Volume 25 – Issue
TARGET ARTICLE
Empathy: Its
ultimate and proximate bases.
BBS 2002 25 (1): 1-20.
OPEN PEER COMMENTARY
Ainslie, George,
Monterosso, John.
Hyperbolic
discounting lets empathy be a motivated process.
BBS 2002 25 (1): 20-21.
Anderson, Cameron,
Keltner, Dacher.
The role of
empathy in the formation and maintenance of social bonds.
BBS 2002 25 (1): 21-22.
Atkinson, Anthony P.
Emotion-specific
clues to the neural substrate of empathy.
BBS 2002 25 (1): 22-23.
Aureli, Filippo,
Schaffner, Colleen M.
Empathy as a
special case of emotional mediation of social behavior.
BBS 2002 25 (1): 23-24.
Bandura, Albert.
Reflexive
empathy: On predicting more than has ever been observed.
BBS 2002 25 (1): 24-25.
Bard, Kim A.
Developmental
processes in empathy.
BBS 2002 25 (1): 25-26
Bekoff, Marc.
Empathy:
Common sense, science sense, wolves, and well-being.
BBS 2002 25 (1): 26-27.
Blair, James R.,
Perschardt, Karina S.
Empathy: A
unitary circuit or a set of dissociable neuro-cognitive systems?
BBS 2002 25 (1): 27-28.
Brownell, Celia A, Zerwas,
Stephanie, Balaram, Geetha.
Peers,
cooperative play, and the development of empathy in children.
BBS 2002 25 (1): 28-29.
Charman, Tony.
Understanding
the imitation deficit in autism may lead to a more specific model of autism as
an empathy disorder.
BBS 2002 25 (1): 29-30.
Commons, Michael Lamport,
Wolfsont,
A complete
theory of empathy must consider stage changes.
BBS 2002 25 (1): 30-31.
Constantino, John N.
Deconstructing
empathy.
BBS 2002 25 (1): 31-32.
Too early
for a neuropsychology of empathy.
BBS 2002 25 (1): 32-33.
Eisenberg, Nancy.
Distinctions
among various modes of empathy-related reactions: A matter of importance in
humans.
BBS 2002 25 (1): 33-34.
Eslinger, Paul J., Moll,
Jorge, de Oliveira-Souza, Ricardo.
Emotional
and cognitive processing in empathy and moral behavior.
BBS 2002 25 (1): 34-35.
Gallese, Vittorio,
Ferrari, Pier Francesco, Umiltà, Maria Alessandra.
The mirror
matching system: A shared manifold for intersubjectivity.
BBS 2002 25 (1): 35-36.
Gallup, Gordon G., Platek,
Steven M.
Cognitive
empathy presupposes self-awareness: Evidence from phylogeny, ontogeny,
neuropsychology, and mental illness.
BBS 2002 25 (1): 36-37.
Gordon, Robert M.
Empathy,
simulation, and PAM.
BBS 2002 25 (1): 37-37.
Hinde, Robert A.
Emotion: The
relation between breadth of definition and explanatory power.
BBS 2002 25 (1): 37-38.
Hoffman, Martin L.
How
automatic and representational is empathy, and why.
BBS 2002 25 (1): 38-39.
Iacoboni, Marco, Lenzi,
Gian Luigi.
Mirror
neurons, the insula, and empathy.
BBS 2002 25 (1): 39-40.
Keenan, Julian Paul,
Wheeler, Mark A.
Elucidation
of the brain correlates of cognitive empathy and self-awareness.
BBS 2002 25 (1): 40-41.
Khalil, Elias L.
Similarity
versus familiarity: When empathy becomes selfish.
BBS 2002 25 (1): 41-41.
Lewis, Michael.
Empathy
requires the development of the self.
BBS 2002 25 (1): 42-42.
Mealey, Linda, Kinner,
Stuart.
The
Perception-Action Model of empathy and psychopathic “cold-heartedness.”
BBS 2002 25 (1): 42-43.
Panksepp, Jaak, Gordon,
Nakia, Burgdorf, Jeff.
Empathy and
the action-perception resonances of basic socio-emotional systems of the brain.
BBS 2002 25 (1): 43-44.
Parr, Lisa A.
Understanding
other's emotions: From affective resonance to empathic action.
BBS 2002 25 (1): 44-45.
Rochat, Philippe.
Various
kinds of empathy as revealed by the developing child, not the monkey's brain.
BBS 2002 25 (1): 45-46.
Schulkin, Jay.
Psychobiological
basis of empathy.
BBS 2002 25 (1): 46-47.
Wilson, Thomas P., Wilson,
Margaret.
Perception-action
links and the evolution of human speech exchange.
BBS 2002 25 (1): 47-48.
Zahn-Waxler, Carolyn.
Caregiving,
emotion, and concern for others.
BBS 2002 25 (1): 48-49.
AUTHORS’ RESPONSE
Empathy:
Each is in the right – hopefully, not all in the wrong.
BBS 2002 25 (1): 49-58.
TARGET ARTICLE
Norman, Joel.
Two visual
systems and two theories of perception: An attempt to reconcile the
constructivist and ecological approaches.
BBS 2002 25 (1): 73-96.
OPEN PEER COMMENTARY
Andersen, George J.
Are the
dorsal/ventral pathways sufficiently distinct to resolve perceptual theory?
BBS 2002 25 (1): 96-97.
Binstead, Gordon,
When is
movement controlled by the dorsal stream?
BBS 2002 25 (1): 97-98.
Braunstein, Myron L.
A better
understanding of inference can reconcile constructivist and direct theories.
BBS 2002 25 (1): 99-99.
Burke, Darren,
Two visual
systems but only one theory of perception.
BBS 2002 25 (1): 100-100.
Chella, Antonio.
Conceptual
space as a connection between the constructivist and the ecological approaches
in a robot vision system.
BBS 2002 25 (1): 100-101.
Cooper, Clinton, Michaels,
Claire F.
Perception,
learning, and judgment in ecological psychology: Who needs a constructivist
ventral system?
BBS 2002 25 (1): 101-102.
Cutting, James E.
Invariants
and cues.
BBS 2002 25 (1): 102-103.
de Grave, Denise D.J.,
Smeets, Jeroen B.J., Brenner, Eli.
Ecological
and constructivist approaches and the influence of illusions.
BBS 2002 25 (1): 103-104.
Ellard, Colin G.
Evolutionary
and intellectual antecedents of primate visual processing streams.
BBS 2002 25 (1): 104-105.
Elliott, Digby, Tremblay,
Luc, Welsh, Timothy N.
A fast
ventral stream or early dorsal-ventral interactions?
BBS 2002 25 (1): 105-105.
Gentaz, Edouard, Hatwell,
Yvette, Streri, Arlette.
Constructivist
and ecological approaches in tactual perception.
BBS 2002 25 (1): 106-106.
Green, Patrick R.,
Pollick, Frank E.
Recognising
actions.
BBS 2002 25 (1): 106-107.
Hochberg, Julian.
Direct
information on the cutting room floor.
BBS 2002 25 (1): 107-108.
Ingle, David.
A wider view
of the spatial mode of vision.
BBS 2002 25 (1): 108-110.
Kingdom, Frederick A.A.
On
invariant-sensitive graspers and cue-sensitive perceivers.
BBS 2002 25 (1): 110-110.
Mace, William M.
The primacy
of ecological realism.
BBS 2002 25 (1): 111-111.
Mareschal, Denis, Kaufman,
Jordy.
The dual
route hypothesis in visual cognition: Why a developmental approach is
necessary.
BBS 2002 25 (1): 111-112.
McCarley, Jason S.,
DiGirolamo, Gregory J.
One visual
system with two interacting visual streams.
BBS 2002 25 (1): 112-113.
McFarland, Dennis J.
Where does
perception end and when does action start?
BBS 2002 25 (1): 113-113.
Neisser, Ulric.
The dorsal
system and the ecological self.
BBS 2002 25 (1): 114-114.
Phillips, James G.,
Meehan, James W., Triggs, Tom J.
Two theories
of perception: Internal consistency, separability and interaction between
processing modes.
BBS 2002 25 (1): 114-115.
Postma, Albert, van der
Lubbe, Rob, Zuidhoek, Sander.
The ventral
stream offers more affordance and the dorsal stream more memory than believed.
BBS 2002 25 (1): 115-116.
Ross, Helen E.
BBS 2002 25 (1): 116-117.
Shebilske, Wayne.
Integrating
constructivist and ecological approaches.
BBS 2002 25 (1): 117-118.
Shull, J. Alex, Bingham,
Geoffrey P.
Two visual
systems must still perceive events.
BBS 2002 25 (1): 118-119.
Toates, Frederick.
BBS 2002 25 (1): 119-120.
van der Kamp, John,
Savelsbergh, Geert J.P.
On the
development of the two visual systems.
BBS 2002 25 (1): 120-120.
AUTHOR’S RESPONSE
Norman, Joel.
Adequacy and
utility of the dual-process approach to perception: Time (and research) will
tell.
BBS 2002 25 (1): 121-137.
CONTINUING COMMENTARY on
Language, tools and brain:
The ontogeny and phylogeny of hierarchically organized sequential behavior.
BBS
1991 14: 531-595.
Reilly, Ronan G.
The
relationship between object manipulation and language development in Broca's
area: A connectionist simulation of Greenfield's hypothesis.
BBS 2002 25 (1): 145-153.
AUTHOR’S RESPONSE
Greenfield, Patricia M.
Author's
Response.
BBS 2002 25 (1): 153-154.
Volume 25 – Issue 02 –
April 2002
TARGET ARTICLE
Pylyshyn, Zenon W.
Mental
imagery: In search of a theory.
BBS 2002 25 (2): 157-182.
OPEN PEER COMMENTARY
Amiri, Hedy,
Depicting
second-order isomorphism and “depictive” representations.
BBS 2002 25 (2): 182-183.
Arterberry, Martha E.,
Craver-Lemley, Catherine, Reeves, Adam.
Visual
imagery is not always like visual perception.
BBS 2002 25 (2): 183-184.
Bartolomeo, Paolo,
Chokron, Sylvie.
Can we
change our vantage point to explore imaginal neglect?
BBS 2002 25 (2): 184-185.
Burgess, Neil.
Spatial
models of imagery for remembered scenes are more likely to advance
(neuro)science than symbolic ones.
BBS 2002 25 (2): 185-186.
Chatterjee, Anjan.
Pictures,
propositions, and primitives in the head.
BBS 2002 25 (2): 186-187.
Dalla Barba, Gianfranco,
Rosenthal, Victor, Visetti, Yves-Marie.
The nature
of mental imagery: How null is the “null hypothesis”?
BBS 2002 25 (2): 187-188.
de Haan, Edward, Aleman,
André.
Mental
imagery: In search of my theory.
BBS 2002 25 (2): 188-189.
Dennett, Daniel C.
Does your
brain use the images in it, and if so, how?
BBS 2002 25 (2): 189-190.
Gold, Ian.
Interpreting
the neuroscience of imagery.
BBS 2002 25 (2): 190-191.
Goldenberg, Georg.
Loss of
visual imagery: Neuropsychological evidence in search for a theory.
BBS 2002 25 (2): 191-191.
Gosselin, Frédéric, Schyns, Philippe G.
You are
about to see pictorial representations!
BBS 2002 25 (2): 191-192.
Gottesmann, Claude.
Mental
imagery during sleep.
BBS 2002 25 (2): 193-193.
Gottschling, Verena.
Functional
versus real space: Is pictorialism hopeless?
BBS 2002 25 (2): 193-194.
Grossberg, Stephen.
Neural
substrates of visual percepts, imagery, and hallucinations.
BBS 2002 25 (2): 194-195.
Ingle, David.
Problems
with a “cortical screen” for visual imagery.
BBS 2002 25 (2): 195-196.
Intons-Peterson, Margaret
Jean.
How do we
define “sameness” of the processing of mental images and general reasoning
processes?
BBS 2002 25 (2): 196-197.
Jüttner,
Martin, Rentschler, Ingo.
Imagery in
multi-modal object learning.
BBS 2002 25 (2): 197-198.
Kosslyn, Stephen M.,
Thompson, William L., Ganis, Giorgio.
Mental
imagery doesn't work like that.
BBS 2002 25 (2): 198-200.
Meyer, Glenn E.
Single cells
in the visual system and images past.
BBS 2002 25 (2): 200-201.
Millar, Susanna.
Imagery and
blindness.
BBS 2002 25 (2): 201-202.
Niall, Keith K.
Visual
imagery and geometric enthymeme: The example of Euclid I.1.
BBS 2002 25 (2): 202-203.
Nijhawan, Romi, Khurana,
Beena.
Motion,
space, and mental imagery.
BBS 2002 25 (2): 203-204.
Olivetti Belardinelli,
Marta, Di Matteo, Rosalia.
Is mental
imagery prominently visual?
BBS 2002 25 (2): 204-205.
Pani, John R.
Mental
imagery is simultaneously symbolic and analog.
BBS 2002 25 (2): 205-206.
Petrusic, William M.,
Baranski, Joseph V.
Mental
imagery in memory psychophysics.
BBS 2002 25 (2): 206-207.
Polimeni, Jonathan,
Schwartz, Eric.
Neural
representation of sensory data.
BBS 2002 25 (2): 207-208.
Raab, Markus, Boschker,
Marc.
Time
matters! Implications from mentally imaged motor actions.
BBS 2002 25 (2): 208-209.
Slezak, Peter P.
The imagery
debate: Déjà-vu all over again?
BBS 2002 25 (2): 209-210.
Sokolov, Evgeni N.
Neuronal
basis of imagery.
BBS 2002 25 (2): 210-210.
Thomas, Nigel J.T.
The false
dichotomy of imagery.
BBS 2002 25 (2): 211-211.
Toth, Jozsef A.
When is
enough enough? The integration of competing scientific agendas.
BBS 2002 25 (2): 212-213.
van der Velde, Frank, de
Kamps, Marc.
Involvement
of a visual blackboard architecture in imagery.
BBS 2002 25 (2): 213-214.
Wright,
A visual
registration can be coloured without being a picture.
BBS 2002 25 (2): 214-214.
Zaidi, Qasim, Griffiths,
A. Fuzz.
Generic
assumptions shared by visual perception and imagery.
BBS 2002 25 (2): 215-216.
AUTHOR’S RESPONSE
Pylyshyn, Zenon W.
Stalking the
elusive mental image screen.
BBS 2002 25 (2): 216-227.
TARGET ARTICLE
Rachlin, Howard.
Altruism and
selfishness.
BBS 2002 25 (2): 239-250.
OPEN PEER COMMENTARY
Ainslie, George, Haslam,
Nick.
Altruism is
a primary impulse, not a discipline.
BBS 2002 25 (2): 251-251.
Alexander, J. McKenzie.
Behaviorism
and altruistic acts.
BBS 2002 25 (2): 252-252.
Baron, Jonathan.
Rationality
and illusion.
BBS 2002 25 (2): 252-253.
Broude, Gwen J.
Can't we all
just be altruistic?
BBS 2002 25 (2): 253-254.
Buck, Ross.
“Choice” and
“emotion” in altruism: Reflections on the morality of justice versus the
morality of caring.
BBS 2002 25 (2): 254-255.
Carlo, Gustavo, Bevins,
Rick A.
The need for
proximal mechanisms to understand individual differences in altruism.
BBS 2002 25 (2): 255-256.
Danielson, Peter.
Learning to
cooperate: Reciprocity and self-control.
BBS 2002 25 (2): 256-257.
Fantino, Edmund J.,
Stolarz-Fantino, Stephanie J.
The role of
negative reinforcement; or: Is there an altruist in the house?
BBS 2002 25 (2): 257-258.
Gintis, Herbert.
Altruism and
emotions.
BBS 2002 25 (2): 258-259.
Grace, Randolph C.,
McLean, Anthony, Bragason, Orn.
Can altruism
be understood in terms of socially-discounted extrinsic reinforcement?
BBS 2002 25 (2): 259-260.
Gray, Jeremy R., Braver,
Todd S.
Cognitive
control in altruism and self-control: A social cognitive neuroscience
perspective.
BBS 2002 25 (2): 260-260.
Grim, Patrick.
The basic
questions: What is reinforced? What is selected?
BBS 2002 25 (2): 261-261.
Hartung, John.
So be good
for goodness' sake.
BBS 2002 25 (2): 261-262.
Hinde, Robert A.
Reinforcement
stretched beyond its limit.
BBS 2002 25 (2): 262-263.
Kaplan, Stephen, De Young,
Raymond.
Toward a
better understanding of prosocial behavior: The role of evolution and directed
attention.
BBS 2002 25 (2): 263-264.
Khalil, Elias L.
Is the
prisoner's dilemma metaphor suitable for altruism? Distinguishing self-control
and commitment from altruism.
BBS 2002 25 (2): 264-265.
Krebs, Dennis L.
Adaptive
altruistic strategies.
BBS 2002 25 (2): 265-266.
Krueger, Joachim I.,
Acevedo, Melissa.
Why
cooperate? Social projection as a cognitive mechanism that helps us do good
BBS 2002 25 (2): 266-266.
Lacey, Hugh.
Teleological
behaviorism and altruism.
BBS 2002 25 (2): 266-267.
Levine, David K.
An
economist's perspective on altruism and selfishness.
BBS 2002 25 (2): 267-268.
Lewis, Michael.
Altruism is
never self-sacrifice.
BBS 2002 25 (2): 268-268.
Margolis, Howard.
Altruism and
Darwinian rationality.
BBS 2002 25 (2): 269-270.
Perugini, Marco.
What is an
altruistic action?
BBS 2002 25 (2): 270-271.
Read, Daniel.
Altruism:
Brand management or uncontrollable urge?
BBS 2002 25 (2): 271-271.
Schuster, Richard.
Altruism is
a social behavior.
BBS 2002 25 (2): 272-274.
Sedikides, Constantine,
Gregg, Aiden P.
Internal
mechanisms that implicate the self enlighten the egoism-altruism debate.
BBS 2002 25 (2): 274-275.
Sobel, Joel.
Putting
altruism in context.
BBS 2002 25 (2): 275-276.
Stukas, Arthur A., Platow,
Michael J., Foddy, Margaret.
The role of
social and cognitive factors in the production of altruism.
BBS 2002 25 (2): 276-277.
van der Steen, Wim J.
Dissolving
the elusiveness of altruism.
BBS 2002 25 (2): 277-278.
Wagstaff, Graham F.
Altruism,
self-control, and justice: What Aristotle really said.
BBS 2002 25 (2): 278-279.
Wedekind, Claus.
Valuable
reputation gained by altruistic behavioral patterns.
BBS 2002 25 (2): 279-280.
Weirich, Paul.
Decisions to
follow a rule.
BBS 2002 25 (2): 280-281.
Wilson, David Sloan,
Miller, Ralph R.
Altruism,
evolutionary psychology, and learning.
BBS 2002 25 (2): 281-282.
Zentall, Thomas R.
A
potentially testable mechanism to account for altruistic behavior.
BBS 2002 25 (2): 282-282.
Zizzo, Daniel John.
From
reinforcement of acts to reinforcement of social preferences.
BBS 2002 25 (2): 282-283.
Zuidema, Willem.
The
importance of social learning in the evolution of cooperation and
communication.
BBS 2002 25 (2): 283-284.
AUTHOR’S RESPONSE
Rachlin, Howard.
Altruism is
a form of self-control.
BBS 2002 25 (2): 284-291.
Volume 25 – Issue 03 –
June 2002
TARGET ARTICLE
Perruchet, Pierre, Vinter,
Annie.
The
self-organizing consciousness.
BBS 2002 25 (3): 297-330
OPEN PEER COMMENTARY
Barrouillet, Pierre,
Markovits, Henry.
Is the
self-organizing consciousness framework compatible with human deductive
reasoning?
BBS 2002 25 (3): 330-331.
Bartolomeo, Paolo, Dalla
Barba, Gianfranco.
Varieties of
consciousness.
BBS 2002 25 (3): 331-332.
Bornstein, Robert F.
Consciousness
organizes more than itself: Findings from subliminal mere exposure research.
BBS 2002 25 (3): 332-333.
Carlson, Richard A.
Mentalism,
information, and consciousness.
BBS 2002 25 (3): 333-333.
Dandurand, Frédéric, Shultz, Thomas R.
Modeling
consciousness.
BBS 2002 25 (3): 334-334.
Destrebecqz, Arnaud,
Cleeremans, Axel.
The self-organizing
conundrum.
BBS 2002 25 (3): 334-335.
Dienes, Zoltan, Perner,
Josef.
What sort of
representation is conscious?
BBS 2002 25 (3): 336-337.
Dulany, Donelson E.
Mentalistic
metatheory and strategies.
BBS 2002 25 (3): 337-338
Ellis, Ralph D.
The limited
roles of unconscious computation and representation in self-organizational
theories of mind.
BBS 2002 25 (3): 338-339.
French, Robert M.
Natura
non facit saltum:
The need for the full continuum of mental representations.
BBS 2002 25 (3): 339-340.
Holender, Daniel,
Duscherer, Katia.
Unconscious
semantic access: A case against a hyperpowerful unconscious.
BBS 2002 25 (3): 340-341.
Houdé,
Olivier.
Consciousness
and unconsciousness of logical reasoning errors in the human brain.
BBS 2002 25 (3): 341-341.
Jiménez,
Luis.
Surfing on
consciousness, or, a deliberately shallow outline of cognition.
BBS 2002 25 (3): 342-342.
Keisler, Aysha S.,
Willingham, Daniel T.
Unconscious
abstraction in motor learning.
BBS 2002 25 (3): 342-343.
Kurthen, Martin.
The
conscious and the unconscious: A package deal.
BBS 2002 25 (3): 343-344.
Lambert, Anthony J.
The reported
demise of the cognitive unconscious is premature.
BBS 2002 25 (3): 344-345
Litman, Leonid, Reber,
Arthur S.
Rules,
abstractions, and evolution.
BBS 2002 25 (3): 345-346.
Manzotti, Riccardo,
Sandini, Giulio.
What does
“isomorphism between conscious representations and the structure of the world”
mean?
BBS 2002 25 (3): 346-347.
Murray, David J.
The SOC
framework and short-term memory.
BBS 2002 25 (3): 347-348.
O’Brien, Gerard, Opie,
Jon.
The
computational baby, the classical bathwater, and the middle way.
BBS 2002 25 (3): 348-349.
Parisse, Christophe,
Cohen, Henri.
Oral and
visual language are not processed in like fashion: Constraints on the products
of the SOC.
BBS 2002 25 (3): 349-350.
Phillips, Steven.
Neo-associativism:
Limited learning transfer without binding symbol representations.
BBS 2002 25 (3): 350-351.
Redington, Martin.
Associative
learning: A generalisation too far.
BBS 2002 25 (3): 351-352.
Rivera-Gaxiola, Maritza,
Silva-Pereyra, Juan Felipe.
Is syntax a
representation in itself?
BBS 2002 25 (3): 352-353.
Seger, Carol A.
Does the SOC
theory avoid unconscious rule use?
BBS 2002 25 (3): 353-353.
Shanon, Benny.
Remember the
old masters!
BBS 2002 25 (3): 353-354.
Siéroff,
Eric.
Hemineglect,
extinction, and the importance of conscious processing.
BBS 2002 25 (3): 354-355.
Sun, Ron.
The
emergence of consciousness: BUC versus SOC.
BBS 2002 25 (3): 355-356.
Tzelgov, Joseph.
Trading automatic/nonautomatic
for unconscious/conscious.
BBS 2002 25 (3): 356-357.
Velmans, Max.
Could
phenomenal consciousness function as a cognitive unconscious?
BBS 2002 25 (3): 357-358.
Wang, William S.-Y., Ke,
Jinyun.
Language
heterogeneity and self-organizing consciousness.
BBS 2002 25 (3): 358-359.
Wolters. Gezinus, Phaf, R.
Hans.
Contrasts
and dissociations suggest qualitative differences between conscious and
unconscious processes.
BBS 2002 25 (3): 359-360.
Yamauchi, Takashi.
The
self-organizing consciousness entails additional intervening subsystems.
BBS 2002 25 (3): 360-360.
AUTHORS’ RESPONSE
Perruchet, Pierre, Vinter,
Annie.
The
self-organizing consciousness as an alternative model of the mind.
BBS 2002 25 (3): 360-380.
TARGET ARTICLE
Wynn, Thomas.
Archaeology
and cognitive evolution.
BBS 2002 25 (3): 389-402.
OPEN PEER COMMENTARY
Bridgeman, Bruce.
Artifacts
and cognition: Evolution or cultural progress?
BBS 2002 25 (3): 403-403.
Calvin, William H.
Rediscovery
and the cognitive aspects of toolmaking: Lessons from the handaxe.
BBS 2002 25 (3): 403-404.
Commons, Michael Lamport,
Miller, Patrice Marie.
A complete
theory of human evolution of intelligence must consider stage changes.
BBS 2002 25 (3): 404-405.
Does complex
behaviour imply complex cognitive abilities?
BBS 2002 25 (3): 406-406.
Deregowski, J.B.
Is symmetry
of stone tools merely an epiphenomenon of similarity?
BBS 2002 25 (3): 406-407.
Epstein, Herman T.
Evolution of
the reasoning hominid brain.
BBS 2002 25 (3): 408-409.
Gurd, Jennifer M., Fink,
Gereon R., Marshall, John C.
Tacit
symmetry detection and explicit symmetry processing.
BBS 2002 25 (3): 409-409.
Humphrey, Diane.
Symmetry in
knapped stones is real, not romanced.
BBS 2002 25 (3): 409-410.
Jeffares, Ben.
The
explanatory limits of cognitive archaeology.
BBS 2002 25 (3): 410-412.
Jordan, J. Scott.
Deriving
intentionality from artifacts.
BBS 2002 25 (3): 412-412.
Masters, Rich, Maxwell,
Jon.
Was early
man caught knapping during the cognitive (r)evolution?
BBS 2002 25 (3): 413-413.
Nowell, April.
Coincidental
factors of handaxe morphology.
BBS 2002 25 (3): 413-414.
Parker, Sue Taylor.
Locating
early Homo and Homo erectus tool production along the
extractive foraging/cognitive continuum.
BBS 2002 25 (3): 414-415.
Reber, Rolf.
Reasons for
the preference for symmetry.
BBS 2002 25 (3): 415-416.
Schoenemann, P. Thomas.
Putting meat
on the bones: The necessity of empirical tests of hypotheses about cognitive
evolution.
BBS 2002 25 (3): 416-417.
Silverman, Irwin.
Symmetry and
human spatial cognition: An alternative perspective.
BBS 2002 25 (3): 418-418.
Simão,
Jorge.
Tools
evolve: The artificial selection and evolution of Paleolithic stone tools.
BBS 2002 25 (3): 419-419.
Stone, Valerie E.
Footloose
and fossil-free no more: Evolutionary psychology needs archaeology.
BBS 2002 25 (3): 420-421.
Stout, Dietrich.
Thinking and
doing in cognitive archaeology: Giving skill its due.
BBS 2002 25 (3): 421-422.
van der Helm, Peter A.
Natural
selection of visual symmetries.
BBS 2002 25 (3): 422-423.
Wagman, Jeffrey B.
Symmetry for
the sake of symmetry, or symmetry for the sake of behavior?
BBS 2002 25 (3): 423-424.
Weaver, Anne H.
The fossil
evidence for spatial cognition.
BBS 2002 25 (3): 424-425.
Welshon, Rex.
Intentions,
goals, and the archaeological record.
BBS 2002 25 (3): 425-426.
AUTHOR’S RESPONSE
Wynn, Thomas.
The devil in
the details.
BBS 2002 25 (3): 426-432.
Volume 25 – Issue
TARGET ARTICLE
Williams, Amanda C de C
Facial expression
of pain: An evolutionary account.
BBS 2002 25 (4): 439-455.
OPEN PEER COMMENTARY
Chapman, C. Richard,
Nakamura, Yoshio.
What role
does intersubjectivity play in the facial expression of pain?
BBS 2002 25 (4): 455-456.
Craig, Kenneth D., Badali,
Melanie A.
Pain in the
social animal.
BBS 2002 25 (4): 456-457.
Crombez, Geert, Eccleston,
Chris.
To express
or suppress may be function of others' distress.
BBS 2002 25 (4): 457-458.
Davies, Temre N., Hoffman,
Donald D.
Psychophysical
studies of expressions of pain.
BBS 2002 25 (4): 458-459.
Evans, Dylan.
Pain,
evolution, and the placebo response.
BBS 2002 25 (4): 459-460.
Frijda, Nico H.
What is pain
facial expression for?
BBS 2002 25 (4): 460-460.
Green, Mitchell S.
Intention
and authenticity in the facial expression of pain.
BBS 2002 25 (4): 460-461.
Harris, Christine R.,
Alvarado,
Pain facial
expression: Individual variability undermines the specific adaptationist
account.
BBS 2002 25 (4): 461-462.
Hermann, Christiane, Flor,
Herta.
Facial
expression of pain – more than a fuzzy expression of distress?
BBS 2002 25 (4): 462-463.
Izard, Carroll E.
Continuity
and change in infants' facial expressions following an unanticipated aversive
stimulus.
BBS 2002 25 (4): 463-464.
Keogh, Edmund, Holdcroft,
Anita.
Sex
differences in pain: Evolutionary links to facial pain expression.
BBS 2002 25 (4): 465-465.
McGrath, Patrick J.
Facial
expression of pain: “Just So Stories,” spandrels, and patient blaming.
BBS 2002 25 (4): 466-466.
Novak, Gary, Peláez, Martha.
A
behavior-analytic developmental model is better.
BBS 2002 25 (4): 466-468.
Pankseep, Jaak,
Pasqualini, Marcia Smith.
“Mindscoping”
pain and suffering.
BBS 2002 25 (4): 468-469.
Pantic, Maja,
Machine
understanding of facial expression of pain.
BBS 2002 25 (4): 469-470.
Prkachin, Kenneth M.
Pain
behavior and the pretence of knowledge.
BBS 2002 25 (4): 470-470.
Salzen, Eric A.
The feeling
of pain and the emotion of distress.
BBS 2002 25 (4): 471-471.
Schmidt, Karen L.
The
evolutionarily novel context of clinical caregiving and facial displays of
pain.
BBS 2002 25 (4): 471-472.
Sullivan, Mark D.
The meaning
of facial expressions of pain lies in their use, not in their reference.
BBS 2002 25 (4): 472-473.
von Baeyer, Carl L.
Children's
facial expressions of pain in the context of complex social interactions.
BBS 2002 25 (4): 473-474.
Voracek, Martin,
Shackelford, Todd K.
An
evolutionary theory of pain must consider sex differences.
BBS 2002 25 (4): 474-475.
AUTHOR’S RESPONSE
Williams, Amanda C de C
Facial
expression of pain, empathy, evolution, and social learning.
BBS 2002 25 (4): 475-480.
TARGET ARTICLE
Andrews, Paul W.,
Gangestad, Steven W., Matthews, Dan.
Adaptationism
– how to carry out an exaptationist program.
BBS 2002 25 (4): 489-504.
OPEN PEER COMMENTARY
Atran, Scott.
Modest
adaptationism: Muddling through cognition and language.
BBS 2002 25 (4): 504-506.
Barrett, Louise, Henzi, S.
Peter.
Are all
bases covered?
BBS 2002 25 (4): 506-507.
Blackburn, Daniel G.
Use of
phylogenetic analysis to distinguish adaptation from exaptation.
BBS 2002 25 (4): 507-508.
Brase, Gary L.
There is no
evidentiary silver bullet for the frequency adaptation hypothesis.
BBS 2002 25 (4): 508-509.
Brown, William Michael.
Development:
The missing link between exaptationist and adaptationist accounts of organismal
design.
BBS 2002 25 (4): 509-510.
Browne, Derek.
Troubles
with exaptationism.
BBS 2002 25 (4): 510-511.
Crawford, Charles.
Musings on
the concept of exaptation and “creationism.”
BBS 2002 25 (4): 511-512.
Dannemiller, James L.
Lack of
evidentiary criteria for exaptations?
BBS 2002 25 (4): 512-513.
Davies, Paul Sheldon.
Does past
selective efficacy matter to psychology?
BBS 2002 25 (4): 513-514.
Deleporte, Pierre.
Phylogenetics
and the aptationist program.
BBS 2002 25 (4): 514-515.
Dickins, Thomas E.,
Dickins, David W.
Is empirical
imagination a constraint on adaptationist theory construction?
BBS 2002 25 (4): 515-516.
John.
Ontology is the problem.
BBS 2002 25 (4): 516-517.
Figueredo, Aurelio José,
“Just not so stories”: Exaptations,
spandrels, and constraints.
BBS 2002 25 (4): 517-518.
Fuentes, Agustin.
Towards an
evolutionary pluralism? The need to establish evidentiary standards and avoid
reification of assumptions.
BBS 2002 25 (4): 518-519.
Hagen, Edward H.
Special
design's centuries of success.
BBS 2002 25 (4): 519-520.
Haig, Brian, Durrant,
Russil.
Adaptationism
and inference to the best explanation.
BBS 2002 25 (4): 520-521.
Jones, Owen D.
Allocating
presumptions.
BBS 2002 25 (4): 521-521.
Klein, Donald F.
Identifying
adaptation by dysfunction.
BBS 2002 25 (4): 521-522.
LaMunyon, Craig W.,
Shackelford, Todd K.
Evolutionary
analyses should include pluralistic and falsifiable hypotheses.
BBS 2002 25 (4): 522-523.
Palmer, Craig T.
Yes, but it
was never just about the science.
BBS 2002 25 (4): 523-524.
Pellis, Sergio M.
When is a
trait an adaptation?
BBS 2002 25 (4): 524-524.
Roney, James R.,
Maestripieri, Dario.
The
importance of comparative and phylogenetic analyses in the study of adaptation.
BBS 2002 25 (4): 525-525.
Rutherford, M.D.
It's
adaptations all the way down.
BBS 2002 25 (4): 526-526.
Schaller, Mark.
The evidentiary standard