Volume
22 – Issue
TARGET ARTICLE
Levelt, Willem J.M.,
Roelofs, Ardi, Meyer, Antje S.
A theory of
lexical access in speech production.
BBS 1999 22 (1): 1-38.
OPEN PEER COMMENTARY
Bowers, Jeffrey S.
Grossberg and colleagues solved the hyperonym
problem over a decade ago.
BBS 1999 22 (1): 38-39.
Carr,
Thomas H.
How does weaver pay attention?
BBS 1999 22 (1): 39-40.
Cutler, Anne, Norris,
Dennis.
Sharpening
Ockham's razor.
BBS 1999 22 (1): 40-41.
Dell, Gary S, Ferreira, Victor S, Bock,
Kathryn.
Binding, attention, and exchanges.
BBS 1999 22 (1): 41-42.
Ferrand,
Ludovic.
Applying Ockham's chainsaw in modeling speech production.
BBS 1999 22 (1): 42-43.
Ferreira, Fernanda.
Prosody and
word production.
BBS 1999 22 (1): 43-44.
Gordon, Peter C.
Naming versus referring in the selection of words.
BBS 1999 22 (1): 44-44.
Harley,
Trevor A.
Will one stage and no feedback suffice in lexicalization?
BBS 1999 22 (1): 45-45.
Hirst, Graeme.
What exactly
are lexical concepts?
BBS 1999 22 (1): 45-46.
Jacobs, Arthur M., Grainger, Jonathan.
Modeling a theory without a model theory, or,
computational modeling “after Feyerabend.”
BBS 1999 22 (1): 46-47.
Jescheniak,
J.D., Schriefers, H.
Strictly discrete serial stages and contextual appropriateness.
BBS 1999 22 (1): 47-48.
Kawamoto, Alan H.
Incremental
encoding and incremental articulation in speech production: Evidence based on
response latency and initial segment duration.
BBS 1999 22 (1): 48-49.
Kelly, Michael H.
Indirect representation of grammatical class at the
lexeme level.
BBS 1999 22 (1): 49-50.
Müller,
Horst M.
The lexicon from a neurophysiological view.
BBS 1999 22 (1): 50-51.
O’Seaghdha, Padraig G.
Parsimonious
feedback.
BBS 1999 22 (1): 51-52.
Pulvermuller, Friedemann.
Lexical access as a brain mechanism.
BBS 1999 22 (1): 52-54.
Roberts,
Benjamin, Kalish, Mike, Hird, Kathryn, Kirsner, Kim.
Decontextualised data IN, decontextualised theory OUT.
BBS 1999 22 (1): 54-55.
Constraining
production theories: Principled motivation, consistency, homunculi,
underspecification, failed predictions, and contrary data.
BBS 1999 22 (1): 55-56.
Semenza, Carlo, Luzzatti, Claudio,
Mondini, Sara.
Lemma theory and aphasiology.
BBS 1999 22 (1): 56-56.
Starreveld,
Peter A., Heij,
What about phonological facilitation, response-set membership,
and phonological coactivation?
BBS 1999 22 (1): 56-58.
Vigliocco, Gabriella,
Zorzi, Marco.
Contact
points between lexical retrieval and sentence production.
BBS 1999 22 (1): 58-59.
Wheeldon, Linda R.
Competitive processes during word-form encoding.
BBS 1999 22 (1): 59-60.
Zorzi,
Marco, Vigliocco, Gabriella.
Compositional semantics and the lemma dilemma.
BBS 1999 22 (1): 60-61.
AUTHORS’ RESPONSE
Levelt, Willem J.M.,
Roelofs, Ardi, Meyer, Antje S.
Multiple
perspectives on word production.
BBS 1999 22 (1): 61-69.
TARGET ARTICLE
Caplan, David, Waters, Gloria S.
Verbal working memory and sentence comprehension.
BBS 1999 22 (1): 77-94.
OPEN
PEER COMMENTARY
Andrews,
Glenda, Halford, Graeme S.
Complexity effects are found in all relative-clause sentence
forms.
BBS 1999 22 (1): 95-95.
Bánréti, Zoltán.
Interfaces
in memory.
BBS 1999 22 (1): 96-96.
Bates, Elizabeth, Dick, Frederic, Wulfeck,
Beverly.
Not so fast: Domain-general factors can account for
selective deficits in grammatical processing.
BBS 1999 22 (1): 96-97.
Christiansen,
Morten H., MacDonald, Maryellen C.
Fractionated working memory: Even in pebbles, it's still a soup
stone.
BBS 1999 22 (1): 97-98.
Ferreira, Fernanda.
Distinguishing
interpretive and post-interpretive processes.
BBS 1999 22 (1): 98-99.
Friston, Karl J.
Modularity, segregation, and interactions.
BBS 1999 22 (1): 99-100.
Gibson,
Edward, Roberts, Rose.
Interpretative and post-interpretative processes in sentence
comprehension.
BBS 1999 22 (1): 100-101.
Kane, Michael J., Conway,
Andrew R.A., Engle, Randall W.
What do
working-memory tests really measure?
BBS 1999 22 (1): 101-102.
Kemper, Susan, Kemtes, Karen A.
The age invariance of working memory measures and
noninvariance of producing complex syntax.
BBS 1999 22 (1): 102-103.
Kolk,
Herman H.H.J., Hartsuiker, Robert J.
Aphasia, prefrontal dysfunction, and the use of word-order
strategies.
BBS 1999 22 (1): 103-103.
Kotz, Sonja A., von
Cramon, D. Yves.
Is it timing
after all?
BBS 1999 22 (1): 103-104.
Kutas, Marta, King, Jonathan W.
In-line measures of syntactic processing using
event-related brain potentials.
BBS 1999 22 (1): 104-105.
Lewis,
Richard L.
Accounting for the fine structure of syntactic working memory:
Similarity-based interference as a unifying principle.
BBS 1999 22 (1): 105-106.
Martin, Randi C.
Further
fractionations of verbal working memory.
BBS 1999 22 (1): 106-107.
McCarthy, Rosaleen A.,
Backtracking? Rehearsing and replaying some old arguments
about short-term memory.
BBS 1999 22 (1): 107-108.
Miyake,
Akira, Emerson, Michael J., Friedman, Naomi P.
Good interactions are hard to find.
BBS 1999 22 (1): 108-109.
Pearlmutter, Neal J.
Problems with plausibility and alternatives to
working memory.
BBS 1999 22 (1): 109-109.
Toomela,
Aaro, Allik, Jüri.
Components of verbal working memory.
BBS 1999 22 (1): 110-110.
Towse, John N., Hitch,
Graham J., Hutton, Una.
The Resource
King is dead! Long live the Resource King!
BBS 1999 22 (1): 111-111.
Walenski, Matthew, Swinney, David.
Sources of variability in correlating syntactic
complexity and working memory.
BBS 1999 22 (1): 112-112.
Whitney,
Paul, Budd, Desiree.
A separate language-interpretation resource: Premature
fractionation?
BBS 1999 22 (1): 113-113.
Wingfield, Arthur.
Working
memory and sentence comprehension: Whose burden of proof?
BBS 1999 22 (1): 113-114.
AUTHORS’ RESPONSE
Caplan, David, Waters, Gloria.
Issues regarding general and domain-specific
resources.
BBS 1999 22 (1): 114-122.
TARGET
ARTICLE
O’Brien,
Gerard, Opie, Jonathan.
A connectionist theory of phenomenal experience.
BBS 1999 22 (1): 127-148.
OPEN PEER COMMENTARY
Carlson, Richard A.
Consciousness
and agency: Explaining what and explaining who.
BBS 1999 22 (1): 148-149.
Does explicitness help?
BBS 1999 22 (1): 149-150.
Clapin,
Hugh.
What, exactly, is explicitness?
BBS 1999 22 (1): 150-151.
Cleeremans, Axel, Jiménez,
Luis.
Stability
and explicitness: In defense of implicit representation.
BBS 1999 22 (1): 151-152.
Coltheart, Max.
Trains, planes, and brains: Attention and
consciousness.
BBS 1999 22 (1): 152-153.
Stability is not intrinsic.
BBS 1999 22 (1): 153-154.
Dulany, Donelson E.
Consciousness,
connectionism, and intentionality.
BBS 1999 22 (1): 154-155.
Ellis, Ralph.
A note on imaginability arguments: Building a
bridge to the hard solution.
BBS 1999 22 (1): 155-155.
Gilman,
Daniel.
Network stability and consciousness?
BBS 1999 22 (1): 155-156.
Kentridge,
R.W.
When is information represented explicitly in
blindsight and cerebral achromatopsia?
BBS 1999 22 (1): 156-157.
Kurthen,
Martin.
The gap into dissolution: The real story.
BBS 1999 22 (1): 157-158.
Lloyd, Dan.
Consciousness
should not mean, but be.
BBS 1999 22 (1): 158-159.
Aogáin, Eoghan Mac.
Information and appearance.
BBS 1999 22 (1): 159-160.
Mangan,
Bruce.
What's new here?
BBS 1999 22 (1): 160-161.
McDermott, Drew.
A vehicle
with no wheels.
BBS 1999 22 (1): 161-161.
Mortensen, Chris.
What about the unconscious?
BBS 1999 22 (1): 162-162.
Arguing about consciousness: A blind alley and a red herring.
BBS 1999 22 (1): 162-163.
O’Rourke, Joseph.
Why
information?
BBS 1999 22 (1): 163-164.
Perner, Josef, Dienes, Zoltan.
Higher order thinking.
BBS 1999 22 (1): 164-165.
Pólya,
Tamás, Tarnay, László.
Sorites paradox and conscious experience.
BBS 1999 22 (1): 165-165.
Reeke, George N.
Getting the
vehicle moving.
BBS 1999 22 (1): 165-166.
Schröder, Jürgen.
What has consciousness to do with explicit
representations and stable activation vectors?
BBS 1999 22 (1): 166-167.
Schwitzgebel,
Eric.
What unifies experiences generated by different parts of my
brain?
BBS 1999 22 (1): 167-168.
Taylor, John G.
The slippery
slopes of connectionist consciousness.
BBS 1999 22 (1): 168-169.
Thomas, Michael S.C., Atkinson, Anthony P.
Quantities of qualia.
BBS 1999 22 (1): 169-170.
Van
Gulick, Robert.
Vehicles, processes, and neo-classical revival.
BBS 1999 22 (1): 170-171.
van Heuveln, Bram, Dietrich, Eric.
Brute association is not identity.
BBS 1999 22 (1): 171-171.
Velmans,
Max.
Neural activation, information, and phenomenal consciousness.
BBS 1999 22 (1): 172-173.
Vinter, Annie, Perruchet,
Pierre.
What about
consciousness during learning?
BBS 1999 22 (1): 173-173.
Wolters, Gezinus, Phaf, R. Hans.
Constructing consciousness.
BBS 1999 22 (1): 174-174.
Zorzi,
Marco, Umiltà, Carlo.
Priming in neglect is problematic for linking consciousness to
stability.
BBS 1999 22 (1): 174-175.
AUTHORS’ RESPONSE
O’Brien, Gerard, Opie, Jonathan.
Putting content into a vehicle theory of
consciousness.
BBS 1999 22 (1): 175-192.
CONTINUING
COMMENTARY on Block, N.
On
a confusion about a function of consciousness.
BBS 1995 18: 227-287.
Kurthen,
Martin, Grunwald, Thomas, Elger, Christian E.
Consciousness as a social construction.
BBS 1999 22 (1): 197-199.
AUTHOR’S RESPONSE
Block, Ned.
Ridiculing social
constructivism about phenomenal consciousness.
BBS 1999 22 (1): 199-201.
Volume 22 – Issue
TARGET ARTICLE
Campbell, Anne.
Staying
alive: Evolution, culture, and women's intrasexual aggression.
BBS 1999 22 (2): 203-214.
OPEN PEER COMMENTARY
Archer, John.
Risk-taking,
fear, dominance, and testosterone.
BBS 1999 22 (2): 214-215.
Beckerman, Stephen.
Violence,
sex, and the good mother.
BBS 1999 22 (2): 215-216.
Benenson, Joyce F.
Females'
desire for status cannot be measured using male definitions.
BBS 1999 22 (2): 216-217.
Betzig, Laura.
When women
win.
BBS 1999 22 (2): 217-217.
Brain, Paul F.
Aggression
in female mammals: Is it really rare?
BBS 1999 22 (2): 218-218.
Browne, Kingsley R.
The
relevance of sex differences in risk-taking to the military and the workplace.
BBS 1999 22 (2): 218-219.
Buss, David M., Duntley,
Joshua.
The
evolutionary psychology of patriarchy: Women are not passive pawns in men's
game.
BBS 1999 22 (2): 219-220.
Caporael, Linnda R.
Warrior
values and social identity.
BBS 1999 22 (2): 220-221.
Cashdan, Elizabeth.
How women
compete.
BBS 1999 22 (2): 221-221.
Charlton, Bruce G.
Social and
psychiatric implications of sex-differentials in aggression.
BBS 1999 22 (2): 221-222.
Chesney-Lind, Meda.
Contextualizing
women's violence and aggression: Beyond denial and demonization.
BBS 1999 22 (2): 222-223.
Eagly, Alice H., Wood,
Wendy.
The origins
of aggression sex differences: Evolved dispositions versus social roles.
BBS 1999 22 (2): 223-224.
Fox, Robin.
Defending
the young: Female aggression, resources, dominance, and the emptiness of
patriarchy.
BBS 1999 22 (2): 224-225.
Harris, Mary B.
Explaining
gender differences in aggression: An ambitious but inconclusive attempt.
BBS 1999 22 (2): 225-226.
Johnston, Marc A.,
Crawford, Charles B.
Stigmatizing
women's aggressive behavior: Who does it benefit and why?
BBS 1999 22 (2): 226-227.
Kendrick, Douglas T.
Saturday
night social constructivism.
BBS 1999 22 (2): 227-228.
Kruttschnitt, Candace.
Do we owe it
all to Darwin? The adequacy of evolutionary psychology as an explanation for
gender differences in aggression.
BBS 1999 22 (2): 228-229.
Lagerspetz, Kirsti M.J.
Theories of
male and female aggression.
BBS 1999 22 (2): 229-230.
MacDonald, Kevin
Individual
differences and the adaptiveness of patriarchal ideology.
BBS 1999 22 (2): 230-230.
Machalek, Richard.
Novel status
contests, archaic evolved psychologies.
BBS 1999 22 (2): 231-231.
Maestripieri, Dario,
Carroll, Kelly A.
Costs and
benefits of female aggressiveness in humans and other mammals.
BBS 1999 22 (2): 231-232.
Maxon, Stephen C.
Some
reflections on sex differences in aggression and violence.
BBS 1999 22 (2): 232-233.
McKnight, J., N.W., Bond.
How deep is
your love?
BBS 1999 22 (2): 233-234.
Mealey, Linda.
Evolutionary
models of female intrasexual competition.
BBS 1999 22 (2): 234-234.
Simpson, Jeffry A.
The dual
selection model: Questions about necessity and completeness.
BBS 1999 22 (2): 235-236.
Townsend, John Marshall
Male
dominance hierarchies and women's intrasexual competition.
BBS 1999 22 (2): 235-236.
Wang, X.T., Hertwig,
Ralph.
How is
maternal survival related to reproductive success?
BBS 1999 22 (2): 236-237.
AUTHOR’S RESPONSE
Campbell, Anne.
The last
days of discord? Evolution and culture as accounts of female–female aggression.
BBS 1999 22 (2): 237-246.
TARGET ARTICLE
Pulvermüller, Friedemann.
Words in the
brain's language.
BBS 1999 22 (2): 253-279.
OPEN PEER COMMENTARY
Bierwisch, Manfred.
Words in the
brain are not just labeled concepts.
BBS 1999 22 (2): 280-282.
Chapman, Robert M.
Function and
content words evoke different brain potentials.
BBS 1999 22 (2): 282-284.
Code, Chris.
Re-assembling the brain: Are cell
assemblies the brain's language for recovery of function?
BBS 1999 22 (2): 284-284.
Culicover, Peter W.,
Nowak, Andrzej.
The dynamics
of language.
BBS 1999 22 (2): 284-285.
Dubé, Sébastien, Cohen,
Henri.
Experimental
and theoretical evidence for a similar localization of words encoded through
different modalities.
BBS 1999 22 (2): 285-286.
Elbert, Thomas, Dobell,
Christian, Angilli, Alessandro, Stegagno, Luciano, Rockstroh, Brigitte.
Word versus
task representation in neural networks.
BBS 1999 22 (2): 286-287.
Epstein, Herman T.
Other brain
effects of words.
BBS 1999 22 (2): 287-288.
Fuster, Joaquín M.
Hebb's other
postulate at work on words.
BBS 1999 22 (2): 288-289.
Greenberg, Seth N.,
Nisslein, Monika.
Words do not
stand alone: Do not ignore a word's role when examining patterns of activation.
BBS 1999 22 (2): 289-290.
Grossi, Giordana.
Which
phonology? Evidence for a dissociation between articulatory and auditory
phonology from word-form deafness.
BBS 1999 22 (2): 290-291.
Haase, Vitor Geraldi,
Rothe-Neves, Rui.
What else
should a neurobiological theory of language account for?
BBS 1999 22 (2): 291-292.
Ivancich, J. Eric, Huyck,
Christian R., Kaplan, Stephen.
Cell
assemblies as building blocks of larger cognitive structures.
BBS 1999 22 (2): 292-293.
Ivanitsky, Alexey M.,
Nikolaev, Andrey R.
Homogeneous
neural networks cannot provide complex cognitive functions.
BBS 1999 22 (2): 293-293.
Jacobs, Arthur M., Rösler,
Frank.
Dondersian
dreams in brain-mappers' minds, or, still no cross-fertilization between mind
mappers and cognitive modelers?
BBS 1999 22 (2): 293-295.
Jorion, Paul J.M.
Thought as
word dynamics.
BBS 1999 22 (2): 295-295.
Kalbe, Elke, Thiel,
Alexander.
What, where,
and how “big” is a word?
BBS 1999 22 (2): 295-296.
Kurthen, Martin.
Semantic
typing via neuronal assemblies.
BBS 1999 22 (2): 296-297.
Miller, R.
Unifying
cell assembly theory with observations of brain dynamics.
BBS 1999 22 (2): 297-298.
Osterhout, Lee, Bersick,
Michael.
Words
[minus] sentences = ?
BBS 1999 22 (2): 298-299.
Posner, Michael I.,
DiGirolamo, Gregory J.
Flexible
neural circuitry in word processing.
BBS 1999 22 (2): 299-300.
Salmelin, Riitta,
Helenius, Päivi, Kuuka, Kari.
Only time
can tell – words in context.
BBS 1999 22 (2): 300-300.
Shillcock, Richard,
Monaghan, Padriac.
Bihemispheric
representation, foveal splitting, and visual word recognition.
BBS 1999 22 (2): 300-301.
Skrandies, Wolfgang.
Early
effects of semantic meaning on electrical brain activity.
BBS 1999 22 (2): 301-302.
Spivey, Michael, Andrews,
Mark, Richardson, Daniel.
On
computational and behavioral evidence regarding Hebbian transcortical cell
assemblies.
BBS 1999 22 (2): 302-302.
Tranel, Daniel, Damasio,
Antonio.
The
neurobiology of knowledge retrieval.
BBS 1999 22 (2): 303-303.
Tucker, Don M.
Structure
and dynamics of language representation.
BBS 1999 22 (2): 304-304.
Turnbull, William,
Carpendale, Jeremy I.M.
Locating
meaning in interaction, not in the brain.
BBS 1999 22 (2): 304-305.
Urbach, Thomas P., Davidson,
Robert E., Drake Rober .
Unifying
cell assembly theory with observations of brain dynamics.
BBS 1999 22 (2): 305-306.
van der Velde, Frank.
A spy to spy
on a spy: From type to token representation with cell assemblies.
BBS 1999 22 (2): 306-307.
AUTHOR’S RESPONSE
Pulvermüller, Friedemann.
Toward a
cognitive neuroscience of language.
BBS 1999 22 (2): 307-327.
CONTINUING COMMENTARY on Wertheim, A.H.
Motion perception during
self-motion: The direct versus inferential controversy revisited.
BBS
1994 17: 293-355.
Sauvan, Xavier M.
Are
sense-specific reference frames so mutually exclusive?
BBS 1999 22 (2): 337-338.
AUTHOR’S RESPONSE
Wertheim, A.H.
Motion
percepts: “Sense specific,” “kinematic,” or . . . ?
BBS 1999 22 (2): 338-340.
Volume 22 – Issue 03 –
June 1999
TARGET ARTICLE
Pylyshyn, Zenon.
Is vision
continuous with cognition?: The case for cognitive impenetrability of visual
perception.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 341-365.
OPEN PEER COMMENTARY
Aloimonos, Yiannis,
Fermüller, Cornelia.
Visual space
is not cognitively impenetrable.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 366-367.
Bermúdez, José Luis.
Cognitive
impenetrability, phenomenology, and nonconceptual content.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 367-368.
Bowers, Jeffrey S.
The visual
categories for letters and words reside outside any informationally
encapsulated perceptual system.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 368-369.
Bruce, Vicki, Langton,
Steve, Hill, Harold.
Complexities
of face perception and categorisation.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 369-370.
Bullier, Jean.
Visual
perception is too fast to be impenetrable to cognition.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 370-370.
Cavanagh, Patrick.
The
cognitive impenetrability of cognition.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 370-371.
Cohen, Dale J., Kubovy,
Michael.
Even feature
integration is cognitively impenetrable.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 371-372.
Crassini, Boris, Broerse,
Jack, Day, R.H., Best, Christopher J., Sparrow, W.A.
What is the
point of attempting to make a case for cognitive impenetrability of visual
perception?
BBS 1999 22 (3): 372-373.
Dannemiller, James L.,
Epstein, William.
Constraining
the use of constraints.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 373-374.
Dawson, Michael R.W.,
Piercey, C. Darren.
Better
theories are needed to distinguish perception from cognition.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 374-375.
Dresp, Birgitta.
The
cognitive impenetrability hypothesis: Doomsday for the unity of the cognitive
neurosciences?
BBS 1999 22 (3): 375-376.
Edelman, Shimon.
No
reconstruction, no impenetrability (at least not much).
BBS 1999 22 (3): 376-376.
Egeth, Howard.
The
cognitive impenetrability of visual perception: Old wine in a new bottle.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 377-377.
Gellatly, Angus.
Perception
and information processing.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 377-378.
Gentaz, Edouard, Rossetti,
Yves.
Is haptic
perception continuous with cognition?
BBS 1999 22 (3): 378-379.
Grunewald, Alexander.
Neurophysiology
indicates cognitive penetration of the visual system.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 379-380.
Hollingworth, Andrew,
Henderson, John M.
Vision and
cognition: Drawing the line.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 380-381.
Kolinsky, Régine, Morais,
José.
We all are
Rembrandt experts – or, How task dissociations in school learning effects
support the discontinuity hypothesis.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 381-382.
Krueger, Lester E.
An even
stronger case for the cognitive impenetrability of visual perception.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 382-383.
Latimer, Cyril.
Binary
oppositions and what focuses in focal attention.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 383-384.
Macmillan, Neil A.
Better ways
to study penetrability with detection theory.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 384-384.
McFarland, Dennis J.,
Cacace, Anthony T.
Defining
perception and cognition.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 385-385.
Moore, Cathleen M.
Cognitive
impenetrability of early vision does not imply cognitive impenetrability of
perception.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 385-386.
Noë, Alva, Thompson, Evan.
Seeing
beyond the modules toward the subject of perception.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 386-387.
Pani, John R.
How does low
level vision interact with knowledge?
BBS 1999 22 (3): 387-388.
Papathomas, Thomas V.
Is
perception of 3-D surface configurations cognitively penetrable?
BBS 1999 22 (3): 388-389.
Peterson, Mary A.
Knowledge
and intention can penetrate early vision.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 389-390.
Rhodes, Gillian, Kalish,
Michael L.
Cognitive
penetration: Would we know it if we saw it?
BBS 1999 22 (3): 390-391.
Rosenfeld, Azriel.
Is visual
recognition entirely impenetrable?
BBS 1999 22 (3): 391-392.
Sanocki, Thomas.
The future
of vision needs more bridges and fewer walls.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 392-393.
Schirillo, James A.
Color memory
penetrates early vision.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 393-393.
Schyns, Philippe G.
The case for
cognitive penetrability.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 394-395.
Singh, Manish, Hoffman,
Donald D.
Perception,
inference, and the veridicality of natural constraints.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 395-396.
Sowden, Paul T.
Expert
perceivers and perceptual learning.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 396-397.
Tsotsos, John K.
Attentive
selection penetrates (almost) the entire visual system.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 397-397.
Uttal, William R.
Can we
answer the unanswerable?
BBS 1999 22 (3): 397-398.
Vallortigara, Giorgio.
Segregation
and integration of information among visual modules.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 398-399.
Withagen, Rob, Michaels,
Claire F.
An
ecological approach to cognitive (im)penetrability.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 399-400.
Yeh, Su-Ling, Chen,
I-Ping.
Is early
visual processing attention impenetrable?
BBS 1999 22 (3): 400-400.
Yu, Karen.
Penetrating
the impenetrable?
BBS 1999 22 (3): 401-401.
AUTHOR’S RESPONSE
Pylyshyn, Zenon.
Vision and
cognition: How do they connect?
BBS 1999 22 (3): 401-414.
TARGET ARTICLE
Aggleton, John P., Brown,
Malcolm W.
Episodic
memory, amnesia, and the hippocampal–anterior thalamic axis.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 425-444.
OPEN PEER COMMENTARY
Bilkey, David K.
Perirhinal
cortex: Lost in space?
BBS 1999 22 (3): 444-445.
Bures, Jan, Fenton, Andre
A.
The gap
between episodic memory and experiment: Can c-fos expression replace recognition testing?
BBS 1999 22 (3): 445-446.
Burwell, Rebecca D.,
Eichenbaum, Howard.
What's new
in animal models of amnesia?
BBS 1999 22 (3): 446-447.
Dalrymple-Alford, John C.,
Gifkins, Anna M., Christie, Michael A.
Raising the
profile of the anterior thalamus.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 447-448.
Eacott, M.J.
That old
familiar feeling: On uniquely identifying the role of perirhinal cortex.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 448-449.
Foster, Jonathan K.
Hippocampus,
recognition, and recall: A new twist on some old data?
BBS 1999 22 (3): 449-450.
Gabriel, Michael, Smith,
David M.
What does
the limbic memory circuit actually do?
BBS 1999 22 (3): 451-451.
Graham, Kim S., Hodges,
John R.
Episodic
memory in semantic dementia: Implications for the roles played by the
perirhinal and hippocampal memory systems in new learning.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 452-453.
Hintzman, Douglas L.
Retrieval
dynamics and brain mechanisms.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 453-454.
Kapur, Narinder.
Neuropsychological
assumptions and implications.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 454-454.
Kesner, Raymond P.
Perirhinal
cortex and hippocampus mediate parallel processing of object and spatial
location information.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 455-455.
Knowlton, Barbara J.
Recall,
recognition, and the medial temporal lobes.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 455-456.
Krieckhaus, E.E.
Consideration
of the drive properties of the mammillary bodies solves the “fornix problem.”
BBS 1999 22 (3): 456-458.
Mair, Robert G., Burk,
Joshua A., Porter, M. Christine, Ley, Jessica E.
Thalamic
amnesia and the hippocampus: Unresolved questions and an alternative candidate.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 458-459.
Markowitsch, Hans J.
Gestalt view of the limbic system and the
Papez circuit – another approach to unity and diversity of brain structures and
functions.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 459-460.
Mayes, A.R., van Eijk, R.,
Gooding, P.A., Isaac, C.L., Holdstock, J.S.
What are the
functional deficits produced by hippocampal and perirhinal cortex lesions?
BBS 1999 22 (3): 460-461.
Mumby, Dave G.
How do
animals solve object-recognition tasks?
BBS 1999 22 (3): 461-462.
Murray, David J.
A
“presence/absence hypothesis” concerning hippocampal function.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 462-463.
Nadel, Lynn, Ryan, Lee,
Keil, Katrina, Putnam, Karen.
Episodic
memory: It's about time (and space).
BBS 1999 22 (3): 463-464.
Parker, Amanda.
Memory
systems, frontal cortex, and the hippocampal axis.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 464-465.
Pickering, Alan D.
The neural
bases of recollection and familiarity: Preliminary tests of the Aggleton–Brown
mode.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 465-466.
Treves, Alessandro.
Mere
functional characterization is not enough to understand memory circuits.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 466-467.
Whislaw, Ian Q.
The
hippocampus and path integration.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 467-467.
Witter, Menno P., Van der
Werf, Ysbrand D.
The medial
dorsal nucleus of the thalamus is not part of a hippocampal-thalamic memory
system.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 467-468.
Yonelinas, Andrew P.,
Kroll, Neal E.A., Dobbins, Ian G., Lazzara, Michele, Knight, Robert T.
The neural
substrates of recollection and familiarity.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 468-469.
Zola, Stuart M., Squire,
Larry R.
Remembering
the hippocampus.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 469-471.
AUTHORS’ RESPONSE
Aggleton, John P., Brown,
Malcolm W.
Thanks for
the memories: Extending the hippocampal-diencephalic mnemonic system.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 471-479.
TARGET ARTICLE
Depue, Richard A.,
Collins, Paul F.
Neurobiology
of the structure of personality: Dopamine, facilitation of incentive
motivation, and extraversion.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 491-517.
OPEN PEER COMMENTARY
Bond, Alan H., Raleigh,
Michael.
The
integration of motivation.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 518-519.
Cabib, Simona,
Puglisi-Allegra, Stefano.
Of genes,
environment, and destiny.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 519-520.
Corr, Philip J.
Does
extraversion predict positive incentive motivation?
BBS 1999 22 (3): 520-521.
Derryberry, Douglas, Reed,
Marjorie A.
Dopaminergic
influences beyond extraversion.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 521-521.
Fine, C., Blair, J.R.
Computations
in extraversion.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 521-523.
Gray, Jeffrey A.
But the
schizophrenia connection . . .
BBS 1999 22 (3): 523-524.
Isom, Jennifer, Heller,
Wendy.
Neurobiology
of extraversion: Pieces of the puzzle still missing.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 524-524.
Joel, Daphna.
The limbic
basal-ganglia-thalamocortical circuit and goal-directed behavior.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 525-526.
Kaplan, Bonnie J.
Toward a
cognitive neuroscience of language.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 526-527.
Katz, Leonard D.
Dopamine and
serotonin: Integrating current affective engagement with longer-term goals.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 527-527.
Kline, John P.
Anterior
asymmetry and the neurobiology of behavioral approach circuitry.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 528-528.
Lawrence, Andrew D.,
Koepp, Matthias J., Gunn, Roger N., Cunningham, Vincent J., Grasby, Paul M.
Steps to a
neurochemistry of personality.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 528-529.
Le Moal, Michel, Piazza,
Pier Vincenzo.
Reconciling
discrete psychological typology with a psychobiological continuum.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 529-530.
MacDonald, Kevin.
What about
sex differences? An adaptationist perspective on “the lines of causal
influence” of personality systems.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 530-531.
Netter,
Moderators
and mechanisms relating personality to reward and dopamine: Some findings and
open questions.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 531-532.
Oades, Robert D.
Dopamine:
Go/No-Go motivation versus switching.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 532-533.
Panksepp, Jaak.
The
affiliative playfulness and impulsivity of extraverts may not be
dopaminergically mediated.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 533-534.
Pickering, Alan D.
Personality
correlates of the dopaminergic facilitation of incentive motivation: Impulsive
sensation seeking rather than extraversion?
BBS 1999 22 (3): 534-535.
Rammsayer, Thomas H.
Dopamine and
extraversion: Differential responsivity may be the key.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 535-536.
Strauman, Timothy J.
Is
depression a dysfunction in self-regulating the brain/behavior system for
approach?
BBS 1999 22 (3): 536-537.
Townsend, John Marshall.
Extraversion,
sexual experience, and sexual emotions.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 537-538.
Tucker, Don M.
Dopamine
tightens, not loosens.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 537-538.
Vezina, Paul.
Conditioned
stimuli and the expression of extraversion: Help or hindrance?
BBS 1999 22 (3): 538-539.
Zuckerman, Marvin.
Incentive
motivation: Just extraversion?
BBS 1999 22 (3): 539-540.
AUTHORS’ RESPONSE
Depue, Richard A.,
Collins, Paul F.
On the
psychobiological complexity and stability of traits.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 541-555.
CONTINUING COMMENTARY on Müller, R.-A.
Innateness, autonomy,
universality? Neurobiological approaches.
BBS
1996 19: 611-75.
Gow, David W., Rodkin,
Philip C.
Can current
methods of pathonormal inference tell us anything about modularity?
BBS 1999 22 (3): 571-572.
Ujhelyi, Maria.
Territorial
song and facial gesture: A language precursor in apes.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 572-573.
AUTHOR’S RESPONSE
Müller, Ralph-Axel.
Toward a
cognitive neuroscience of language.
BBS 1999 22 (3): 573-574.
Volume 22 – Issue
TARGET ARTICLE
Barsalou, Lawrence W.
Perceptual
symbol systems.
BBS 1999 22 (4): 577-600.
OPEN PEER COMMENTARY
Adams, Fred, Campbell,
Kenneth.
Modality and
abstract concepts.
BBS 1999 22 (4): 610-610.
Aydede, Murat.
What makes
perceptual symbols perceptual?
BBS 1999 22 (4): 610-611.
Brewer, William F.
Perceptual
symbols: The power and limitations of a theory of dynamic imagery and
structured frames.
BBS 1999 22 (4): 611-612.
Charland, Louis C.
Perceptual
symbol systems and emotion.
BBS 1999 22 (4): 612-613.
Dennett, Daniel C., Viger,
Christopher D.
Sort-of
symbols?
BBS 1999 22 (4): 613-613.
Edelman, Shimon, Breen,
Elise M.
On the
virtues of going all the way.
BBS 1999 22 (4): 614-614.
Fauconnier, Gilles.
Creativity,
simulation, and conceptualization.
BBS 1999 22 (4): 615-615.
Freksa, Christian,
Barkowsky, Thomas, Klippel, Alexander.
Spatial
symbol systems and spatial cognition: A computer science perspective on
perception-based symbol processing.
BBS 1999 22 (4): 616-617.
Gabora, Liane.
Grounded in
perceptions yet transformed into amodal symbols.
BBS 1999 22 (4): 617-617.
Gibbs, Raymond W., Berg,
Eric A.
Embodied
metaphor in perceptual symbols.
BBS 1999 22 (4): 617-618.
Glenberg, Arthur M.
Perceptual
symbols in language comprehension.
BBS 1999 22 (4): 618-619.
Hochberg, Julian.
Perception
as purposeful inquiry: We elect where to direct each glance, and determine what
is encoded within and between glances.
BBS 1999 22 (4): 619-620.
Hurford, James R.
Individuals
are abstractions.
BBS 1999 22 (4): 620-621.
Indurkhya, Bipin.
Creativity
of metaphor in perceptual symbol systems.
BBS 1999 22 (4): 621-622.
Jorion, Paul J.M.
The uncanny
power of words.
BBS 1999 22 (4): 622-623.
Landau, Barbara.
Reinventing
a broken wheel.
BBS 1999 22 (4): 623-624.
Landauer, Thomas K.
Latent
Semantic Analysis (LSA), a disembodied learning machine, acquires human word
meaning vicariously from language alone.
BBS 1999 22 (4): 624-625.
Langacker, Ronald W.
A view from
cognitive linguistics.
BBS 1999 22 (4): 625-625.
Lowenthal, F.
Can
handicapped subjects use perceptual symbol systems?
BBS 1999 22 (4): 625-626.
Markman, Arthur B.,
Dietrich, Eric.
Whither
structured representation?
BBS 1999 22 (4): 626-627.
Development,
consciousness, and the perception/mental representation distinction.
BBS 1999 22 (4): 627-628.
Mitchell, Robert W.,
Clement, Catherine A.
Simulations,
simulators, amodality, and abstract terms.
BBS 1999 22 (4): 628-629.
Introspection
and the secret agent.
BBS 1999 22 (4): 629-629.
Oehlmann, Ruediger.
Can
metacognition be explained in terms of perceptual symbol systems?
BBS 1999 22 (4): 629-630.
Ohlsson, Stellan.
Selecting is
not abstracting.
BBS 1999 22 (4): 630-631.
Schwartz, David A.,
Weaver, Mark, Kaplan, Stephen.
A little
mechanism can go a long way.
BBS 1999 22 (4): 631-632.
Siebel, Mark.
Truth and
intra-personal concept stability.
BBS 1999 22 (4): 632-633.
Toomela, Aaro.
A perceptual
theory of knowledge: Specifying some details.
BBS 1999 22 (4): 633-634.
Wells, A.J.
External
symbols are a better bet than perceptual symbols.
BBS 1999 22 (4): 634-635.
Wiemer-Hastings, Katja,
Graesser, Arthur C.
Perceiving
abstract concepts.
BBS 1999 22 (4): 635-636.
Zwaan, Rolf A., Stanfield,
Robert A., Madden, Carol J.
Perceptual
symbols in language comprehension: Can an empirical case be made?
BBS 1999 22 (4): 636-637.
AUTHOR’S RESPONSE