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.