Behavioral and Brain Sciences

Volume 28 – Issue 01 – February 2005

 

TARGET ARTICLE

 

The rules versus similarity distinction

Emmanuel M. Pothos

BBS  28 (1): 1-14.

 

OPEN PEER COMMENTARY

 

Similarity in logical reasoning and decision-making

Horacio Arló-Costa

BBS 28 (1): 14-15.

 

Empirical dissociations between rule-based and similarity-based categorization

Gregory Ashby, Michael B. Casale

BBS 28 (1): 15-16.

 

Rules work on one representation; similarity compares two representations

Todd M. Bailey

BBS 28 (1): 16-16.

 

Instantiated rules and abstract analogy: Not a continuum of similarity

Lee R. Brooks, Samuel D. Hannah

BBS 28 (1): 17-17.

 

Rules, similarity, and the information-processing blind alley

Francisco Calvo Garzón

BBS 28 (1): 17-18.

 

Epistemological requirements for a cognitive psychology of real people

John Campion

BBS 28 (1): 18-19.

 

Real rules are conscious

Axel Cleeremans, Arnaud Destrebecqz

BBS 28 (1): 19-20.

 

Two types of thought: Evidence from aphasia

Jules Davidoff

BBS 28 (1): 20-21.

 

“Commitment” distinguishes between rules and similarity: A developmental perspective

Gil Diesendruck

BBS 28 (1): 21-22.

 

The discontinuity between rules and similarity

Peter F. Dominey

BBS 28 (1): 22-23.

 

Rules, similarity, and threshold logic

Wlodzislaw Duch

BBS 28 (1): 23-23.

 

Rules and similarity as conscious contents with distinctive roles in theory

Donelson E. Dulany

BBS 28 (1): 24-24.

 

Is this what the debate on rules was about?

Ulrike Hahn

BBS 28 (1): 25-26.

 

Rules and similarity – a false dichotomy

James A. Hampton

BBS 28 (1): 26-26.

 

Illuminating reasoning and categorization.

Evan Heit, Brett K. Hayes

BBS 28 (1): 27-27.

 

Processing is shaped by multiple tasks: There is more to rules and similarity than Rules-to-Similarity

Gary Lupyan, Gautam Vallabha

BBS 28 (1): 28-28.

 

Oosites detract: Why rules and similarity should not be viewed as oosite ends of a continuum

Gary Marcus

BBS 28 (1): 28-29.

 

Digging beneath rules and similarity

Arthur B. Markman, Sergey Blok, Kyungil Kim, Levi Larkey, Lisa R. Narvaez, C. Hunt Stilwell, Eric Taylor

BBS 28 (1): 29-30.

 

It’s not how many dimensions you have, it’s what you do with them: Evidence from speech perception

Bob McMurray, David Gow

BBS 28 (1): 31-31.

 

Rule versus similarity: Different in processing mode, not in representations

Rolf Reber

BBS 28 (1): 31-32.

 

Rules and similarity processes in artificial grammar and natural second language learning: What is the “default”?

Peter Robinson

BBS 28 (1): 32-33.

 

Avoiding foolish consistency

Steven Sloman

BBS 28 (1): 33-34.

 

Rule and similarity as prototype concepts

Edward E. Smith

BBS 28 (1): 34-35.

 

In search of radical similarity

Oscar Vilarroya

BBS 28 (1): 35-35.

 

Integration of “rules” and similarity in a framework of information compression by multiple alignment, unification, and search

J. Gerard Wolff

BBS 28 (1): 36-37.

 

AUTHOR’S RESPONSE

 

Preferring Rules to Similarity: Coherence, goals, and commitment

Emmanual M. Pothos

BBS 28 (1): 37-49.

 

 

TARGET ARTICLE

 

A refined model of sleep and the time course of memory formation

Matthew P. Walker

BBS 28 (1): 51-64.

 

OPEN PEER COMMENTARY

 

Redefining memory consolidation

Mercedes Atienza, Jose L. Cantero

BBS 28 (1): 64-65.

 

Molecular mechanisms of synaptic consolidation during sleep: BDNF function and dendritic protein synthesis

Clive R. Bramham

BBS 28 (1): 65-66.

 

Sleep is optimizing

Thomas L. Clarke

BBS 28 (1): 66-67.

 

Where is the classic interference theory for sleep and memory?

Anton Coenen

BBS 28 (1): 67-68.

 

Motor memory: Consolidation-based enhancement effect revisited

Julien Doyon, Julie Carrier, Alain Simard, Abdallah Hadj Tahar, Amelie Morin, Habib Benali, Leslie G. Ungerleider

BBS 28 (1): 68-69.

 

Do words go to sleep? Exploring consolidation of spoken forms through direct and indirect measures

Nicolas Dumay, M. Gareth Gaskell

BBS 28 (1): 69-70.

 

What is consolidated during sleep-dependent motor skill learning?

Luca A. Finelli, Terrence J. Sejnowski

BBS 28 (1): 70-71.

 

Sleep and memory: Definitions, terminology, models, and predictions?

Jonathan K. Foster, Andrew C. Wilson

BBS 28 (1): 71-72.

 

Old wine (most of it) in new bottles: Where are dreams and what is the memory?

Ramon Greenberg

BBS 28 (1): 72-73.

 

Consolidating consolidation? Sleep stages, memory systems, and procedures

JohnA. Groeger, Derk-Jan Dijk

BBS 28 (1): 73-74.

 

Resistance to interference and the emergence of delayed gains in newly acquired procedural memories: Synaptic and system consolidation?

Maria Korman, Tamar Flash, Avi Karni

BBS 28 (1): 74-75.

 

Neurosignals – Incorporating CNS electrophysiology into cognitive process

James F. Pagel

BBS 28 (1): 75-76.

 

Beyond acetylcholine: Next steps for sleep and memory research

Jessica D. Payne, Willoughby B. Britton, Richard R. Bootzin, Lynn Nadel

BBS 28 (1): 77-77.

 

Filling one gap by creating another: Memory stabilization is not all-or-nothing, either

Philie Peigneux, Arnaud Destrebecqz, Christophe Hotermans, Axel Cleeremans

BBS 28 (1): 78-78.

 

New perspectives on sleep disturbances and memory in human pathological and psychopharmalogical states

Margaret A. Piggott, Elaine K. Perry

BBS 28 (1): 78-79.

 

Procedural replay: The anatomy and physics of the sleep spindle

Helene Sophrin Porte

BBS 28 (1): 79-80.

 

REM sleep, dreaming, and procedural memory

Michael Schredl

BBS 28 (1): 80-81.

 

Memory consolidation during sleep: A form of brain restitution

Bhavin R. Sheth

BBS 28 (1): 81-82.

 

The incredible, shrinking sleep-learning connection

Jerome M. Siegel

BBS 28 (1): 82-83.

 

Consolidation enhancement: Which stages of sleep for which tasks?

Carlyle T. Smith

BBS 28 (1): 83-84.

 

The challenge of indentifying cellular mechanisms of memory formation during sleep

Ronald Szymusiak

BBS 28 (1): 84-85.

 

Sleep and synaptic homeostasis

Giulio Tononi, Chiara Cirelli

BBS 28 (1): 85-85.

 

Sleep is for rest, waking consciousness is for learning and memory – of any kind

Robert P. Vertes

BBS 28 (1): 86-87.

 

AUTHOR’S RESPONSE

 

Past, present, and the future: Discussions surrounding a new model of sleep-dependent learning and memory processing

Matthew P. Walker

BBS 28 (1): 87-104.

 

 

Behavioral and Brain Sciences

Volume 28 – Issue 02 – April 2005

 

TARGET ARTICLE

 

From monkey-like action recognition to human language: An evolutionary framework for neurolinguistics

Michael A. Arbib

BBS 28 (2): 105-124.

 

OPEN PEER COMMENTARY

 

Speech and gesture are mediated by independent systems

Anna M. Barrett, Anne L. Foundas, Kenneth M. Heilman

BBS 28 (2): 125-126.

 

Byond the mirror neuron – the smoke neuron?

Derek Bickerton

BBS 28 (2): 126-126.

 

The evolutionary link between mirror neurons and imitation: An evolutionary adaptive agents model

Elhanan Borenstein, Eytan Ruin

BBS 28 (2): 127-128.

 

Sharpening Occam’s razor: Is there need for a hand-signing stage prior to vocal communication?

Conrado Bosman, Vladimir López, Francisco Aboitiz

BBS 28 (2): 128-129.

 

Action planning sulements mirror systems in language evolution

Bruce Bridgeman

BBS 28 (2): 129-130.

 

Sign languages are problematic for a gestural origins theory of language evolution

Karen Emmorey

BBS 28 (2): 130-131.

 

Biological evolution of cognition and culture: Off Arbib’s mirror-neuron system stage?

Horacio Fabrega, Jr.

BBS 28 (2): 131-132.

 

Protomusic and protolanguage as alternatives to protosign

W. Tecumseh Fitch

BBS 28 (2): 132-133.

 

Imitation systems, monkey vocalization, and the human language

Emmanuel Gilissen

BBS 28 (2): 133-134.

 

Auditory object processing and primate biological evolution

Barry Horowitz, Fatima T. Husain, Frank H. Guenther

BBS 28 (2): 134-134.

 

On the neural grounding for metaphor and projection

Bipin Indurkhya

BBS 28 (2): 134-135.

 

Listen to my actions!

Jonas T. Kaplan, Marco Iacoboni

BBS 28 (2): 135-136.

 

Pragmatics, prosody, and evolution: Language is more than a symbolic system

Boris Kotchoubey

BBS 28 (2): 136-137.

 

Evolutionary sleight of hand: Then, they saw it; now we don’t

Peter F. MacNeilage, Barbara L. Davis

BBS 28 (2): 137-138.

 

Gesture-first, but no gestures?

David McNeill, Bennett Bertenthal, Jonathan Cole, Shaun Gallagher

BBS 28 (2): 138-139.

 

Meaning and motor actions: Artificial life and behavioral evidence

Domenico Parisi, Anna M. Borghi, Andrea Di Ferdinando, Giorgio Tsiotas

BBS 28 (2): 139-140.

 

An avian parallel to primate mirror neurons and language evolution?

Irene M. Peerberg

BBS 28 (2): 141-141.

 

Contagious yawning and laughing: Everyday imitation—and mirror-like behavior

Robert R. Provine

BBS 28 (2): 142-142.

 

Motivation rather than imitation determined the aearance of language

Pavel N. Prudkov

BBS 28 (2): 142-143.

 

Vocal gesutures and auditory objects

Josef P. Rauschecker

BBS 28 (2): 143-144.

 

Continuities in vocal communication argue against a gestural origin of language

Robert M. Seyfarth

BBS 28 (2): 144-145.

 

Making a case for mirror-neuron system involvement in language development: What about autism and blindness?

Hugo Théoret, Shirley Fecteau

BBS 28 (2): 145-146.

 

Language is fundamentally a social affair

Justin H.G. Williams

BBS 28 (2): 146-147.

 

The explanatory advantages of the holistic protolanguage model: The case of linguistic irregularity

Alison Wray

BBS 28 (2): 147-148.

 

Language evolution: Body of evidence?

Chen Yu, Dana H. Ballard

BBS 28 (2): 148-149.

 

AUTHOR’S RESPONSE

 

The mirror system hypothesis stands but the framework is much enriched

Michael A. Arib

BBS 28 (2): 149-159.

 

 

TARGET ARTICLE

 

Bridging emotion theory and neurobiology though dynamic systems modeling

Marc D. Lewis

BBS 28 (2): 169-194.

 

OPEN PEER COMMENTARY

 

Why not emotions as motivated behaviors?

George Ainslie, John Monterosso

BBS 28 (2): 194-195.

 

The concept of circular causality should be discarded

Bram Bakker

BBS 28 (2): 195-196.

 

Psychological-level systems theory: The missing link in bridging emotion theory and neurobiology through dynamic systems modeling

Philip Barnard, Tim Dalgleish

BBS 28 (2): 196-197.

 

Adding ingredients to the self-organizing dynamic system stew: Motivation, communication, and higher-level emotions—and don’t forget the genes!

Ross Bunk

BBS 28 (2): 197-198.

 

Emotion theory is about more than affect and cognition: Taking triggers and actions into account

Charles S. Carver

BBS 28 (2): 198-199.

 

An intermediate level between the psychological and the neurobiological levels of descriptions of araisal-emotion dynamics

Antonio Chella

BBS 28 (2): 199-200.

 

Enacting emotional interpretations with feeling

Giovanna Colombetti, Evan Thompson

BBS 28 (2): 200-201.

 

Lewi’s DS aroach is a tool, not a theory

Craig DeLancey

BBS 28 (2): 201-201.

 

The contribution of cross-cultural study to dynamic systems modeling of emotions

Greg Downey

BBS 28 (2): 201-202.

 

Generating predictions from a dynamical systems emotion theory

Ralph D. Ellis

BBS 28 (2): 202-203.

 

Alications to the social and clinical sciences

Horacio Fabrega, Jr.

BBS 28 (2): 203-204.

 

Emotion is from preparatory brain chaos; irrational action is from premature closure

Walter J. Freeman

BBS 28 (2): 204-205.

 

Dynamic araisals: A paper with promises

Nico H. Frijda

BBS 28 (2): 205-206.

 

Exploring psychological complexity through dynamic systems theory: A complement to reductionism

Robert M. Galatzer-Levy

BBS 28 (2): 206-207.

 

START: A bridge between emotion theory and neurobiology through dynamic system modeling

Stephen Grossberg

BBS 28 (2): 207-208.

 

Brain, emotions, and emotion-cognition relations

Carrol E. Izard, Christopher J. Trentacosta, Kristen A. King

BBS 28 (2): 208-209.

 

Where’s the example?

David J. Kaup, Thomas L. Clarke

BBS 28 (2): 210-210.

 

On the relationship between rhythmic firing in the supramammillary nucleus and limbic theta rhythm

Bernat Kocsis

BBS 28 (2): 210-211.

 

Emotional-cognitive integration, the self, and cortical midline structures

Georg Northoff

BBS 28 (2): 211-212.

 

Emotional dynamics of the organism and its parts

Jaak Pankse

BBS 28 (2): 212-213.

 

Not a bridge but an organismic (general and causal) neuropsychology should make a difference in emotion theory

Juan Pascual-Leone

BBS 28 (2): 213-214.

 

The role of frontocingulate pathways in the emotion-cognition interface: Emerging clues from depression

Diego A. Pizzagalli

BBS 28 (2): 214-215.

 

Characteristics of anger: Notes for a systems theory of emotion

Michael Potegal

BBS 28 (2): 215-216.

 

Amalgams and the power of analytical chemistry: Affective science needs to decompose the araisal-emotion interaction

David Sander, Klaus R. Scherer

BBS 28 (2): 216-217.

 

Developmental affective neuroscience describes mechanisms at the core of dynamic systems theory

Allan N. Schore

BBS 28 (2): 217-218.

 

The importance of inhibition in dynamical systems models of emotion and neurobiology

Julian F. Thayer, Richard D. Lane

BBS 28 (2): 218-219.

 

Mechanisms of the occasional self

Don M. Tucker

BBS 28 (2): 219-220.

 

Dynamic brain systems in quest for emotional homeostasis

Jack van Honk, J.L.G. Schutter

BBS 28 (2): 220-221.

 

A dynamic duo: Emotion and development

Arlene S. Walker-Andrews, Jeannette Haviland-Jones

BBS 28 (2): 221-222.

 

Dynamics of cognition-emotion interface: Coherence breeds familiarity and liking, and does it fast

Piotr Winkielman, Andrzej Nowak

BBS 28 (2): 222-223.

 

AUTHOR’S RESPONSE

 

An emerging dialogue among social scientists and neuroscientists on the causal bases of emotion

Marc D. Lewis

BBS 28 (2): 223-234.

 

 

TARGET ARTICLE

 

Sociosexuality from Argentina to Zimbabwe: A 48-nation study of sex, culture, and strategies of human mating

David P. Schmitt

BBS 28 (2): 247-275.

 

OPEN PEER COMMENTARY

 

A mature evolutionary psychology demands careful conclusions about sex differences

Jens B. Asendorpf, Lars Penke

BBS 28 (2): 275-276.

 

Sex differences: Empiricism, hypothesis testing, and other virtues

David P. Barash

BBS 28 (2): 276-277.

 

Sociosexual strategies in tribes and nations

Stephen Beckerman

BBS 28 (2): 277-278.

 

Who’s zooming who?

Nigel W. Bond

BBS 28 (2): 278-278.

 

Sex differences in the design features of socially contingent mating adaptations

David M. Buss

BBS 28 (2): 278-279.

 

What is the significance of cross-national variability in sociosexuality?

Andrew Clark, Martin Daly

BBS 28 (2): 280-280.

 

On sociosexual cognitive architecture

Thomas E. Dickins

BBS 28 (2): 280-281.

 

Universal sex differences across patriarchal cultures [are not equal to] evolved psychological dispositions

Alice H. Eagly, Wendy Wood

BBS 28 (2): 281-283.

 

The second to fourth digit ration, sociosexuality, and offspring sex ratio

Bernhard Fink, John T. Manning, Nick Neave

BBS 28 (2): 283-284.

 

Ethnography, cultural context, and assessments of reproductive success matter when discussing human mating strategies

Agustin Fuentes

BBS 28 (2): 284-285.

 

Sperm competition theory offers additional insight into cultural variation in sexual behavior

Aaron T. Goetz, Todd K. Shackelford

BBS 28 (2): 285-286.

 

Medical advances reduce risk of behaviours related to high sociosexuality

Valerie J. Grant

BBS 28 (2): 286-287.

 

The trees are not the forest, and monogamy is certainly not a kind of wood

Shashi Kiran

BBS 28 (2): 287-288.

 

Sociosexuality and sex ratio: Sex differences and local markets

John Lazarus

BBS 28 (2): 288-288.

 

Adding the missing link back into mate choice research

Rui Mata, Andreas Wilke, Peter M. Todd

BBS 28 (2): 289-289.

 

Promiscuity in an evolved pair-bonding system: Mating within and outside the Pleistocene box

Lynn Carol Miller, William C. Pedersen, Anila Putcha-Bhagavatula

BBS 28 (2): 290-291.

 

Less restricted mating, low contact with kin, and the role of culture

Lesley Newson, Tom Postmes

BBS 28 (2): 291-292.

 

Universal human traits: The holy grail of evolutionary psychology

Christopher Ryan, Cacilda Jethá

BBS 28 (2): 292-293.

 

Worldwide, economic development and gender equality correlate with liberal sexual attitudes and behavior: what does this tell us about evolutionary psychology?

Dory A. Schachner, Joanna E. Scheib, Omri Gillath, Phillip R. Shaver

BBS 28 (2): 293-294.

 

Fitting data to theory: The contribution of a comparative perspective

Steve Stewart-Williams

BBS 28 (2): 294-295.

 

Sex, sex differences, and the new polygyny

John Marshall Townsend

BBS 28 (2): 295-296.

 

Shortcomings of the sociosexual orientation inventory: Can psychometrics inform evolutionary psychology?

Martin Voracek

BBS 28 (2): 296-297.

 

AUTHOR’S RESPONSE

 

Measuring sociosexuality across people and nations: Revisiting the strengths and weaknesses of cross-cultural sex research

David P. Schmitt

BBS 28 (2): 297-304.

 

 

Behavioral and Brain Sciences

Volume 28 – Issue 03 – June 2005

 

TARGET ARTICLE

 

A neurobehavioral model of affiliative bonding: Implications for conceptualizing a human trait of affiliation

Richard A. Depue, Jeannine V. Morrone-Strupinsky

BBS 28 (3): 313-350.

 

OPEN PEER COMMENTARY

 

Affiliative drive: Could this be disturbed in childhood autism?

Ralf-Peter Behrendt

BBS 28 (3): 350-351.

 

Social bonds, motivational conflict, and altruism: Implications for neurobiology

Stephanie L. Brown, R. Michael Brown

BBS 28 (3): 351-352.

 

Neuropeptides influence expression of and capacity to form social bonds

C.S. Carter, K.L. Bales, S.W. Porges

BBS 28 (3): 353-354.

 

The role of trait affiliation in human community

Michael Glassman, Cynthia K. Buettner

BBS 28 (3): 354-354.

 

Affiliative bonding as a dynamical process: A view from ethology

Kosuke Itoh, Akihiro Izumi

BBS 28 (3): 355-356.

 

Opioid bliss as the felt hedonic core of mammalian prosociality – and of consummatory pleasure more generally?

Leonard D. Katz

BBS 28 (3): 356-356.

 

Is all affiliation the same? Facilitation or complementarity?

Daniel S. Levine

BBS 28 (3): 356-357.

 

Affiliative reward and the ontogenetic bonding system

Warren B. Miller

BBS 28 (3): 357-358.

 

Integrating genetic, behavioral, and psychometric research in conceptualizing human behavioral traits

Marcus R. Munafò

BBS 28 (3): 358-359.

 

Specificity of affiliation suorted by neurotransmitter challenge tests and molecular genetics

Petra Netter, Martin Reuter, Juergen Hennig

BBS 28 (3): 359-360.

 

Mesolimbic-mesocortical loops may encode saliency, not just reward

Patricio O’Donnell

BBS 28 (3): 360-361.

 

Loving opioids in the brain

Jaak Pankse, Joseph R. Moskal

BBS 28 (3): 361-362.

 

Impaired hedonic capacity in major depressive disorder: Impact on affiliative behaviors

Diego A. Pizzagalli, Christen M. Deveney

BBS 28 (3): 362-363.

 

Is the construct for human affiliation too narrow?

Nancy Nyquist Potter

BBS 28 (3): 363-364.

 

Endogenous and exogenous opiates modulate the development of parent-infant attachment

James Edward Swain, Linda C. Mayes, James F. Leckman

BBS 28 (3): 364-365.

 

Deficits in affiliative reward: An endophenotype for psychiatric disorders?

Alfonso Troisi, Francesca R. D’Amato

BBS 28 (3): 365-366.

 

A nonhuman primate perspective on affiliation

Tamara A.R. Weinstein, John P. Capitanio

BBS 28 (3): 366-367.

 

Serotonin and affiliative behavior

Simon N. Young, D.S. Moskowitz

BBS 28 (3): 367-368.

 

Trust: A temporary human attachment facilitated by oxytocin

Paul J. Zak

BBS 28 (3): 368-369.

 

Serotonin, dopamine, and cooperation

Daniel John Zizzo

BBS 28 (3): 370-370.

 

It’s a long way up from comparative studies of animals to personality traits in humans

Marvin Zuckerman

BBS 28 (3): 370-371.

 

AUTHOR’S RESPONSE

 

Modeling human behavioral traits and clarifying the construct of affiliation and its disorders

Richard A. Depue, Jeannine V. Morrone-Strupinsky

BBS 28 (3): 371-378.

 

 

TARGET ARTICLE

 

A dynamic developmental theory of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) predominantly hyperactive/impulsive and combined subtypes

Terje Sagvolden, Espen Borgå Johansen, Heidi Aase, Vivienne Ann Russell

BBS 28 (3): 397-419.

 

PRECOMMENTARY

 

Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD): Delay-of-reinforcement gradients and other behavioral mechanisms

A. Charles Catania

BBS 28 (3): 419-424.

 

OPEN PEER COMMENTARY

 

Unitary or multiple pathways: The trap of radical behaviorism

Tobias Banaschewski, Sunke Himpel, Aribert Rothenberger

BBS 28 (3): 425-426.

 

The role of context and inhibition in ADHD

Petra Bjorne, Christian Balkenius

BBS 28 (3): 426-427.

 

Frontal and executive dysfunction is a central aspect of ADHD

Ximena Carrasco, Vladimir López, Francisco Aboitiz

BBS 28 (3): 427-428.

 

Delay of reinforcement gradients and attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD): The challenges of moving from causal theories to causal models

David R. Coghill

BBS 28 (3): 428-429.

 

Selectionism: Complex outcomes from simple processes

John W. Donahoe, José E. Burgos

BBS 28 (3): 429-430.

 

A comprehensive and developmental theory of ADHD is tantalizing, but premature

Canan Karatekin

BBS 28 (3): 430-431.

 

Gradus ad parnassum: Ascending strength gradients or descending memory traces?

Peter R. Killeen

BBS 28 (3): 432-434.

 

ADHD, comorbidity, synaptic gates and re-entrant circuits

Florence Levy

BBS 28 (3): 434-435.

 

What is the purpose of a new behaviorally based dynamic developmental theory of ADHD? The perspective of the educational psychologist

Paolo Moderato, Giovambattista Presti

BBS 28 (3): 435-436.

 

Reinforcement gradient, response inhibition, genetic versus experiential effects, and multiple pathways to ADHD

Joel Nigg

BBS 28 (3): 437-438.

 

ADHD theories still need to take more on board: Serotonin and pre-executive variability

Robert D. Oades, Hanna Christiansen

BBS 28 (3): 438-438.

 

Chages in sleep-wake behavior may be more than just an epiphenomenon of ADHD

Aribert Rothenberger, Roumen Kirov

BBS 28 (3): 439-439.

 

RED: ADHD under the “micro-scope” of the rat model

Katya Rubia

BBS 28 (3): 439-440.

 

Is the hypodopaminergic hypothesis plausible as neural bases of ADHD?

Adolfo G. Sadile, Davide Viggiano

BBS 28 (3): 440-441.

 

The biopsychosocial context of ADHD

Seija Sandberg

BBS 28 (3): 441-442.

 

The dynamic developmental theory of ADHD: Reflections from a cognitive energetic model standpoint

Joseph A. Sergeant

BBS 28 (3): 442-443.

 

A common core dysfunction in attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder: A scientific red herring?

Edmund J.S. Sonuga-Barke, F.X. Castellanos

BBS 28 (3): 443-444.

 

Hypodopaminergic function influences learning and memory as well as delay gradients.

Rosemary Tannock

BBS 28 (3): 444-445.

 

Altered sensitivity to reward in children with ADHD: Dopamine timing is off

Jeffery R. Wickens, E. Gail Tri

BBS 28 (3): 445-446.

 

PRECOMMENTATOR’S RESPONSE

 

Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD): One process or many?

A. Charles Catania

BBS 28 (3): 446-450.

 

AUTHOR’S RESPONSE

 

The dynamic developmental theory of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD): Present status and future perspectives

Espen Borgå Johansen, Terge Sagvolden, Heidi Aase, Vivienne Ann Russell

BBS 28 (3): 451-454.

 

 

Behavioral and Brain Sciences

Volume 28 – Issue 04 – August 2005

 

TARGET ARTICLE

 

Coordinating perceptually grounded categories through language: A case study for colour

Luc Steels and Tony Belpaeme

BBS 28 (4): 469-489.

 

OPEN PEER COMMENTARY

 

Intimations of optimality: Extensions of simulation testing of color-language hypotheses

David Bimler

BBS 28 (4): 489-490.

 

Implications for memetics

Susan Blackmore

BBS 28 (4): 490-490.

 

Language, ecological structure, and across-population sharing

Alexa Bódog, Gábor P. Háden, Zoltán Jakab and Zsolt Palatinus

BBS 28 (4): 490-491.

 

How to learn a conceptual space

Antonio Chella

BBS 28 (4): 492-492.

 

Color categories in biological evolution: Broadening the palette

Wayne D. Christensen and Luca Tommasi

BBS 28 (4): 492-493.

 

In the beginning: Word or deed?

Stephen J. Cowley

BBS 28 (4): 493-494.

 

Language impairment and colour categories

Jules Davidoff and Claudio Luzzatti

BBS 28 (4): 494-495.

 

Realistic constraints on brain color perception and category learning

Stephen Grossberg

BBS 28 (4): 495-496.

 

Modeling category coordination: Comments and complications

James A. Hampton

BBS 28 (4): 496-497.

 

Language and the game of life

Stevan Harnad

BBS 28 (4): 497-498.

 

A synthesis of many levels of constraints as a modern view of development

Derek Harter and Shulan Lu

BBS 28 (4): 498-499.

 

It is not evolution, but a better game would need a better agent

Christian Huyck and Ian Mitchell

BBS 28 (4): 499-500.

 

Dynamical categories and language

Takashi Ikegami

BBS 28 (4): 500-501.

 

Sharing perceptually grounded categories in uniform and nonuniform populations

Kimberly A. Jameson

BBS 28 (4): 501-502.

 

Seeing and talking: Whorf wouldn't be satisfied

Boris Kotchoubey

BBS 28 (4): 502-503.

 

Not all categories work the same way

Sidney R. Lehky

BBS 28 (4): 503-503.

 

On sticking labels

Jan Pieter M. A. Maes

BBS 28 (4): 503-504.

 

Is color perception really categorical?

Mohan Matthen

BBS 28 (4): 504-505.

 

How culture might constrain color categories

Debi Roberson and Catherine O'Hanlon

BBS 28 (4): 505-506.

 

It takes a(n) (agent-based) village

Teresa Satterfield

BBS 28 (4): 506-507.

 

Colour is a culturalist category

J. van Brakel

BBS 28 (4): 507-508.

 

A categorial mutation

Oscar Vilarroya

BBS 28 (4): 508-509.

 

Learning colour words is slow: A cross-situational learning account

Paul Vogt and Andrew D. M. Smith

BBS 28 (4): 509-510.

 

Interindividual variation in human color categories: Evidence against strong influence of language

Thomas Wachtler

BBS 28 (4): 510-510.

 

Categorization in artificial agents: Guidance on empirical research?

William S.-Y. Wang and Tao Gong

BBS 28 (4): 511-512.

 

Variations in color naming within and across populations

Michael A. Webster and Paul Kay

BBS 28 (4): 512-513.

 

In the tiniest house of time: Parametric constraints in evolutionary models of symbolization

Chris Westbury and Geoff Hollis

BBS 28 (4): 513-514.

 

The question of the assumed givenness of the singularity of the target

Edmond Wright

BBS 28 (4): 514-514.

 

What is culture made of?

Chen Yu and Linda Smith

BBS 28 (4): 515-515.

 

AUTHOR’S RESPONSE

The semiotic dynamics of colour

Luc Steels and Tony Belpaeme

BBS 28 (4): 515-524.

 

 

TARGET ARTICLE

 Moral heuristics

Cass R. Sunstein

BBS 28 (4): 531-542.

 

OPEN PEER COMMENTARY

 

Cognitivism, controversy, and moral heuristics

Matthew D. Adler

BBS 28 (4): 542-543.

 

Alternative perspectives on omission bias

Christopher J. Anderson

BBS 28 (4): 544-544.

 

Moral heuristics: Rigid rules or flexible inputs in moral deliberation?

Elizabeth Anderson

BBS 28 (4): 544-545.

 

Biting the utilitarian bullet

Jonathan Baron

BBS 28 (4): 545-546.

 

Towards an intuitionist account of moral development

Karen Bartsch and Jennifer Cole Wright

BBS 28 (4): 546-547.

 

Neurobiology suorts virtue theory on the role of heuristics in moral cognition

William D. Casebeer

BBS 28 (4): 547-548.

 

About emotional intelligence and moral decisions

Pablo Fernandez-Berrocal and Natalio Extremera

BBS 28 (4): 548-549.

 

Moral heuristics and the means/end distinction

Barbara H. Fried

BBS 28 (4): 549-550.

 

Moral judgments in narrative contexts

Richard J. Gerrig

BBS 28 (4): 550-550.

 

Heuristics, moral imagination, and the future of technology

Michael E. Gorman

BBS 28 (4): 551-551.

 

What's in a heuristic?

Ulrike Hahn, John-Mark Frost and Greg Maio

BBS 28 (4): 551-552.

 

Invisible fences of the moral domain

Jonathan Haidt

BBS 28 (4): 552-553.

 

Sunstein's heuristics provide insufficient descriptive and explanatory adequacy

Marc D. Hauser

BBS 28 (4): 553-554.

 

The next frontier: Moral heuristics and the treatment of animals

Harold A. Herzog and Gordon M. Burghardt

BBS 28 (4): 554-555.

 

A selectionist aroach integrates moral heuristics

Robert A. Hinde

BBS 28 (4): 555-556.

 

Betrayal aversion is reasonable

Jonathan J. Koehler and Andrew D. Gershoff

BBS 28 (4): 556-557.

 

Moral heuristics or moral competence? Reflections on Sunstein

John Mikhail

BBS 28 (4): 557-558.

 

Do normative standards advance our understanding of moral judgment?

David A. Pizarro and Eric Luis Uhlmann

BBS 28 (4): 558-559.

 

Cognitive heuristics and deontological rules

Ilana Ritov

BBS 28 (4): 559-560.

 

Intuitions, heuristics, and utilitarianism

Peter Singer

BBS 28 (4): 560-561.

 

Wide reflective equilibrium as an answer to an objection to moral heuristics

Edward Stein

BBS 28 (4): 561-562.

 

Gauging the heuristic value of heuristics

Philip E. Tetlock

BBS 28 (4): 562-563.

 

Towards a taxonomy of modes of moral decision-making

Elke U. Weber and Jessica S. Ancker

BBS 28 (4): 563-564.

 

Regulation of risks

Paul Weirich

BBS 28 (4): 564-565.

 

Author's Response

On moral intuitions and moral heuristics: A response

Cass R. Sunstein

BBS 28 (4): 565-570.

 

Research Articles

Survival with an asymmetrical brain: Advantages and disadvantages of cerebral lateralization

Giorgio Vallortigara and Lesley J. Rogers

BBS 28 (4): 575-589.

 

Open Peer Commentary

Partial reversal and the functions of lateralisation

Richard John Andrew

BBS 28 (4): 589-590.

 

Do asymmetrical differences in primate brains correspond to cerebral lateralization?

Douglas C. Broadfield

BBS 28 (4): 590-591.

 

Cerebral lateralisation, “social constraints,” and coordinated anti-predator responses

Culum Brown

BBS 28 (4): 591-592.

 

Developmental systems, evolutionarily stable strategies, and population laterality

Michael B. Casey

BBS 28 (4): 592-593.

 

Genes as primary determinants of population level lateralisation

Miguel L. Concha

BBS 28 (4): 593-594.

 

The trade-off between symmetry and asymmetry

Michael C. Corballis

BBS 28 (4): 594-595.

 

The cerebral torque and directional asymmetry for hand use are correlates of the capacity for language in Homo sapiens

Timothy J. Crow

BBS 28 (4): 595-596.

 

Causal relations between asymmetries at the individual level?

Rebecca G. Deason, David R. Andresen and Chad J. Marsolek

BBS 28 (4): 596-597.

 

Behavioral symmetry and reverse asymmetry in the chick and rat

Victor H. Denenberg

BBS 28 (4): 597-597.

 

Interactions between genetic and environmental factors determine direction of population lateralization

Chao Deng

BBS 28 (4): 598-598.

 

Rethinking brain asymmetries in humans

Bianca Dräger, Caterina Breitenstein and Stefan Knecht

BBS 28 (4): 598-599.

 

Darwin's legacy and the evolution of cerebral asymmetries

Onur Güntürkün

BBS 28 (4): 599-600.

 

The left-side bias for holding human infants: An everyday directional asymmetry in the natural environment

Lauren Julius Harris and Jason B. Almerigi

BBS 28 (4): 600-601.

 

Behavioral left-right asymmetry extends to arthropods

Boudewijn Adriaan Heuts and Tibor Brunt

BBS 28 (4): 601-602.

 

The riddle of nature and nurture – Lateralization has an epigenetic trait

Martina Manns

BBS 28 (4): 602-603.

 

Constraints from handedness on the evolution of brain lateralization

Maryanne Martin and Gregory V. Jones

BBS 28 (4): 603-604.

 

Selection pressure on the decision-making process in conflict

Toshiya Matsushima

BBS 28 (4): 604-605.

 

Natural selection of asymmetric traits operates at multiple levels

Michael K. McBeath and Thomas G. Sugar

BBS 28 (4): 605-606.

 

Unity in the wild variety of nature, or just variety?

I. C. McManus

BBS 28 (4): 606-608.

 

Putting things right: “Why” before “how”

Á. Miklósi

BBS 28 (4): 608-608.

 

Asymmetrical behavior without an asymmetrical brain: Corpus callosum and neuroplasticity

Andrei C. Miu

BBS 28 (4): 608-609.

 

Population lateralization arises in simulated evolution of non-interacting neural networks

James A. Reggia and Alexander Grushin

BBS 28 (4): 609-611.

 

Optimization through lateralization: The evolution of handedness

Robert L. Sainburg and Robert B. Eckhardt

BBS 28 (4): 611-612.

 

When dominance and sex are both right

James A. Schirillo and Melissa Fox

BBS 28 (4): 612-613.

 

Cerebral asymmetry: From survival strategies to social behaviour

Jechil Sieratzki and Bencie Woll

BBS 28 (4): 613-614.

 

Evolutionary tango: Perceptual asymmetries as a trick of sexual selection

Luca Tommasi

BBS 28 (4): 614-615.

 

AUTHOR’S RESPONSE

 

Forming an asymmetrical brain: Genes, environment, and evolutionarily stable strategies

Giorgio Vallortigara and Lesley J. Rogers

BBS 28 (4): 615-623.

 

 

Behavioral and Brain Sciences

Volume 28 – Issue 05 – October 2005

 

TARGET ARTICLE

 

Précis of Breakdown of Will

George Ainslie

BBS 28 (5): 635-650.

 

OPEN PEER COMMENTARY

 

Models of preference reversals and personal rules: Do they require maximizing a utility function with a specific structure?

Horacio Arló-Costa

BBS 28 (5): 650-651.

 

Three other motivational factors

Kent Bach

BBS 28 (5): 651-652.

 

Hyperbolas and hyperbole: The free will problem remains

Bruce Bridgeman

BBS 28 (5): 652-653.

 

Regret and the control of temporary preferences

Terry Connolly and Jochen Reb

BBS 28 (5): 653-654.

 

The will: Interpersonal bargaining versus intrapersonal prediction

Luca Ferrero

BBS 28 (5): 654-655.

 

Hyperbola-like discounting, impulsivity, and the analysis of will

Leonard Green and Joel Myerson

BBS 28 (5): 655-656.

 

Comparing ales to oranges: Who does the framing?

Richard Griffin and Daniel Dennett

BBS 28 (5): 656-656.

 

Is the evidence for hyperbolic discounting in humans just an experimental artefact?

Glenn W. Harrison and Morten Igel Lau

BBS 28 (5): 657-657.

 

Shaping your past selves

Jeanne Peijnenburg

BBS 28 (5): 657-658.

 

Problems with internalization

Howard Rachlin

BBS 28 (5): 658-659.

 

Behavioral (pico)economics and the brain sciences

Don Ross and David Spurrett

BBS 28 (5): 659-660.

 

Freud meets Skinner: Hyperbolic curves, elliptical theories, and Ainslie Interests

Federico Sanabria and Peter R. Killeen

BBS 28 (5): 660-661.

 

On the coexistence of cognitivism and intertemporal bargaining

Keith E. Stanovich

BBS 28 (5): 661-662.

 

 “To do or not to do?” Modeling the control of behavior

John D. Swain and James E. Swain

BBS 28 (5): 662-663.

 

Reference point-dependent tradeoffs in intertemporal decision making

X. T. Wang and Jeffrey S. Simons

BBS 28 (5): 663-664.

 

AUTHOR’S RESPONSE

 

A bazaar of opinions mostly fit within picoeconomics

George Ainslie

BBS 28 (5): 664-670.

 

 

TARGET ARTICLE

 

Understanding and sharing intentions: The origins of cultural cognition

Michael Tomasello, Malinda Carpenter, Josep Call, Tanya Behne and Henrike Moll

BBS 28 (5): 675-691.

 

OPEN PEER COMMENTARY

 

Language first, then shared intentionality, then a beneficent spiral

Derek Bickerton

BBS 28 (5): 691-692.

 

Joint cooperative hunting among wild chimpanzees: Taking natural observations seriously

Christophe Boesch

BBS 28 (5): 692-693.

 

Early development of shared intentionality with peers

Celia A. Brownell, Sara Nichols and Margarita Svetlova

BBS 28 (5): 693-694.

 

Homo sapiens, a localized species

Jerome Bruner

BBS 28 (5): 694-695.

 

Why do individuals with autism lack the motivation or capacity to share intentions?

Tony Charman

BBS 28 (5): 695-696.

 

Toward a construction-based account of shared intentions in social cognition

Peter F. Dominey

BBS 28 (5): 696-696.

 

Symbolic behavior and perspective-taking are forms of derived relational responding and can be learned

Simon Dymond and Louise McHugh

BBS 28 (5): 697-697.

 

Interaction synchrony and neural circuits contribute to shared intentionality

Ruth Feldman, Linda C. Mayes and James E. Swain

BBS 28 (5): 697-698.

 

What is internalised? Dialogic cognitive representations and the mediated mind

Charles Fernyhough

BBS 28 (5): 698-699.

 

Animal cognition meets evo-devo

R. Allen Gardner

BBS 28 (5): 699-700.

 

What are the consequences of understanding the complex goal-directed actions of others?

Mary Gauvain

BBS 28 (5): 700-701.

 

A few reasons why we don't share Tomasello et al.'s intuitions about sharing

György Gergely and Gergely Csibra

BBS 28 (5): 701-702.

 

Is shared intentionality widespread among and unique to humans?

Giyoo Hatano and Keiko Takahashi

BBS 28 (5): 703-703.

 

The interpersonal foundations of thinking

R. Peter Hobson

BBS 28 (5): 703-704.

 

Identifying the motivations of chimpanzees: Culture and collaboration

Victoria Horner, Kristin E. Bonnie and Frans B. M. de Waal

BBS 28 (5): 704-705.

 

Dolphin play: Evidence for cooperation and culture?

Stan A. Kuczaj and Lauren E. Highfill

BBS 28 (5): 705-706.

 

Steps toward categorizing motivation: Abilities, limitations, and conditional constraints

Valerie A. Kuhlmeier and Susan A. J. Birch

BBS 28 (5): 706-707.

 

Shared intentions without a self

Michael Lewis

BBS 28 (5): 707-708.

 

Motivation is not enough

Derek E. Lyons, Webb Phillips and Laurie R. Santos

BBS 28 (5): 708-708.

 

Causal curiosity and the conventionality of culture

Lori Markson and Gil Diesendruck

BBS 28 (5): 709-709.

 

Motivation, self-regulation, and the neurodevelopment of intention sharing

Peter Mundy

BBS 28 (5): 709-710.

 

Do infants understand that external goals are internally represented?

Josef Perner and Martin Doherty

BBS 28 (5): 710-711.

 

From action to interaction: Apes, infants, and the last Rubicon

Diane Poulin-Dubois

BBS 28 (5): 711-712.

 

Reinterpreting behavior: A human specialization?

Daniel J. Povinelli and Jochen Barth

BBS 28 (5): 712-713.

 

Illusions of intentionality, shared and unshared

Robert R. Provine

BBS 28 (5): 713-714.

 

Humans evolved to become Homo negotiatus . . . the rest followed

Philie Rochat

BBS 28 (5): 714-715.

 

Distinctive human social motivations in a game-theoretic framework

Don Ross

BBS 28 (5): 715-716.

 

Why not chimpanzees, lions, and hyenas too?

Richard Schuster

BBS 28 (5): 716-717.

 

Baby steps on the path to understanding intentions

Amrisha Vaish and Amanda Woodward

BBS 28 (5): 717-718.

 

Lack of motivation to share intentions: Primary deficit in autism?

Eline Verbeke, Wilfried Peeters, Inneke Kerkhof, Patricia Bijttebier, Jean Steyaert and Johan Wagemans

BBS 28 (5): 718-719.

 

“Einstein's baby” could infer intentionality

John S. Watson

BBS 28 (5): 719-720.

 

Triadic bodily mimesis is the difference

Jordan Zlatev, Tomas Persson and Peter Gärdenfors

BBS 28 (5): 720-721.

 

AUTHORS’ RESPONSE

 

In Search of the Uniquely Human

Michael Tomasello, Malinda Carpenter, Josep Call, Tanya Behne and Henrike Moll

BBS 28 (5): 721-727.

 

 

 

Behavioral and Brain Sciences

Volume 28 – Issue 06 – December 2005

 

TARGET ARTICLE

 

Why people see things that are not there: A novel Perception and Attention Deficit model for recurrent complex visual hallucinations

Daniel Collerton, Elaine Perry and Ian McKeith

BBS 28 (6): 737-757.

 

OPEN PEER COMMENTARY

 

Common or distinct deficits for auditory and visual hallucinations?

Johanna C. Badcock and Murray T. Maybery

BBS 28 (6): 757-758.

 

Attentional deficit versus impaired reality testing: What is the role of executive dysfunction in complex visual hallucinations?

Ralf-Peter Behrendt

BBS 28 (6): 758-759.

 

Catatonia is the Rosetta Stone of psychosis

Brendan T. Carroll and Tressa D. Carroll

BBS 28 (6): 759-760.

 

Neural correlates of visual hallucinatory phenomena: The role of attention

Miguel Castelo-Branco

BBS 28 (6): 760-761.

 

A signal-detection-theory representation of normal and hallucinatory perception

Igor Dolgov and Michael K. McBeath

BBS 28 (6): 761-762.

 

Perception is far from perfection: The role of the brain and mind in constructing realities

Itiel E. Dror

BBS 28 (6): 763-763.

 

Two visual hallucinatory syndromes

Dominic H. ffytche

BBS 28 (6): 763-764.

 

Hallucinations and perceptual inference

Karl J. Friston

BBS 28 (6): 764-766.

 

Waking hallucinations could correspond to a mild form of dreaming sleep stage hallucinatory activity

Claude Gottesmann

BBS 28 (6): 766-767.

 

The emergence of proto-objects in complex visual hallucinations

Glenda Halliday

BBS 28 (6): 767-768.

 

Two kinds of “memory images”: Experimental models for hallucinations?

David Ingle

BBS 28 (6): 768-768.

 

Monoamines in RCVH: Implications from sleep, neurophysiologic, and clinical research

Roumen Kirov

BBS 28 (6): 768-769.

 

Mental images: Always present, never there

Fred W. Mast

BBS 28 (6): 769-770.

 

Now you see it, now you don't: More data at the cognitive level needed before the PAD model can be accepted

Jason Morrison and Anthony S. David

BBS 28 (6): 770-771.

 

Complex hallucinations in waking suggest mechanisms of dream construction

Edward F. Pace-Schott

BBS 28 (6): 771-772.

 

Hallucinating objects versus hallucinating subjects

Alexei V. Samsonovich

BBS 28 (6): 772-773.

 

The role of acetylcholine in hallucinatory perception

John Raymond Smythies

BBS 28 (6): 773-773.

 

Visual hallucinations, attention, and neural circuitry: Perspectives from schizophrenia research

Kevin M. Spencer and Robert W. McCarley

BBS 28 (6): 774-774.

 

Believing is seeing in schizophrenia: The role of top-down processing

Duje Tadin, Peiyan Wong, Michael W. Mebane, Michael J. Berkowitz, Hollister Trott and Sohee Park

BBS 28 (6): 775-775.

 

AUTHORS’ RESPONSE

 

Still PADing along: Perception and attention remain key factors in understanding complex visual hallucinations

Daniel Collerton, Elaine Perry and Ian McKeith

BBS 28 (6): 776-794.

 

 

TARGET ARTICLE

 

“Economic man” in cross-cultural perspective: Behavioral experiments in 15 small-scale societies

Joseph Henrich, Robert Boyd, Samuel Bowles, Colin Camerer, Ernst Fehr, Herbert Gintis, Richard McElreath, Michael Alvard, Abigail Barr, Jean Ensminger, Natalie Smith Henrich, Kim Hill, Francisco Gil-White, Michael Gurven, Frank W. Marlowe, John Q. Patton and David Tracer

BBS 28 (6): 795-815.

 

OPEN PEER COMMENTARY

You can't give permission to be a bastard: Empathy and self-signaling as uncontrollable independent variables in bargaining games

George Ainslie

BBS 28 (6): 815-816.

 

Economic man – or straw man?

Ken Binmore

BBS 28 (6): 817-818.

 

A cross-species perspective on the selfishness axiom

Sarah F. Brosnan and Frans B. M. de Waal

BBS 28 (6): 818-818.

 

On the limitations of quasi-experiments

Terence C. Burnham and Robert Kurzban

BBS 28 (6): 818-819.

 

Psychology and groups at the junction of genes and culture

Linnda R. Caporael

BBS 28 (6): 819-821.

 

Radical contingency in sharing behavior and its consequences

Todd Davies

BBS 28 (6): 821-821.

 

Measuring fairness across cultural contexts

Edmund Fantino, Stephanie Stolarz-Fantino and Arthur Kennelly

BBS 28 (6): 822-822.

 

Cross-cultural differences in norm enforcement

Simon Gächter, Benedikt Herrmann and Christian Thöni

BBS 28 (6): 822-823.

 

Is the Ultimatum Game a three-body affair?

Gerd Gigerenzer and Thalia Gigerenzer

BBS 28 (6): 823-824.

 

What does the Ultimatum Game mean in the real world?

Randolph C. Grace and Simon Kemp

BBS 28 (6): 824-825.

 

The ecological rationality of strategic cognition

Christophe Heintz

BBS 28 (6): 825-826.

 

Market integration, cognitive awareness, and the expansion of moral empathy

William Jankowiak

BBS 28 (6): 826-827.

 

How do cultural variations emerge from universal mechanisms?

Douglas T. Kenrick and Jill M. Sundie

BBS 28 (6): 827-828.

 

Let's add some psychology (and maybe even some evolution) to the mix

Daniel Brian Krupp, Pat Barclay, Martin Daly, Toko Kiyonari, Greg Dingle and Margo Wilson

BBS 28 (6): 828-829.

 

Born selfish? Rationality, altruism, and the initial state

Margery Lucas and Laura Wagner

BBS 28 (6): 829-830.

 

Moral realism and cross-cultural normative diversity

Edouard Machery, Daniel Kelly and Stephen P. Stich

BBS 28 (6): 830-830.

 

Culture and individual differences

Arthur B. Markman, Serge Blok, John Dennis, Micah Goldwater, Kyungil Kim, Jeff Laux, Lisa Narvaez and Eric Taylor

BBS 28 (6): 831-831.

 

Building a better micro-foundation for institutional analysis

Elinor Ostrom

BBS 28 (6): 831-832.

 

Making it real: Interpreting economic experiments

Eric Alden Smith

BBS 28 (6): 832-833.

 

Sociality and self interest

Vernon L. Smith

BBS 28 (6): 833-834.

 

Methods do matter: Variation in experimental methodologies and results

Richard Sosis

BBS 28 (6): 834-835.

 

Economic models are not evolutionary models

Roger J. Sullivan and Henry F. Lyle, III

BBS 28 (6): 836-836.

 

Preferences, beliefs, and heuristics

Toshio Yamagishi

BBS 28 (6): 836-837.

 

Economic man: Self-interest and rational choice

Daniel John Zizzo

BBS 28 (6): 837-838.

 

AUTHORS’ RESPONSE

 

Models of decision-making and the coevolution of social preferences

Joseph Henrich, Robert Boyd, Samuel Bowles, Colin Camerer, Ernst Fehr, Herbert Gintis, Richard McElreath, Michael Alvard, Abigail Barr, Jean Ensminger, Natalie Smith Henrich, Kim Hill, Francisco Gil-White, Michael Gurven, Frank W. Marlowe, John Q. Patton and David Tracer

BBS 28 (6): 838-855.

 

SUPPLEMENTARY COMMENTARY

 

Refinements and confinements in a two-stage model of memory consolidation

Ullrich Wagner, Steffen Gais and Jan Born

BBS 28 (6): 857-858.