Volume 26 – Issue
Harnad, Stevan.
Valedictory Editorial.
BBS 2003 26 (1): 1-1.
Finlay, Barbara, Bloom, Paul, Gray, Jeffrey.
A Message From The New Editors.
BBS 2003 26 (1): 2-2.
TARGET ARTICLE
Byrne, Alex, Hilbert,
David R.
Color realism
and color science.
BBS 2003 26 (1): 3-21.
OPEN PEER COMMENTARY
Averill, Edward Wilson.
Perceptual variation and access to colors.
BBS 2003 26 (1): 22-22.
Ben-Ze’ev,
Aaron.
Perceptual
objects may have nonphysical properties.
BBS 2003 26 (1): 22-23.
Brill, Michael H.
“Color
realism” shows a subjectivist' mode of thinking.
BBS 2003 26 (1): 23-24.
Clark, James J.
Ecological
considerations support color physicalism.
BBS 2003 26 (1): 24-25.
Cohen, Jonathan.
Perceptual
variation, realism, and relativization, or: How I
learned to stop worrying and love variations in color vision.
BBS 2003 26 (1): 25-26.
Cornelissen, Frans W., Brenner, Eli,
Smeets, Jeroen.
True color
only exists in the eye of the observer.
BBS 2003 26 (1): 26-27.
Decock, Lieven, van Brakel, Jaap.
Orange laser
beams are not illusory: The need for a plurality of “real” color ontologies.
BBS 2003 26 (1): 27-28.
Dedrick, Don.
Productance physicalism
and a posteriori necessity.
BBS 2003 26 (1): 28-29.
Funt, Brian V.
Imprecise color constancy versus color realism.
BBS 2003 26 (1): 29-30.
Hahn, Martin.
Do metamers matter?
BBS 2003 26 (1): 30-31.
Handel, Stephen, Erickson,
Molly L.
Parallels between hearing and seeing support physicalism.
BBS 2003 26 (1): 31-32.
Hardin, C.L.
Byrne and Hilbert's chromatic ether.
BBS 2003 26 (1): 32-33.
Huettel, Scott, Polger, Thomas,
Riley, Michael.
In favor of an ecological account of color.
BBS 2003 26 (1): 33-33.
Jackson, Frank.
Color and content.
BBS 2003 26 (1): 34-34.
Jakab, Zoltán, McLaughlin, Brian P.
Why not
color physicalism without color absolutism?
BBS 2003 26 (1): 34-35.
Kuehni, Rolf G.
Olive green or chestnut brown?
BBS 2003 26 (1): 35-36.
Kulvicki, John.
BBS 2003 26 (1): 36-37.
MacLennan, Bruce J.
Color as a material, not an optical, property.
BBS 2003 26 (1): 37-38.
Maloney, Laurence T.
Surface
color perception in constrained environments.
BBS 2003 26 (1): 38-39.
Matthen, Mohan.
Color nominalism, pluralistic realism, and color science.
BBS 2003 26 (1): 39-40.
Maund, Barry.
Clarifying the problem of color realism.
BBS 2003 26 (1): 40-41.
Mausfeld, Rainer, Niederée, Reinhard.
Can a physicalist notion of color provide any insight into the
nature of color perception?
BBS 2003 26 (1): 41-42.
Myin, Erik.
An account of color without a subject?
BBS 2003 26 (1): 42-43.
Nijhawan, Romi.
Spatial position and perceived color of objects.
BBS 2003 26 (1): 43-44.
Pautz, Adam.
Have Byrne
& Hilbert answered Hardin's challenge?
BBS 2003 26 (1): 44-45.
Reeves, Adam.
Color as a factor analytic approximation to Nature.
BBS 2003 26 (1): 46-46.
Rudd, Michael E.
Reflectance-to-color
mappings depend critically on spatial context.
BBS 2003 26 (1): 46-47.
Saunders, Barbara.
Surreptitious substitution.
BBS 2003 26 (1): 47-48.
Teller, Davida Y.
Color: A
vision scientist's perspective.
BBS 2003 26 (1): 48-49.
Todorovic, Dejan.
Color
realism and color illusions.
BBS 2003 26 (1): 49-50.
Van Gulick,
Robert.
Beautiful
red squares.
BBS 2003 26 (1): 50-51.
Warren, Richard M.
Confusion of sensations and their physical correlates.
BBS 2003 26 (1): 51-51.
AUTHORS’ RESPONSE
Byrne, Alex, Hilbert,
David R.
Color realism redux.
BBS 2003 26 (1): 52-59.
TARGET ARTICLE
Phillips, William A.,
Silverstein, Steven M.
Convergence of biological and psychological perspectives on
cognitive coordination in schizophrenia.
BBS 2003 26 (1): 65-82.
OPEN PEER COMMENTARY
Alpert, Murray, Angrist, Burt.
The ketamine model for schizophrenia.
BBS 2003 26 (1): 82-83.
Barch, Deanna M., Braver, Todd S.
Where the rubber
meets the road: The importance of implementation.
BBS 2003 26 (1): 83-84.
Barendregt, Hendrik Pieter.
A wide-spectrum coordination model of schizophrenia.
BBS 2003 26 (1): 84-85.
Bressler, Steven L.
Context rules.
BBS 2003 26 (1): 85-85.
Chen, Yue.
Spatial
integration in perception and cognition: An empirical approach to the pathophysiology of schizophrenia.
BBS 2003 26 (1): 86-87.
Condray, Ruth, Steinhauer,
Stuart R.
Mechanisms of disrupted language comprehension in schizophrenia.
BBS 2003 26 (1): 87-88.
Ginsberg, J.P.
Setting domain boundaries for convergence of biological and
psychological perspectives on cognitive coordination in schizophrenia.
BBS 2003 26 (1): 88-89.
Gooding, Diane C., Braun,
Jacqueline G.
Cognitive
coordination deficits: A necessary but not sufficient factor in the development
of schizophrenia.
BBS 2003 26 (1): 89-90.
Grossberg, Stephen.
Linking brain to mind in normal behavior and schizophrenia.
BBS 2003 26 (1): 90-90.
Hemsley, David R.
Schizophrenic
cognition: Taken out of context?
BBS 2003 26 (1): 91-91.
Hoffman, Ralph E., McGlashan, Thomas H.
NMDA-receptor hypofunction versus
excessive synaptic elimination as models of schizophrenia.
BBS 2003 26 (1): 92-92.
Javitt, Daniel C.
Peeling the onion: NMDA dysfunction as a unifying model in
schizophrenia.
BBS 2003 26 (1): 93-94.
Kisley, Michael A., Davalos,
Deana B.
Is sensory
gating a form of cognitive coordination?
BBS 2003 26 (1): 94-95.
Leiser, David, Bonshtein, Udi.
Theory of
mind in schizophrenia: Damaged module or deficit in cognitive coordination?
BBS 2003 26 (1): 95-96.
MacDonald, Angus W.
Reconciling
schizophrenic deficits in top-down and bottom-up processes: Not yet.
BBS 2003 26 (1): 96-96.
Oades, Robert D., Röpcke, Bernd, Oknina, Ljubov.
Context,
connection, and coordination: The need to switch.
BBS 2003 26 (1): 97-97.
Park, Sohee,
Lee, Junghee, Folley,
Bradley, Kim, Jejoong.
Schizophrenia:
Putting context in context.
BBS 2003 26 (1): 98-99.
Pflieger, Mark E.
Inferring contextual field interactions from scalp EEG.
BBS 2003 26 (1): 99-100.
Raffone, Antonino, Murre, Jaap M.J., Wolters, Gezinus.
NMDA
synapses can bias competition between object representations and mediate attentional selection.
BBS 2003 26 (1): 100-101.
Roelfsema, Pieter R., Supèr, Hans.
Why do schizophrenic
patients hallucinate?
BBS 2003 26 (1): 101-103.
Sanders,
Glenn S., Platek, Steven M., Gallup, Gordon G.
No blind
schizophrenics: Are NMDA-receptor dynamics involved?
BBS 2003 26 (1): 103-104.
Sass,
Louis A., Uhlhaas, Peter J.
Phenomenology, context, and self-experience in schizophrenia.
BBS 2003 26 (1): 104-105.
Strelets, Valeria.
Cortical connectivity in high-frequency beta-rhythm in
schizophrenics with positive and negative symptoms.
BBS 2003 26 (1): 105-106.
Tagamets, M.-A., Horwitz, Barry.
Synchronous
dynamics for cognitive coordination: But how?
BBS 2003 26 (1): 106-107.
Talamini, L.M., Meeter, M., Murre, J.M.J.
Combating fuzziness with computational modeling.
BBS 2003 26 (1): 107-108.
Titone, Debra, Debruille, J.
Bruno.
Guarding against over-inclusive notions of “context”:
Psycholinguistic and electrophysiological studies of specific context functions
in schizophrenia.
BBS 2003 26 (1): 108-109.
Williams,
Leanne M., Lee, Kwang-Hyuk, Haig,
Albert, Gordon, Evian.
High-frequency
synchronisation in schizophrenia: Too much or too
little?
BBS 2003 26 (1): 109-110.
AUTHORS’ RESPONSE
Silverstein, Steven M.,
Phillips, William A.
Cognitive
coordination and its neurobiological bases: A new continent to explore.
BBS 2003 26 (1): 110-125.
Volume 26 – Issue
TARGET
ARTICLE
Colman,
Andrew M.
Cooperation, psychological game theory, and limitations of
rationality in social interaction.
BBS 2003 26 (2): 139-153.
OPEN PEER
COMMENTARY
Alvard,
Michael.
Cooperation, evolution, and culture.
BBS 2003 26 (2): 153-154.
Barclay,
Pat, Daly, Martin.
Humans
should be individualistic and utility-maximizing, but not necessarily
“rational.”
BBS 2003 26 (2): 154-155.
Berns,
Gregory S.
Neural game theory and the search for rational agents in the brain.
BBS 2003 26 (2): 155-156.
Butler,
David J.
Evolution, the emotions, and rationality in social interaction.
BBS 2003 26 (2): 156-157.
Camerer, Colin F.
Behavioral
game theory: Plausible formal models that predict accurately.
BBS 2003 26 (2): 157-158.
Carpenter, Jeffrey P., Matthews, Peter Hans.
Beliefs,
intentions, and evolution: Old versus new psychological game theory.
BBS 2003 26 (2): 158-159.
Casebeer, William D., Parco, James E.
To have and
to eat cake: The biscriptive role of game-theoretic
explanations of human choice behavior.
BBS 2003 26 (2): 159-160.
Fantino, Edmund, Stolarz-Fantino,
Stephanie.
Experience and decisions.
BBS 2003 26 (2): 160-160.
Gintis,
Herbert.
A critique of team and Stackelberg
reasoning.
BBS 2003 26 (2): 160-161.
Haller,
Hans.
How to play if you must.
BBS 2003 26 (2): 161-162.
Hancock,
Peter J.B., DeBruine, Lisa M.
What's a
face worth: Noneconomic factors in game playing.
BBS 2003 26 (2): 162-163.
Hausman, Daniel M.
Rational belief and social interaction.
BBS 2003 26 (2): 163-164.
Hurley,
Susan.
The limits
of individualism are not the limits of rationality.
BBS 2003 26 (2): 164-165.
Janssen, Maarten C.W.
Coordination and cooperation.
BBS 2003 26 (2): 165-166.
Jones, Matt,
Zhang, Jun.
Which is to
blame: Instrumental rationality, or common knowledge?
BBS 2003 26 (2): 166-167.
Kokinov, Boicho.
Analogy in decision-making, social interaction, and emergent
rationality.
BBS 2003 26 (2): 167-168.
Krueger,
Joachim I.
Wanted: A reconciliation of rationality with determinism.
BBS 2003 26 (2): 168-169.
Lazarus,
John.
Let's
cooperate to understand cooperation.
BBS 2003 26 (2): 169-170.
Monterosso, John, Ainslie, George.
Game theory
need not abandon individual maximization.
BBS 2003 26 (2): 171-171.
Perugini, Marco.
Second-order indeterminacy.
BBS 2003 26 (2): 171-172.
Rapoport, Anatol.
Chance, utility, rationality, strategy, equilibrium.
BBS 2003 26 (2): 172-173.
Schuster,
Richard.
Why not go
all the way.
BBS 2003 26 (2): 173-174.
Shiffrin, Richard M.
Locally rational decision-making.
BBS 2003 26 (2): 175-175.
Sigmund,
Karl.
“Was you ever bit by a dead bee?” – Evolutionary games and
dominated strategies.
BBS 2003 26 (2): 175-176.
Steer, Mark,
Cuthill, Innes.
Irrationality, suboptimality, and the
evolutionary context.
BBS 2003 26 (2): 176-177.
Van Lange,
Paul A.M., Gallucci, Marcello.
Bridging
psychology and game theory yields interdependence theory.
BBS 2003 26 (2): 177-178.
Vlaev,
Ivaylo, Chater, Nick.
Toward a cognitive game theory.
BBS 2003 26 (2): 178-179.
Weirich, Paul.
From rationality to coordination.
BBS 2003 26 (2): 179-180.
AUTHOR’S
RESPONSE
Colman,
Andrew M.
Beyond
rationality: Rigor without mortis in game theory.
BBS 2003 26 (2): 180-192.
TARGET
ARTICLE
Corballis, Michael C.
From mouth
to hand: Gesture, speech, and the evolution of right-handedness.
BBS 2003 26 (2): 199-208.
OPEN PEER
COMMENTARY
Annett,
Marian.
Myths of first cause and asymmetries in human evolution.
BBS 2003 26 (2): 208-209.
Arbib,
Michael A.
Protosign and protospeech: An expanding spiral.
BBS 2003 26 (2): 209-210.
Arcadi,
Adam Clark.
Is gestural communication more sophisticated than vocal
communication in wild chimpanzees?
BBS 2003 26 (2): 210-211.
Armstrong,
David F.
Creative solution to an old problem.
BBS 2003 26 (2): 211-212.
Beaton,
Alan A.
Going for Broca? I wouldn't bet on it!
BBS 2003 26 (2): 212-213.
Bradshaw,
John L.
Gesture in
language evolution: Could I but raise my hand to it!
BBS 2003 26 (2): 213-214.
Breitenstein, Caterina, Floel,
Agnes, Dräger, Bianca, Knecht,
Stefan.
Lateralisation may be a side issue for understanding language development.
BBS 2003 26 (2): 214-214.
Carstairs-McCarthy, Andrew.
A shrug is
not a sentence.
BBS 2003 26 (2): 215-215.
Code, Chris.
Vocalisation and the development of hand
preference.
BBS 2003 26 (2): 215-216.
Cook, Norman
D.
Hemispheric
dominance has its origins in the control of the midline organs of speech.
BBS 2003 26 (2): 216-217.
Corbetta, Daniela.
Right-handedness
may have come first: Evidence from studies in human infants and nonhuman
primates.
BBS 2003 26 (2): 217-218.
Dale, Rick,
Richardson, Daniel C., Owren, Michael J.
Pumping for gestural origins: The well
may be rather dry.
BBS 2003 26 (2): 218-219.
Dickins, Thomas E.
Possible
phylogenies: The role of hypotheses, weak inferences, and falsification.
BBS 2003 26 (2): 219-220.
Faurie,
Charlotte, Raymond, Michel.
Handedness:
Neutral or adaptive?
BBS 2003 26 (2): 220-220.
Feyereisen, Pierre.
Are human
gestures in the present time a mere vestige of a former sign language? Probably not.
BBS 2003 26 (2): 220-221.
Fouts, Roger
S., Waters, Gabriel.
Unbalanced human apes and syntax.
BBS 2003 26 (2): 221-222.
Gillett,
Grant R.
Work and talk – handedness and the stuff of life.
BBS 2003 26 (2): 222-223.
Holloway,
Ralph L.
Was a manual
gesturing stage really necessary?
BBS 2003 26 (2): 223-224.
Hopkins,
William D., Cantalupo, Claudio.
Brodmann's area 44, gestural
communication, and the emergence of right handedness in chimpanzees.
BBS 2003 26 (2): 224-225.
Iverson,
Jana M., Thelen, Esther.
The hand
leads the mouth in ontogenesis too.
BBS 2003 26 (2): 225-226.
Johnson-Frey,
Scott H.
Mirror
neurons, Broca's area and language: Reflecting on the
evidence.
BBS 2003 26 (2): 226-227.
Jones,
Gregory V., Martin, Maryanne.
Dual asymmetries in handedness.
BBS 2003 26 (2): 227-228.
Josse, Goulven, Tzourio-Mazoyer, Nathalie.
What
functional imaging of the human brain can tell about handedness and language.
BBS 2003 26 (2): 228-229.
Jürgens, Uwe.
From mouth
to mouth and hand to hand: On language evolution.
BBS 2003 26 (2): 229-230.
Kelly,
Spencer D.
From past to
present: Speech, gesture, and brain in present-day human communication.
BBS 2003 26 (2): 230-231.
Knight,
Chris.
The secret
of lateralisation is trust.
BBS 2003 26 (2): 231-232.
Leavens,
David A.
Integration
of visual and vocal communication: Evidence for Miocene origins.
BBS 2003 26 (2): 232-233.
MacNeilage,
Peter F.
Mouth to
hand and back again? Could language have made those journeys?
BBS 2003 26 (2): 233-234.
Michel,
George F.
Ontogenetic constraints on the evolution of right-handedness.
BBS 2003 26 (2): 234-235.
Pearce, Toby
M.
Did they
talk their way out of
BBS 2003 26 (2): 235-236.
Pedersen, Arve Vorland, Vereijken,
Beatrix.
Laterality
probabilities fluctuate during ontogenetic development.
BBS 2003 26 (2): 236-237.
Raz, Amir, Donchin, Opher.
A zetetic's perspective on gesture,
speech, and the evolution of right-handedness.
BBS 2003 26 (2): 237-238.
Rönnqvist, Louise.
Developmentally,
the arm preference precedes handedness.
BBS 2003 26 (2): 238-239.
Sommer, Iris E.C., Kahn, René S.
The left hemisphere as the redundant hemisphere.
BBS 2003 26 (2): 239-240.
Walker,
Stephen F.
Misleading asymmetries of brain structure.
BBS 2003 26 (2): 240-241.
Woll,
Bencie, Sieratzki, Jechil S.
Why homolaterality of language and hand dominance may not be
the expression of a specific evolutionary link.
BBS 2003 26 (2): 241-241.
Wolpert, Lewis.
Causal
beliefs lead to toolmaking, which require handedness
for motor control.
BBS 2003 26 (2): 242-242.
AUTHOR’S
RESPONSE
Corballis, Michael C.
Hand-to-hand
combat, or mouth-to-mouth resuscitation?
BBS 2003 26 (2): 242-250.
Volume 26 – Issue
TARGET
ARTICLE
Hurford, James R.
The neural basis of predicate-argument structure.
BBS 2003 26 (3): 261-283.
OPEN PEER
COMMENTARY
Anastasio, Thomas J.
Probability rather than logic as the basis of perception.
BBS 2003 26 (3): 283-284.
Anderson,
Michael L., Oates, Tim.
Prelinguistic agents will form only egocentric representations.
BBS 2003 26 (3): 284-285.
Arbib,
Michael A.
Predicates:
External description or neural reality?
BBS 2003 26 (3): 285-286.
Bickerton,
Derek.
Afferent
isn't efferent, and language isn't logic, either.
BBS 2003 26 (3): 286-287.
Bridgeman,
Bruce.
Grammar
originates in action planning, not in cognitive and sensorimotor
visual systems.
BBS 2003 26 (3): 287-287.
Brinck,
Ingar.
The objects
of attention: Causes and targets.
BBS 2003 26 (3): 287-288.
Carstairs-McCarthy, Andrew.
What proper
names, and their absence, do not demonstrate.
BBS 2003 26 (3): 288-289.
Cowie,
Fiona.
Hurford's partial vindication of classical
empiricism.
BBS 2003 26 (3): 289-290.
Dessalles, Jean-Louis, Ghadakpour,
Laleh.
Object
recognition is not predication.
BBS 2003 26 (3): 290-291.
Dominey, Peter F.
Representational limitations of the one-place predicate.
BBS 2003 26 (3): 291-292.
Gillett,
Grant.
Cognitive structure, logic, and language.
BBS 2003 26 (3): 292-293.
Indurkhya, Bipin.
Word-sentences and an interaction-based account of language
evolution.
BBS 2003 26 (3): 293-293.
Jones,
Gregory V.
Predicates as cantilevers for the bridge between perception and
knowledge.
BBS 2003 26 (3): 294-294.
Knott,
Alistair.
Do sensorimotor processes have reflexes in sentence syntax as
well as sentence semantics?
BBS 2003 26 (3): 294-295.
Lu, Shulan, Franceschetti, Donald R.
Perceiving
and describing motion events.
BBS 2003 26 (3): 295-296.
MacNeilage,
Peter F., Davis, Barbara L.
Message and medium: Lowly and action-related origins.
BBS 2003 26 (3): 296-297.
Piattelli-Palmarini, Massimo, Harley,
Heidi.
Arguments in the syntactic straitjacket.
BBS 2003 26 (3): 297-298.
Politzer, Guy.
No problem
for Aristotle's subject and predicate.
BBS 2003 26 (3): 298-299.
Werning, Markus.
Ventral
versus dorsal pathway: The source of the semantic object/event and the
syntactic noun/verb distinction?
BBS 2003 26 (3): 299-300.
Woll,
Bencie.
The neural representation of spatial predicate-argument
structures in sign language.
BBS 2003 26 (3): 300-301.
AUTHOR’S
RESPONSE
Hurford, James R.
Ventral/dorsal,
predicate/argument: The transformation from perception to meaning.
BBS 2003 26 (3): 301-311.
TARGET
ARTICLE
Smith, J.
David, Shields, Wendy E., Washburn, David A.
The comparative psychology of uncertainty monitoring and metacognition.
BBS 2003 26 (3): 317-339.
OPEN PEER
COMMENTARY
Browne,
Derek.
Some sceptical thoughts about metacognition.
BBS 2003 26 (3): 340-341.
Call, Josep.
On linking comparative metacognition
and theory of mind.
BBS 2003 26 (3): 341-342.
If metacognition exists in other species, how does it develop?
BBS 2003 26 (3): 342-342.
Carruthers, Peter.
Monitoring without metacognition.
BBS 2003 26 (3): 342-343.
Fantino, Edmund.
Pigeon
parallels to human metacognition.
BBS 2003 26 (3): 343-344.
Flavell, John H.
Varieties of uncertainty monitoring.
BBS 2003 26 (3): 344-344.
Goldsmith,
Morris, Koriat, Asher.
Dolphins on the witness stand? The comparative
psychology of strategic memory regulation.
BBS 2003 26 (3): 345-346.
Griffin,
Donald R.
Significant
uncertainty is common in nature.
BBS 2003 26 (3): 346-346.
Hampton,
Robert Russell.
Metacognition as evidence for explicit
representation in nonhumans.
BBS 2003 26 (3): 346-347.
King, James
E.
Parsimonious explanations and wider evolutionary consequences.
BBS 2003 26 (3): 347-348.
Marino,
Lori.
Can we be
too uncertain about uncertainty responses?
BBS 2003 26 (3): 348-349.
Mazzoni, Giuliana.
Animals show
monitoring, but does monitoring imply awareness?
BBS 2003 26 (3): 349-350.
Metcalfe,
Janet.
Drawing the line on metacognition.
BBS 2003 26 (3): 350-351.
Nelson,
Thomas O.
Relevance of unjustified strong assumptions when utilizing
signal detection theory.
BBS 2003 26 (3): 351-351.
Proust,
Joëlle.
Does metacognition necessarily involve metarepresentation?
BBS 2003 26 (3): 352-352.
Rumbaugh, Duane M., Beran,
Michael J., Pate, James L.
Uncertainty
monitoring may promote emergents.
BBS 2003 26 (3): 353-353.
Shettleworth, Sara J., Sutton, Jennifer E.
Animal metacognition? It's all in the methods.
BBS 2003 26 (3): 353-354.
Shimp,
Charles P.
Metaknowledge may or may not facilitate knowledge and performance.
BBS 2003 26 (3): 354-355.
Son, Lisa K., Schwartz, Bennett L., Kornell,
Nate.
Implicit metacognition, explicit uncertainty,
and the monitoring/control distinction in animal metacognition.
BBS 2003 26 (3): 355-356.
Wilkins,
Victoria M., Cardaciotto, LeeAnn,
Platek, Steven M.
Uncertain what uncertainty monitoring monitors.
BBS 2003 26 (3): 356-357.
Zentall, Thomas R.
Evidence
both for and against metacognition is insufficient.
BBS 2003 26 (3): 357-358.
AUTHORS’
RESPONSE
Smith, J.
David, Shields, Wendy E., Washburn, David A.
Inaugurating a new area of comparative cognition research.
BBS 2003 26 (3): 358-369.
Volume 26 –
Issue
TARGET
ARTICLE
Lehar,
Steven.
Gestalt
isomorphism and the primacy of subjective conscious experience: A Gestalt
Bubble model.
BBS 2003 26 (4): 375-408.
OPEN PEER
COMMENTARY
Booth, David
A.
Phenomenology
is art, not psychological or neural science.
BBS 2003 26 (4): 408-409.
Dresp,
Birgitta.
Double,
double, toil and trouble – fire burn, and theory bubble!
BBS 2003 26 (4): 409-410.
Duch,
Wlodzislaw.
Just
bubbles?
BBS 2003 26 (4): 410-411.
Fox, Charles
R.
Empirical constraints for perceptual modeling.
BBS 2003 26 (4): 411-412.
Grossberg, Stephen.
Linking visual cortex to visual perception: An alternative to
the Gestalt Bubble.
BBS 2003 26 (4): 412-413.
Gunderson,
Keith.
Steven Lehar's Gestalt Bubble model of visual experience: The
embodied percipient, emergent holism, and the ultimate question of
consciousness.
BBS 2003 26 (4): 413-414.
Hochberg,
Julian.
Backdrop,
flat, and prop: The stage for active perceptual inquiry.
BBS 2003 26 (4): 414-415.
Hoffman,
Donald D.
Does perception
replicate the external world?
BBS 2003 26 (4): 415-416.
Laming, Donald.
Psychological relativity.
BBS 2003 26 (4): 416-417.
Lloyd, Dan.
Double trouble for Gestalt Bubbles.
BBS 2003 26 (4): 417-418.
Luccio,
Riccardo.
Isomorphism and representationalism.
BBS 2003 26 (4): 418-419.
MacKay,
William A.
The unified electrical field.
BBS 2003 26 (4): 419-420.
Markovic, Slobodan.
The soap
bubble: Phenomenal state or perceptual system dynamics?
BBS 2003 26 (4): 420-421.
McLoughlin, Niall P.
Bursting the
bubble: Do we need true Gestalt isomorphism?
BBS 2003 26 (4): 421-421.
Randrup, Axel.
Relations
between three-dimensional, volumetric experiences, and neural processes:
Limitations of materialism.
BBS 2003 26 (4): 422-422.
Revonsuo, Antti.
Consciousness as phenomenal ether?
BBS 2003 26 (4): 422-423.
Rosenthal, Victor, Visetti,
Yves-Marie.
Gestalt Bubble and the genesis of space.
BBS 2003 26 (4): 424-424.
Ross, Helen
E.
Neurological
models of size scaling.
BBS 2003 26 (4): 425-425.
Schirillo, James A.
Spatial
phenomenology requires potential illumination.
BBS 2003 26 (4): 425-426.
Tse,
Peter Ulric.
If vision is
“veridical hallucination,” what keeps it veridical?
BBS 2003 26 (4): 426-427.
Velmans, Max.
Is the world
in the brain, or the brain in the world?