulty negative feedback control underlies the schizophrenic syndrome?
BBS 1991 14 (1): 20-20.

Claridge, G., Beech, T.
“Don’t leave the ‘psyche’ out of neuropsychology.”
BBS 1991 14 (1): 21-21.

Cools, A.R., Ellenbroek, B.
The limbic-striatal interaction: A seesaw rather than a tandem.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 22-22.

Crider, A.
Motor disturbances in schizophrenia.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 22-22.

Crusio, W.E.
The neuropsychology of schizophrenia: A perspective from neurobehavioral genetics.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 23-23.

Dawson, M.E., Hazlett, E.A.
Heterogeneity, orienting, and habituation in schizophrenia.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 24-24.

Dougherty, G.G., Steinhauer, S.R., Zubin, J., van Kammen, D.P.
How does the physiology change with symptom exacerbation and remission in schizophrenia?
BBS 1991 14 (1): 25-25.

Early, T.S., Haller, J.W., Posner, M.
Dopaminergic excess or dysregulation?
BBS 1991 14 (1): 26-26.

Elkins, I.J., Cromwell, R.L.
A focalized deficit within an elegant system.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 27-27.

Frith, C.
In what context is latent inhibition relevant to the symptoms of schizophrenia?
BBS 1991 14 (1): 28-28.

Gewirtz, J.
Novelty value in associative learning.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 29-29.

Harrow, M., Silverstein, M.
The role of long-term memory (LTM) and monitoring in schizophrenia: Multiple functions.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 30-30.

Goldberg, E.
Schizophrenia and stored memories: Left hemisphere dysfunction after all?
BBS 1991 14 (1): 30-30.

Hestenes, D.
A cardinal principle for neuropsychology, with implications for schizophrenia and mania.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 31-32.

Hoffman, R.E.
The mechanism of positive symptoms in schizophrenia.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 33-33.

Ingraham, L.J.
A neuropsychology of psychosis.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 34-34.

Jansen, K.L.R., Faull, R.L.M.
Excitatory amino acids, NMDA and sigma receptors: A role in schizophrenia?
BBS 1991 14 (1): 34-34.

Lubow, R.E.
Schizophrenia and attention: In and out of context.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 35-35.

Manschreck, T.C., Maher, B.A.
Approximations to a neuropsychological model of schizophrenia.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 36-36.

Nuechterlein, K.H., Green, M.F.
Neuropsychological vulnerability or episode factors in schizophrenia?
BBS 1991 14 (1): 37-37.

Oades, R.D.
Bases for irrelevant information processing in schizophrenia: Room for manoeuvre.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 38-38.

Oke, A.F., Adams, R.N.
Is another loop needed to explain schizophrenia?
BBS 1991 14 (1): 39-39.

Patterson, T.
A realistic model will be much more complex and consider longitudinal neuropsychodevelopment.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 40-40.

Pilowsky, L., Murray, R.M.
Why don’t preschizophrenic children have delusions and hallucinations?
BBS 1991 14 (1): 41-41.

Pisa, M., Cleghorn, J.M.
A heuristically useful but empirically weak neuropsychological model of schizophrenia.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 42-42.

Raine, A., Cannon, T.D.
Neuro-developmental, brain imaging, and psychophysiological perspectives on the neuropsychology of schizophrenia.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 43-43.

Salzinger, K.
What should a theory of schizophrenia be able to do?
BBS 1991 14 (1): 44-44.

Sandyk, R., Kay, S.R.
The significance of the basal ganglia for schizophrenia.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 45-45.

Sarter, M.
Dopamine-GABA-cholinergic interactions and negative schizophrenic symptomatology.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 46-46.

Schmajuk, N.A., Dicarlo, J.J.
A hippocampal theory of schizophrenia.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 47-48.

Spohn, H.E.
A plausible theory marred by certain inconsistencies.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 49-49.

Stevens, J.R., Gold, J.M.
What is schizophrenia?
BBS 1991 14 (1): 50-50.

Swerdlow, N.R.
Neuropsychology of schizophrenia: The “hole” thing is wrong.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 51-52.

Venables, P.H.
Positive and negative symptoms, the hippocampus and P3.

BBS 1991 14 (1): 53-53.

Weiner, I.
The accumbens-substantia nigra pathway, mismatch, and amphetamine.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 54-54.

Williams, J.H.
The neuropsychology of schizophrenia: In step but not in time.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 55-55.

AUTHORS’ RESPONSE

Gray, J.A., Hemsley, D.R., Feldon, J., Gray, N.S., and Others.
Schiz bits: Misses, mysteries and hits.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 56-84.

TARGET ARTICLE

Clark, C.W.
Modeling behavioral adaptations.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 85-93.

OPEN PEER COMMENTARY

Alley, T.R.
Dynamic models of behavior: Promising but risky.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 94-94.

Barto, A.G.
Learning and incremental dynamic programming.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 94-94.

Colgan, P., Jamieson, I.
Gaps in the optimization approach to behavior.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 95-95.

Dickinson, B.W.
Dynamic programming, limited information, and behavioral modeling.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 96-96.

Fantino, E.
Rules of choice.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 97-97.

Focardi, S.
Can dynamic optimization cope with ecological complexity?
BBS 1991 14 (1): 98-98.

Hitchcock, C.L., Sherry, D.F.
Dynamic models, fitness functions, and food storing.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 99-99.

Houston, A.I., Mcnamara, J.M.
The next state of the art.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 100-100.

Howe, M.L., Montevecchi, W.A., Rabinowitz, F.M., Stones, M.J.
Modeling adaptation in the next generation: A developmental perspective.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 100-100.

Mace, R.H., Sutherland, W.J.
Limits to stochastic dynamic programming.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 101-101.

Milinski, M.
Models are just prothesis for our brains.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 101-101.

Miller, G.F., Todd, P.M.
Let evolution take care of its own.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 101-101.

Odling-Smee, F.J.
The “crooked bookie” cycle.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 103-103.

Partridge, L.D.
State
variable models are powerful, not perfect.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 104-104.

Roughgarden, J.
Rules of thumb.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 104-104.

Schmid-Hempel, P.
Short-term behavior and long-term consequences.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 105-105.

Sozou, P.D., Byrd, J.W.
A not so backward way of thinking.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 106-106.

Stamps, J.
Pitfalls and promises of behavioral modeling.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 106-106.

Szathmáry, E.
Variational principles, behavioural adaptations, and selection hierarchies.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 107-107.

Townsend, J.T.
Modeling change in biology and psychology.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 108-108.

Travis, J.
Using models of behavior in optimal fashion.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 108-108.

Ydenberg, R.C.
Testing predictions and gaining insights from dynamic state-variable models.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 109-109.

AUTHOR’S RESPONSE

Clark, C.W.
Dynamic optimization: Let’s get on with the job.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 110-118.

TARGET ARTICLE

Cicchetti, D.V.
The reliability of peer review for manuscript and grant submissions: A cross-disciplinary investigation.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 119-134.

OPEN PEER COMMENTARY

Adams, K.M.
Peer review: An unflattering picture.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 135-135.

Armstrong, J.S., Hubbard, R.
Does the need for agreement among reviewers inhibit the publication of controversial findings?
BBS 1991 14 (1): 136-136.

Bailar, J.C.
Reliability, fairness, objectivity, and other inappropriate goals in peer review.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 137-137.

Bornstein, R.F.
The predictive validity of peer review: A neglected issue.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 138-138.

Cohen, P.
Does group discussion contribute to the reliability of complex judgements?
BBS 1991 14 (1): 139-139.

Cole, S.
Consensus and the reliability of peer-review evaluations.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 140-140.

Colman, A.M.
Unreliable peer review: Causes and cures of human misery.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 141-141.

Cone, J.D.
Evaluating scholarly works: How many reviewers? How much anonymity?
BBS 1991 14 (1): 142-142.

Crandall, R.
What should be done to improve reviewing?
BBS 1991 14 (1): 143-143.

Delcomyn, F.
Peer review: Explicit criteria and training can help.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 144-144.

Demorest, M.E.
Different rates of agreement on acceptance and rejection: A statistical artifact?
BBS 1991 14 (1): 144-144.

Eckberg, D.L.
When nonreliability of reviews indicates solid science.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 145-145.

Fletcher, J.M.
Journal availability and the quality of published research.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 146-146.

Fuller, S.
Peer review is not enough: Editors must work with librarians to ensure access to research.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 147-147.

Gilmore, J.B.
On forecasting validity and finessing reliability.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 148-148.

Gorman, M.E.
Replication, reliability and peer-review: A case study.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 149-149.

Greene, R.
Is there an alternative to peer review?
BBS 1991 14 (1): 149-149.

Hargens, L.L.
Referee agreement in context.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 150-150.

Kiesler, C.A.
Confusion between reviewer reliability and wise editorial and funding decisions.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 151-151.

Kraemer, H.C.
Do we really want more “reliable” reviewers?
BBS 1991 14 (1): 152-153.

Laming, D.
Why is the reliability of peer review so low?
BBS 1991 14 (1): 154-155.

Lock, S.P.
Should the blinded lead the blinded?
BBS 1991 14 (1): 156-156.

Mahoney, M.J.
Justice, efficiency, and epistemology in the peer review of scientific manuscripts.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 157-157.

Marsh, H.W., Ball, S.
Reflections on the peer review process.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 157-157.

Nelson, L.D.
The process of peer review: Unanswered questions.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 158-158.

Roediger, H.L.
Is unreliability in peer review harmful?
BBS 1991 14 (1): 159-159.

Rosenthal, R.
Some indices of the reliability of peer review.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 160-160.

Rourke, B.P.
Toward openness and fairness in the review process.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 161-161.

Salzinger, K.
Now that we know how low the reliability is, what shall we do?
BBS 1991 14 (1): 162-162.

Schönemann, P.H.
In praise of randomness.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 162-162.

Stricker, L.J.
Disagreement among journal reviewers: No cause for undue alarm.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 163-163.

Tyrer, P.
Chairman’s action: The importance of executive decisions in peer review.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 164-164.

Wasserman, G.S.
Do peer reviewers really agree more on rejections than acceptances? A random-agreement benchmark says they do not.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 165-165.

Zentall, T.R.
What to do about peer review: Is the cure worse than the disease?
BBS 1991 14 (1): 166-166.

AUTHOR’S RESPONSE

Cicchetti, D.V.
Reflections from the peer review mirror.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 167-186.

CONTINUING COMMENTARY on: Krueger, L.E.
Reconciling Fechner and Stevens: Toward a unified psychophysical law.
BBS 1989 12: 251-320.

Gregson, R.A.M.
Dead men tell odd simple tales!
BBS 1991 14 (1): 187-187.

Laming, D.
Reconciling Fechner and Stevens?
BBS 1991 14 (1): 188-191.

Wasserman, G.S.
Neural and behavioral assessments of sensory quantity.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 192-192.

AUTHOR’S RESPONSE

Krueger, L.E.
Psychophysical law: Taming the cognitive and chaotic aspects.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 193-198.

CONTINUING COMMENTARY on: Turkkan, J.S.
Classical conditioning: The new hegemony.
BBS 1989 12: 121-179.

Goudie, A.J.
Opponent processes in classical conditioning: The jury is still out.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 199-199.

Kirsch, J.
The placebo effect as a conditioned response: Failures of the “litmus test.”
BBS 1991 14 (1): 200-203.

AUTHOR’S RESPONSE

Turkkan, J.S.
The search for convincing experimental tests of conditioned drug effects.
BBS 1991 14 (1): 204-204.

Volume 14 – Issue 02 – June 1991

TARGET ARTICLE

Schoemaker, P.J.H.
The quest for optimality: A positive heuristic of science.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 205-214.

OPEN PEER COMMENTARY

Anderson, J.R.
Optimality and human memory.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 215-215.

Baron, J.
Optimality as an evaluative standard in the study of decision-making.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 216-216.

Bookstein, F.L.
Optimality as a mathematical rhetoric for zeroes.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 216-216.

Byrne, R.W.
The quest for plausibility: A negative heuristic for science?
BBS 1991 14 (2): 217-217.

Crow, J.F.
Some optimality principles in evolution.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 218-218.

Cabanac, M.
Criteria for optimality.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 218-218.

Daly, M.
Natural selection doesn’t have goals, but its the reason why organisms do.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 219-219.

Davison, M.
Organisms, scientists, and optimality.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 220-220.

Dayan, P., Oberlander, J.
Vaulting optimality.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 221-221.

Helweg, D.A., Roitblat, H.L.
Optimality and constraint.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 222-222.

Hyland, M.E.
Types of optimality: Who is the steersman?
BBS 1991 14 (2): 223-223.

Larichev, O.
Natural science, social science and optimality.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 224-224.

Levine, D.S.
The example of psychology: Optimism, not optimality.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 225-226.

Lea, S.E.G.
Why optimality is not worth arguing about.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 225-225.

Mazur, J.E.
Straining the word “optimal.”
BBS 1991 14 (2): 227-227.

Miller, D.A., Zucker, S.W.
Complexity and optimality: A commentary.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 227-227.

Miller, G.F.
Two dynamic criteria for validating claims of optimality.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 228-228.

Mongin, P.
The infinite regression of optimization.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 229-229.

Kan, A.H.G.R.
Optimality as a prescriptive tool.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 230-230.

Paelinck, J.H.P.
Don’t just sit out there, optimise something.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 230-230.

Sahlin, N.E.
Should the quest for optimality worry us?
BBS 1991 14 (2): 231-231.

Shafir, E.
Rational agents, real people, and the quest for optimality.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 232-232.

Sober, E.
Extremum descriptions, process laws, and minimality heuristics.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 232-232.

Steele, K.M.
Avoid the push-pull dilemma in explanation.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 233-233.

Stolarz-Fantino, S., Fantino, E.
Optimal confusion.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 234-234.

Toda, M.
Human being as a bumbling optimizer: A psychologist’s viewpoint.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 235-235.

Wierzbicki, A.P.
Is economics still immersed in the old concepts of Enlightenment era?
BBS 1991 14 (2): 236-236.

AUTHOR’S RESPONSE

Schoemaker, P.J.H.
The strategy of optimality revisited.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 237-246.

TARGET ARTICLE

Thornhill, N.W.
An evolutionary analysis of rules regulating human inbreeding and marriage.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 247-260.

OPEN PEER COMMENTARY

Barkow, J.H.
Evolved self-interest and the cross-cultural survey.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 261-262.

Beckerman, S.
The cross cultural method and the incest taboo.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 263-263.

Betzig, L.
A little more mortar for a firm foundation.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 264-264.

Bittles, A.H.
Societal stratification, consanguinity and fertility.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 264-264.

Bixler, R.H.
Multiple causes, eye witnesses and imaginative fertility.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 265-265.

Crusio, W.E.
No evolution without genetic variation.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 266-266.

Crow, J.F.
Deleterious versus beneficial effects of inbreeding.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 266-266.

Dow, M.M., Pollock, G.B.
Galton’s problem for strict adaptationists.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 267-267.

Dunbar, R.I.M.
Marriage rules in perspective.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 268-268.

Freedman, D.G.
On incestuous attraction and natural selection between populations.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 268-268.

Glucksberg, S.
Rules regulating inbreeding and marriage: Evolutionary or socioeconomic?
BBS 1991 14 (2): 269-269.

Hann, K.L.
The nature of the data.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 269-269.

Hyland, M.E.
What were the incest rules of the Upper Paleolithic People? Putting evolution into an evolutionary analysis.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 270-270.

Kline, P.
Evolutionary analysis: Antithetical or irrelevant to psychoanalytic theory?
BBS 1991 14 (2): 271-271.

Leavitt, G.C.
Evolutionary analysis: Biological or cultural?
BBS 1991 14 (2): 272-272.

Livingstone, F.B.
What happened to the universality of the incest taboo?
BBS 1991 14 (2): 273-273.

MacQueen, K.M.
Power as a contextual variable in the analysis of human inbreeding rules.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 273-273.

Meiselman, K.C.
Beyond the Westermarck effect: The role of denial and nurturant bonding in incest avoidance.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 274-274.

Money, J.
Correlation is not causation.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 275-275.

Moore, J.
Another definition of “human” falls.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 275-275.

Paul, R.A.
Psychoanalytic theory and incest avoidance rules.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 276-276.

Russell, P.A.
Evolutionary theories must fit the data better than other theories.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 277-277.

Spain, D.H.
Muddled theory and misinterpreted data: Comments on yet another attempt to identify a so-called Westermarck effect and, in the process, to refute Freud.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 278-278.

Voland, E.
Rules regulating inbreeding, cultural variability and the great heuristic problem of evolutionary anthropology.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 279-279.

Wilson, M., Daly, M.
The metaphorical extension of “incest”: A human universal.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 280-280.

AUTHOR’S RESPONSE

Thornhill, N.W.
Mental mechanisms underlying inbreeding rule making.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 281-281.

TARGET ARTICLE

Barkow, J.H.
Précis of
Darwin, sex, and status: Biological approaches to mind and culture.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 295-300.

OPEN PEER COMMENTARY

Buss, D.M.
Toward an empirical foundation for evolutionary psychology.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 301-301.

Caporael, L.R.
Folk psychology redux.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 302-302.

Charlesworth, W.R.
Sleepwalking is out, but is dualism back in?
BBS 1991 14 (2): 303-304.

Cronk, L.
Hypothesis testing and social engineering.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 305-305.

Crawford, C., Lindberg, T.
The reemergence of evolutionary psychology?
BBS 1991 14 (2): 305-305.

Daly, M.
Too many errors.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 306-306.

Feierman, J.R.
When the mind goes awry: Schizophrenia and the emergence of culture.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 307-307.

Gibson, K.R.
Genetically determined neural modules versus mental constructional acts in the genesis of human intelligence.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 308-308.

Horowitz, M.J.
Person schemas: Evolutionary, individual developmental, and social sources.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 309-310.

Lumsden, D.P.
The awakened brain: From Wright’s psychozoology to Barkow’s selfless persons.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 311-311.

Hailman, J.P.
Focus on language origins.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 309-309.

Nesse, R.M.
Human nature and the Holy Grail.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 312-312.

Plotkin, H.C.
Multiple causes of human behaviour.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 313-313.

Rasmussen, D.R.
Thought-provoking speculations with need of rigor.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 313-313.

Simons, R.C.
Maladaptation and hierarchically organized explanatory levels.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 314-314.

Smith, P.K.
Hostile aggression as social skills deficit, or evolutionary strategy?
BBS 1991 14 (2): 315-315.

Tobin, H., Logue, A.W.
Being aware of consciousness and cultures.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 316-316.

Vandenberghe, P.L.
Once more with feeling: Genes, mind and culture.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 317-317.

Vine, I.
Can a sociobiology of mind discard the will?
BBS 1991 14 (2): 318-318.

Wetherick, N.E.
Freud and sociobiology.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 319-319.

AUTHOR’S RESPONSE

Barkow, J.H.
Joinings, discontinuities, and details:
Darwin, sex, and status revisited.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 320-334.

CONTINUING COMMENTARY on Plomin, R., Daniels, D.
Why are children in the same family so different from one another?
BBS 1987 10: 1-60.

Daruna, J.H., Greenberg, R.D.
On the source of individual differences within families.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 335-335.

Dudley, R.M.
Why are adoptees so similar in IQ?
BBS 1991 14 (2): 336-336.

AUTHORS’ RESPONSE

Plomin, R.
Why children in the same family are so different from one another.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 336-337.

CONTINUING COMMENTARY on MacNeilage, P.F., Studdert-Kennedy, M.G., Lindblom, B.
Primate handedness reconsidered.
BBS 1987 10: 247-303.

Annett, M.
Predicting from the right shift theory.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 338-340.

Elliott, D.
Human handedness reconsidered.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 341-341.

Hauser, M., Perry, S., Manson, J.H., Ball, H., and Others.
It’s all in the hands of the beholder: New data on free-ranging rhesus monkeys.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 342-343.

AUTHORS’ RESPONSE

MacNeilage, P.F., Studdert-Kennedy, M.G., Lindblom, B.
Primate handedness reconsidered: Response.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 344-344.

CONTINUING COMMENTARY on Johnston, T.D.
Developmental explanation and the ontogeny of birdsong: Nature/nurture redux.
BBS 1988 11: 617-663.

Bolhuis, J., Johnson, M.
Sensory templates: Mechanism or metaphor?
BBS 1991 14 (2): 349-349.

Khayutin, S.N., Alexandrov, L.I.
Abovo with song!
BBS 1991 14 (2): 350-351.

Van Valen, L.M.
Instinct and innateness: Information in causes.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 351-351.

AUTHOR’S RESPONSE

Johnston, T.D.
On unmodifiability of views and innateness of behavior.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 351-351.

CONTINUING COMMENTARY on Gottlieb, G.L., Corcos, D.M., Agarwal, G.C.
Strategies for the control of voluntary movements with one mechanical degree of freedom.
BBS 1989 12: 189-250.

Darling, W.G.
Potential difficulties in the evaluation of motor strategies using EMG patterns.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 352-352.

Eagleson, R.
Motor strategy selection by cognitive controllers.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 353-353.

Kwan, H.C., Yeap, T.H., Barrett, D., Jiang, B.C.
Network relaxation as biological computation.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 354-355.

Marteniuk, R.G., Carnahan, H.
The issue of motor equivalence.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 356-356.

Lee, R.G.
Are there multiple movement strategies?
BBS 1991 14 (2): 356-356.

Teasdale, N., Stelmach, G.E., Mueller, F.
Strategies for the control of voluntary movements in patients with Parkinson’s disease: Commentary.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 357-357.

Winters, J.M., Seif-Naraghi, A.H.
Strategies for goal-directed fast movements are byproducts of satisfying performance criteria.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 357-358.

AUTHORS’ RESPONSE

Corcos, D.M., Gottlieb, G.L., Agarwal, G.C.
Movement strategies and the necessity for task differentiation.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 359-363.

CONTINUING COMMENTARY on Lightfoot, D.
The child’s trigger experience: Degree-0 learnability.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 364-364.

Bickerton, D.
Haunted by the specter of creole genesis.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 364-365.

AUTHOR’S RESPONSE

Lightfoot, D.
Simple triggers and creoles.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 366-367.

CONTINUING COMMENTARY on Chevalier-Skolnikoff, S.
Spontaneous tool use and sensorimotor intelligence in Cebus compared with other monkeys and apes.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 368-368.

Doré, F.Y.
A neo-Piagetian theory can contribute to comparative studies of cognitive development.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 368-369.

Parker, S.T.
Corrections to Chevalier-Skolnikoff’s Appendix: Collaborative origins of Cebus and gorilla data: Misdated chronology, misattributed methodology.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 370-370.

AUTHOR’S RESPONSE

Chevalier-Skolnikoff, S.
Procedures and chronology.
BBS 1991 14 (2): 371-371.

Volume 14 – Issue 03 – September 1991

TARGET ARTICLE

Plomin, R., Bergeman, C.S.
The nature of nurture: Genetic influence on “environmental” measures.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 373-385.

OPEN PEER COMMENTARY

Baumrind, D.
To nurture nature.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 386-386.

Bookstein, F.L.
Heritability of what?
BBS 1991 14 (3): 387-388.

Boomsma, D.I., Molenaar, P.C.M.
Implications for behavior genetics research: No shared environment left.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 389-389.

Bradley, R.H., Caldwell, B.M.
Like images refracted: A view from the interactionist perspective.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 389-389.

Bronfenbrenner, U.
The nurture of nature.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 390-390.

Caspi, A.
Cleaning up the environment.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 391-392.

Duyme, M., Capron, C.
On the misuse of certain concepts derived from genetic analysis.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 393-393.

Crusio, W.E.
Genetic effects on “environmental” measures: Consequences for behavior-genetic analysis.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 393-393.

Goodman, R., Stevenson, J.
Parental criticism and warmth towards unrecognized monozygotic twins.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 394-394.

Graham, P.
Genetic explanations of environment explain little.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 395-395.

Hay, D.A.
“Significant and substantial” or minor and unreliable genetic influences on measures of the environment?
BBS 1991 14 (3): 396-396.

Hirsch, J.
Obfuscation of interaction.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 397-397.

Hewitt, J.K.
There is indeed no substitute for multivariate genetic and environmental analyses.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 397-397.

Kendler, K.S.
A psychiatric perspective on the “nature of nurture.”
BBS 1991 14 (3): 398-398.

Johnson, R.C.
Genes and environment: More complicated all the time or genes and environment: A complicated affair.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 398-398.

Lytton, H.
Different parental practices - Different sources of influence.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 399-399.

McGue, M., Bouchard, T.J., Lykken, D.T., Finkel, D.
On genes, environment and experience.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 400-400.

Rowe, D.C.
Three shocks to socialization research.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 401-401.

Rutter, M.
Origins of nurture: It’s not just effects on measures and its not just effects of nature.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 402-402.

Scarr, S.
The construction of family reality.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 403-403.

Schönemann, P.H., Schonemann, R.D.
We wondered where the errors went.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 404-405.

Schulsinger, F.
Environment A dubious concept?
BBS 1991 14 (3): 406-406.

Simonton, D.K.
Genes and genius from Galton to Freud.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 406-406.

Socha, R.
Problems with the “environment as phenotype” hypothesis.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 407-407.

Tellegen, A.
Modeling and measuring environment.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 408-408.

Thelen, E.
Improvisations on the behavioral-genetics theme.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 409-409.

Turkheimer, E.,  Gottesman, I.I.
Is H2 = 0 a null hypothesis anymore?
BBS 1991 14 (3): 410-410.

Wachs, T.D.
Nature and nurture: A shaky alliance.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 411-411.

Waldman, I.D., Weinberg, R.A.
The need for collaboration between behavior geneticists and environmentally oriented investigators in developmental research.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 412-412.

Willerman, L.
Overinterpreting model fitting effects.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 413-413.

AUTHORS’ RESPONSE

Plomin, R., Bergeman, C.S.
Nature and nurture.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 414-428.

TARGET ARTICLE

Shallice, T.
Précis of From neuropsychology to mental structure.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 429-437.

OPEN PEER COMMENTARY

Allen, C.
Towards a functionalist theory of consciousness.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 438-438.

Andrews, D.B.
Extending neuropsychology.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 439-439.

Bridgeman, B.
2 kinds of models, many kinds of souls: Shallice on neuropsychology.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 440-440.

Baars, B.J.
Consciousness and modularity.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 440-440.

Bruder, G.A.
How can cognitive neuropsychology be of value in understanding central processing?
BBS 1991 14 (3): 441-441.

Butter, C.M., Laeng, B.
NeuropsychologyExclusive or inclusive?
BBS 1991 14 (3): 442-442.

Caplan, D.
Potential pitfalls in neuropsychological studies: The case of short-term memory.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 443-443.

Caramazza, A., Mccloskey, M.
The poverty of methodology.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 444-444.

Cowan, N.
Neuropsychology and mental structure: Where do we go from here?
BBS 1991 14 (3): 445-445.

Flanagan, O.
The modularity of consciousness.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 446-446.

Frith, C.
Mental structure in the psychoses: The only hope for a neuropsychology of schizophrenia.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 447-447.

Goshengottstein, Y.
The possible futility of neuropsychology.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 448-448.

Grodzinsky, Y.
Much ado about the wrong thing.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 449-449.

Hunt, E.
On the relationship between neuropsychology and cognitive psychology.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 450-450.

Jerison, H.J.
Evolution of the flowchart.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 451-452.

Mccloskey, M., Caramazza, A.
On crude data and impoverished theory.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 453-453.

Smith, M.E.
Making up the brain’s mind.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 454-454.

Umiltà, C.
More on modularity.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 455-455.

Wilson, J.T.L.
Does cognitive neuropsychology have a future?
BBS 1991 14 (3): 456-456.

AUTHOR’S RESPONSE

Shallice, T.
How neuropsychology informs an understanding of normal function.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 457-470.

TARGET ARTICLE

Anderson, J.R.
Is human cognition adaptive?
BBS 1991 14 (3): 471-484.

OPEN PEER COMMENTARY

Agarwal, G.C.
Human cognition is an adaptive process.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 485-485.

Baron, J.
Some thinking is irrational.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 486-486.

Becker, G.M.
The nonoptimality of
Anderson’s memory fits.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 487-487.

Campbell, R.L., Bickhard, M.H.
If human cognition is adaptive, can human knowledge consist of encodings?
BBS 1991 14 (3): 488-488.

Chandrasekaran, B.
Mechanistic and rationalistic explanations are complementary.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 489-490.

Corter, J.E.
Normative theories of categorization.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 491-491.

de Sousa, R.
Rational analysis: Too rational for comfort?
BBS 1991 14 (3): 492-492.

Dickinson, B.W.
Adaptivity and rational analysis.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 492-492.

Evans, J.S.T.
Adaptive cognition: The question is how.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 493-493.

Fantino, E., Stolarz-Fantino, S.
Rational analysis and illogical inference.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 494-494.

Geissler, H.-G.
Beyond Helmholtz, or why not include inner determinants from the beginning? BBS 1991 14 (3): 494-494.

Gigerenzer, G.
Does the environment have the same structure as Bayes’ theorem.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 495-495.

Godfrey-Smith, P.
Optimality and psychological explanation.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 496-496.

Gregson, R.A.M.
Bayes in the context of suboptimality.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 497-497.

Hastie, R., Hammond, K.
Rational analysis and the Lens model.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 498-498.

Holyoak, K.J.
Probing the “Achilles’ heel” of rational analysis.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 498-498.

Massaro, D.W., Friedman, D.
Adaptive rationality and identifiability of psychological processes.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 499-500.

Rachlin, H.
The cognitive laboratory, the library and the skinner box.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 501-501.

Schwarz, W.
Rational analysis will not throw off the yoke of the precision-importance trade-off function.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 501-501.

Shafir, E.
On the inapplicability of a rational analysis to human cognition.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 502-502.

Shultz, T.R.
The rationality of causal inference.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 503-503.

Small, S.L.
But how does the brain think? (or wasn’t that the question?)

BBS 1991 14 (3): 504-504.

Smokler, H.
A Bayesian theory of thought.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 505-505.

Snow, P.
Rationality and irrationality: Still fighting words.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 505-505.

Tsotsos, J.K.
Computational resources do constrain behavior.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 506-506.

Zétényi, T.
Human and nonhuman systems are adaptive in a different sense.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 507-507.

AUTHOR’S RESPONSE

Anderson, J.R.
More on rational analysis.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 508-518.

CONTINUING COMMENTARY on Buss, D.M.
Sex differences in human mate preferences: Evolutionary hypotheses tested in 37 cultures.
BBS 1989 12: 1-49.

Chisholm, J.S.
Whose reproductive value?
BBS 1991 14 (3): 519-519.

AUTHOR’S RESPONSE

Buss, D.M.
Mate selection for good parenting skills.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 520-521.

CONTINUING COMMENTARY on Deregowski, J.B.
Real space and represented space: Cross-cultural perspectives.
BBS 1989
12: 51-119.

Pontius, A.A.
Cross-evolutionary spatial representation within stone-age ecology.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 522-522.

AUTHOR’S RESPONSE

Deregowski, J.B.
“Stone-age” data: Wider implications and greater difficulties.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 523-524.

CONTINUING COMMENTARY on Rushton, J.P.
Genetic similarity, human altruism, and group selection.
BBS 1989 12: 503-559.

Jaffe, K.
Genetic similarity, human altruism, and group selection: A study of the open peer commentaries.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 525-525.

AUTHOR’S RESPONSE

Rushton, J.P.
Ethnic nepotism in science?
BBS 1991 14 (3): 526-526.

Editorial Commentary

Genetic similarity, human altruism, and group selection.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 526-526.

CONTINUING COMMENTARY on Falk, D.
Brain evolution in Homo: The radiator theory.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 527-527.

Fialkowski, K.R.
The mechanism of the origin of human intelligence may be underrated in current estimates.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 527-527.

Pickford, M.
Radiators and big brains in walkie-talkie primates.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 528-528.

AUTHOR’S RESPONSE

Falk, D.
More on the radiator.
BBS 1991 14 (3): 529-529.

Volume 14 – Issue 04 – December 1991

TARGET ARTICLE

Greenfield, P.M.
Language, tools, and brain: The ontogeny and phylogeny of hierarchically organized sequential behavior.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 531-550.

OPEN PEER COMMENTARY

Anderson, J.R.
Making the best use of primate tool use?
BBS 1991 14 (4): 551-551.

Bickerton, D.
Syntax is more complex than it seems.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 552-552.

Bloom, P.
What does language acquisition tell us about language evolution?
BBS 1991 14 (4): 553-553.

Connolly, K.J., Manoel, E.D.
Hierarchies and tool-using strategies.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 554-554.

Deacon, T.W.
Anatomy of hierarchical information processing.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 555-556.

Fragaszy, D.M.
A comparative view of object combination and tool use: Moving ahead.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 557-557.

Fuster, J.M.
Up and down the frontal hierarchies: Whither Broca’s area?
BBS 1991 14 (4): 557-557.

Gardner, R.A.. Gardner, B.T.
Absence of evidence and evidence of absence.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 558-559.

Gibson, K.R.
Continuity versus discontinuity theories of the evolution of human and animal minds.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 560-560.

Golinkoff, R.M., Hirshpase, K., Reeves, L.
Have your module and eat it too!
BBS 1991 14 (4): 560-560.

Gómez, J.C., Sarriá, E.
Gestures, persons and communication: Sociocognitive factors in the development and evolution of linguistic abilities.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 561-562.

Grafman, J., Hendler, J.
Planning and the brain.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 563-563.

Hauser, M.D.
If you’ve got it why not flaunt it? Monkeys with Broca’s area but no syntactical structure to their vocal utterances.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 564-564.

Jacobs, B.
Neurobiology and language acquisition: Continuity and identity.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 564-564.

Karmiloff-Smith, A., Johnson, M.H.
Constructivism without tears.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 565-565.

Lieberman, P.
Speech and brain evolution.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 566-567.

MacNeilage, P.F.
Linguistic and manuel evolution.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 568-569.

Matsuzawa, T.
Nesting cups and metatools in chimpanzees.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 570-571.

Noble, W., Davidson, I.
Evolving remembrance of times past and future: Braining behavior.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 572-572.

Powers, D.M.W.
Goal directed behavior in the sensory-motor and language hierarchies.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 572-573.

Rolfe, L.
Hierarchical organization in grammar.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 574-574.

Thatcher, R.W.
Are rhythms of human cerebral development “traveling waves”?
BBS 1991 14 (4): 575-575.

Tomasello, M.
Objects are analogous to words, not phonemes or grammatical categories.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 575-575.

Wynn, T.
The comparative simplicity of tool-use and its implications for human evolution.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 576-576.

AUTHOR’S RESPONSE

Greenfield, P.M.
From hand to mouth.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 577-596.

TARGET ARTICLE

Crain, S.
Language acquisition in the absence of experience.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 597-611.

OPEN PEER COMMENTARY

Berman, R.A.
In defence of development.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 612-612.

Brothers, L., Raleigh, M.J.
Simians, space and syntax: Parallels between human language and primate social cognition.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 613-613.

Cairns, H.S.
Not in the absence of experience.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 614-614.

Culicover, P.W.
Innate knowledge and linguistics principles.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 615-615.

Devillier, J.
Syntactic parameter hunting: Little scavengers might get lost.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 616-616.

Dodd, D., Fogel, A.
Non-innatist alternatives to the negative evidence hypothesis.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 617-617.

Freidin, R.
Linguistic theory and language acquisition: A note on structure-dependence.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 618-618.

Goldin-Meadow, S.
Is “innate” another name for “developmentally resilient”?
BBS 1991 14 (4): 619-619.

Goodluck, H.
Language development: Relatives to the rescue!
BBS 1991 14 (4): 620-620.

Grant, J., Karmiloff-Smith, A.
Diagnostics for domain-specific constraints.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 621-621.

Harris, C.L.
Alternatives to linguistic arbitrariness.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 622-622.

Hyams, N.
Early emergence of linguistic knowledge: How early?
BBS 1991 14 (4): 623-623.

Lasnik, H.
Language acquisition and two types of constraints.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 624-624.

Leonard, L.B.
Early emergence as a diagnostic for innateness.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 625-625.

Lowenthal, F.
Logic and language acquisition.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 626-626.

Mccawley, J.D.
“Negative evidence” and the gratuitous leap from principles to parameters.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 627-627.

Pierce, A.E.
Acquisition errors in the absence of experience.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 628-628.

Powers, D.M.W.
Language acquisition in the absence of proof of absence of experience.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 628-629.

Roeper, T.
We need a team of gene-mappers, not principle-provers.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 630-630.

Samet, J., Tager-Flusberg, H.
Maturation, emergence, and performance.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 631-632.

Schlesinger, I.M.
Innate universals do not solve the negative feedback problem.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 633-633.

Slobin, D.I.
Can Crain constrain the constraints?
BBS 1991 14 (4): 633-634.

Sokolov, J.L., Snow, C.E.
A premature retreat to nativism.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 635-635.

Wasow, T.
Debatable constraints.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 636-636.

Weinberg, A.
Parameter setting and early emergence.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 637-637.

Wilkins, W.
Autonomy and the nature of the input.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 638-638.

AUTHOR’S RESPONSE

Crain, S.
Charting the course of language development.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 639-650.

TARGET ARTICLE

Velmans, S.
Is human information processing conscious?
BBS 1991 14 (4): 651-668.

OPEN PEER COMMENTARY

Baars, B.J.
A curious coincidence? Consciousness as an object of scientific scrutiny fits our personal experience remarkably well.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 669-669.

Block, N.
Evidence against epiphenomenalism.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 670-671.

Bowers, K.S.
(Un)conscious influences in everyday life and cognitive research.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 672-672.

Carlson, R.A.
Consciousness and content in learning: Missing or misconceived?
BBS 1991 14 (4): 673-673.

Corteen, R.S.
Consciousness and making choices.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 674-674.

Dixon, N.F.
Hydrocephalus and “misapplied competence”: Awkward evidence for or against?
BBS 1991 14 (4): 675-675.

Dagenbach, D.
On the premature demise of causal functions for consciousness in human information processing.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 675-675.

Dretske, F.
Conscious acts and their objects.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 676-676.

Economos, J.
Observing protocol.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 677-677.

Foulkes, D.
Dream processing.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 678-678.

Gardiner, J.M.
Memory with and without recollective experience.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 678-678.

Gregson, R.A.M.
Has consciousness a sharp edge?
BBS 1991 14 (4): 679-679.

Gray, J.A.
What is the relation between language and consciousness.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 679-679.

Hardcastle, V.G.
Epiphenomenalism and the reduction of experience.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 680-680.

Inhoff, A.W.
Limits of preconscious processing.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 680-681.

Kinsbourne, M.
Velmans’s overfocused perspective on consciousness.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 682-682.

Keane, M.T.
Consciousness, analogy and creativity.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 682-682.

Klein, R.
Is consciousness information processing?
BBS 1991 14 (4): 683-683.

Koch, C., Crick, F.
Understanding awareness at the neuronal level.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 683-684.

Libet, B.
Conscious functions and brain processes.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 685-685.

Lloyd, D.
Consciousness: Only introspective hindsight?
BBS 1991 14 (4): 686-686.

MaKay, W.A.
Consciousness is king of the neuronal processors.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 687-687.

Mandler, G.
The processing of information is not conscious, but its products often are.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 688-688.

Mangan, B.
Epi-arguments for epiphenomenalism.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 689-689.

Navon, D.
The function of consciousness or of information?
BBS 1991 14 (4): 690-690.

Rey, G.
Reasons for doubting the existence of even epiphenomenal consciousness.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 691-691.

Schaeken, W., d’Ydewalle, G.
Isn’t the first-person perspective a bad third-person perspective?
BBS 1991 14 (4): 692-692.

Reznick, J.S., Zelazo, P.D.
A limitation of the reflex-arc approach to consciousness.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 692-692.

Shevrin, H.
A lawful first-person psychology involving a causal consciousness: A psychoanalytic solution.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 693-693.

Sloman, A.
Developing concept of consciousness.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 694-694.

Spiegel, D.
Dissociating consciousness from cognition.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 695-695.

Stanovich, K.E.
Damn! There goes that ghost again!
BBS 1991 14 (4): 696-697.

Underwood, G.
Attention is necessary for word integration.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 698-698.

Van Gulick, R.
Consciousness may still have a processing role to play.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 699-699.

Wagstaff, G.F.
No conscious or co-conscious?
BBS 1991 14 (4): 700-700.

Wilson, T.D.
Consciousness: Limited but consequential.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 701-701.

Editorial Commentary

Is human information processing conscious.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 701-701.

AUTHOR’S RESPONSE

Velmans, M.
Consciousness from a first-person perspective.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 702-726.

CONTINUING COMMENTARY on Grünbaum, A.
Multiple book review of The foundations of psychoanalysis: A philosophical critique.
BBS 1986 9: 217-284.

Rakover, S.S.
Tallying the “tally argument”: What next?
BBS 1991 14 (4): 727-728.

AUTHOR’S RESPONSE

Grünbaum, A.
Etiology and therapy in psychoanalytic theory.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 729-731.

CONTINUING COMMENTARY on Verleger, R.
Event-related potentials and cognition: A critique of the context updating hypothesis and an alternative interpretation of P3.

BBS 1988 11: 343-427.

Johnson, M., Anderson, M.
What can evoked potentials tell us about cognition?
BBS 1991 14 (4): 732-732.

Ullsperger, P., Baldeweg, T.
Interpretation of P300 amplitude changes by the use of adaptation level theory.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 733-733.

AUTHOR’S RESPONSE

Verleger, R.
Event-related potentials and cognition: On unexpected events and on the utility of event-related potentials.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 734-734.

PRECOMMENTARY AUTHORS’ RESPONSE

Donchin, E., Coles, M.G.H.
Behavior, cognition and event-related brain potentials.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 735-738.

CONTINUING COMMENTARY on Thagard, P.
Explanatory coherence.
BBS 1989 12: 435-502.

Callen, C.R.
Explanatory coherence and fact-finding.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 739-739.

Chater, N.
Network and direct methods of maximising harmony.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 740-741.

Downes, S.M.
Empirical investigation or rational reconstruction?
BBS 1991 14 (4): 742-742.

Roberts, L., Gorman, M.E.
The emperor’s new epistemology.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 743-744.

AUTHOR’S RESPONSE

Thagard, P.
Defending explanatory coherence.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 745-747.

CONTINUING COMMENTARY on Caporael, L.R., Dawes, R.M., Orbell, J.M., Van Dekragt, A.J.C.
Selfishness examined: Cooperation in the absence of egoistic incentives.
BBS 1989 12: 683-739.

Eisenberg, N.
An explanatory mechanism that merits more attention.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 749-749.

Schubert, G.
Sociobiology’s bully pulpit: Romancing the gene.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 749-749.

AUTHOR’S RESPONSE

Caporael, L.
Obstacles to expanding human evolutionary theory.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 750-750.

CONTINUING COMMENTARY on Dawkins, M.S. With Precommentary by Singer, P.

From an animal’s point of view: Motivation, fitness, and animal welfare.
BBS 1990 13: 1-61.

Bekoff, M.
The animal’s point of view, animal welfare, and some other related matters.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 753-755.

Everill, B.
Humans’ use of animals: On the horns of a moral dilemma.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 756-756.

Gray, J.A.
On strangerism and speciesism.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 756-756.

Hollands, C.
Toward positive animal welfare.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 757-757.

Rushen, J.
Assessing animal welfare: Design versus performance criteria.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 758-758.

PRECOMMENTARY AUTHOR’S RESPONSE

Singer, P.
The pervasiveness of species bias.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 759-760.

CONTINUING COMMENTARY on Näätänen, R.
The role of attention in auditory information processing as revealed by event-related potentials and other brain measures of cognitive function.
BBS 1990 13: 201-288.

Alain, C., Achim, A., Richer, F.
Matching cannot account for context effects on the attention-related negative potential.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 761-761.

Kranda, K.
Responding to attention.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 762-762.

Port, R.F.
Can complex temporal patterns be automatized?
BBS 1991 14 (4): 762-763.

AUTHOR’S RESPONSE

Näätänen, R.
Mismatch and processing negativities in auditory stimulus processing and selection: Authors response.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 764-767.

CONTINUING COMMENTARY on Tsotsos, J.K.
Analyzing vision at the complexity level.
BBS 1990 13: 423-469.

Kube, P.R.
Unbounded visual search is not both biologically plausible and NP-complete.
BBS 1991 14 (4): 768-769.

AUTHOR’S RESPONSE

Tsotsos, J.K.
Is complexity theory appropriate for analyzing biological systems?
BBS 1991 14 (4): 770-770.