Behavioral and Brain Sciences

Volume 29 – Issue 01 – February 2006

 

TARGET ARTICLE

 

Précis of Principles of Brain Evolution

Georg F. Striedter

BBS 29 (1): 1-12.

 

Open Peer Commentary

 

Brain evolution: Part I

Elizabeth Adkins-Regan

BBS 29 (1): 12-13.

 

Neuroscientists need to be evolutionarily challenged

Robert A. Barton

BBS 29 (1): 13-14.

 

Practical use of evolutionary neuroscience principles

Barbara Clancy

BBS 29 (1): 14-15.

 

Putting humans in their proper place

R. I. M. Dunbar

BBS 29 (1): 15-16.

 

Scaling patterns of interhemispheric connectivity in eutherian mammals

Emmanuel Gilissen

BBS 29 (1): 16-17.

 

The evolution of computation in brain circuitry

Richard Granger

BBS 29 (1): 17-18.

 

Principles of brain connectivity organization

Claus C. Hilgetag

BBS 29 (1): 18-19.

 

Mental attention, not language, may explain evolutionary growth of human intelligence and brain size

Juan Pascual-Leone

BBS 29 (1): 19-20.

 

Velocity and direction in neurobehavioral evolution: The centripetal prospective

Robert R. Provine

BBS 29 (1): 21-22.

 

The key role of prefrontal cortex structure and function

Antonino Raffone and Gary L. Brase

BBS 29 (1): 22-22.

 

Brain evolution by natural selection

Toru Shimizu

BBS 29 (1): 23-24.

 

An evolutionary niche for quantitative theoretical analyses?

Yasser Roudi and Alessandro Treves

BBS 29 (1): 23-23.

 

Brain design: The evolution of brains

James E. Swain

BBS 29 (1): 24-25.

 

Author’S Response

 

Evolutionary neuroscience: Limitations and prospects

Georg F. Striedter

BBS 29 (1): 25-31.

 

 

TARGET ARTICLE

 

Neural blackboard architectures of combinatorial structures in cognition

Frank van der Velde and Marc de Kamps

BBS 29 (1): 37-70.

 

Open Peer Commentary

 

Conscious cognition and blackboard architectures

Bernard J. Baars

BBS 29 (1): 70-71.

 

On the structural ambiguity in natural language that the neural architecture cannot deal with

Rens Bod, Hartmut Fitz and Willem Zuidema

BBS 29 (1): 71-72.

 

How neural is the neural blackboard architecture?

Yoonsuck Choe

BBS 29 (1): 72-73.

 

How anchors allow reusing categories in neural composition of sentences

William J. Clancey

BBS 29 (1): 73-74.

 

The problem with using associations to carry binding information

Leonidas A. A. Doumas, Keith J. Holyoak and John E. Hummel

BBS 29 (1): 74-75.

 

Has the brain evolved to answer “binding questions” or to generate likely hypotheses about complex and continuously changing environments?

Birgitta Dresp and Jean Charles Barthaud

BBS 29 (1): 75-76.

 

Engineering the brain

Daniel Durstewitz

BBS 29 (1): 76-77.

 

Will the neural blackboard architecture scale up to semantics?

Michael G. Dyer

BBS 29 (1): 77-78.

 

Vector symbolic architectures are a viable alternative for Jackendoff's challenges

Ross W. Gayler

BBS 29 (1): 78-79.

 

Distributed neural blackboards could be more attractive

André Grüning and Alessandro Treves

BBS 29 (1): 79-80.

 

Neural circuits, matrices, and conjunctive binding

Robert F. Hadley

BBS 29 (1): 80-80.

 

Blackboards in the brain

Ralph-Axel Müller

BBS 29 (1): 81-81.

 

Constituent structure and the binding problem

Colin Phillips and Matthew Wagers

BBS 29 (1): 81-82.

 

On the unproductiveness of language and linguistics

David M. W. Powers

BBS 29 (1): 82-84.

 

Comparing the neural blackboard and the temporal synchrony-based SHRUTI architectures

Lokendra Shastri

BBS 29 (1): 84-86.

 

Can neural models of cognition benefit from the advantages of connectionism?

Friedrich T. Sommer and Pentti Kanerva

BBS 29 (1): 86-87.

 

An alternative model of sentence parsing explains complexity phenomena more comprehensively without problems of localist encoding

Carol Whitney

BBS 29 (1): 87-88.

 

Authors’ Response

 

From neural dynamics to true combinatorial structures

Frank van der Velde and Marc de Kamps

BBS 29 (1): 88-104.

 

 

Behavioral and Brain Sciences

Volume 29 – Issue 02 – April 2006

 

TARGET ARTICLE

 

How similar are fluid cognition and general intelligence? A developmental neuroscience perspective on fluid cognition as an aspect of human cognitive ability

Clancy Blair

BBS 29 (2): 109-125.

 

Open Peer Commentary

 

What we need is better theory, not more data

Mike Anderson

BBS 29 (2): 125-126.

 

Heterogeneity in fluid cognition and some neural underpinnings

Oana Benga

BBS 29 (2): 126-126.

 

Prior to paradigm integration, the task is to resolve construct definitions of gF and WM

Damian P. Birney, David B. Bowman and Gerry Pallier

BBS 29 (2): 127-129.

 

Exactly how are fluid intelligence, working memory, and executive function related? Cognitive neuroscience approaches to investigating the mechanisms of fluid cognition

Gregory C. Burgess, Todd S. Braver and Jeremy R. Gray

BBS 29 (2): 128-129.

 

Within fluid cognition: Fluid processing and fluid storage?

Nelson Cowan

BBS 29 (2): 129-130.

 

Dissecting g

Andreas Demetriou

BBS 29 (2): 130-132.

 

Towards a theory of intelligence beyond g

James R. Flynn

BBS 29 (2): 132-134..

 

Early intervention and the growth of children's fluid intelligence: A cognitive developmental perspective

Ruth M. Ford

BBS 29 (2): 133-134.

 

There is more to fluid intelligence than working memory capacity and executive function

Dennis Garlick and Terrence J. Sejnowski

BBS 29 (2): 134-135.

 

Working memory, executive function, and general fluid intelligence are not the same

Richard P. Heitz, Thomas S. Redick, David Z. Hambrick, Michael J. Kane, Andrew R. A. Conway and Randall W. Engle

BBS 29 (2): 135-136.

 

Clarifying process versus structure in human intelligence: Stop talking about fluid and crystallized

Wendy Johnson and Irving I. Gottesman

BBS 29 (2): 136-137.

 

Some considerations concerning neurological development and psychometric assessment

James C. Kaufman and Alan S. Kaufman

BBS 29 (2): 137-138.

 

Difficulties differentiating dissociations

Kristof Kovacs, Kate C. Plaisted and Nicholas J. Mackintosh

BBS 29 (2): 138-139.

 

Fluid intelligence as cognitive decoupling

Keith E. Stanovich

BBS 29 (2): 139-140.

 

Fluidity, adaptivity, and self-organization

Elpida S. Tzafestas

BBS 29 (2): 140-141.

 

Mechanisms of fluid cognition: Relational integration and inhibition

Indre V. Viskontas and Keith J. Holyoak

BBS 29 (2): 141-142.

 

Phlogiston, fluid intelligence, and the Lynn–Flynn effect

Martin Voracek

BBS 29 (2): 142-143.

 

How relevant are fluid cognition and general intelligence? A developmental neuroscientist's perspective on a new model

Marko Wilke

BBS 29 (2): 143-143.

 

Can fluid and general intelligence be differentiated in an older adult population?

Nancy A. Zook and Deana B. Davalos

BBS 29 (2): 143-145.

 

Author’S Response

Toward a revised theory of general intelligence: Further examination of fluid cognitive abilities as unique aspects of human cognition

Clancy Blair

BBS 29 (2): 145-153.

 

 

TARGET ARTICLE

 

Money as tool, money as drug: The biological psychology of a strong incentive

Stephen E. G. Lea and Paul Webley

BBS 29 (2): 161-209.

 

Open Peer Commentary

 

What good are facts? The “drug” value of money as an exemplar of all non-instrumental value

George Ainslie

BBS 29 (2): 176-177.

 

The biology of the interest in money

Joseph Agassi

BBS 29 (2): 176-176.

 

Scarcity begets addiction

Giorgio A. Ascoli and Kevin A. McCabe

BBS 29 (2): 178-178.

 

The desire to obtain money: A culturally ritualised expression of the aggressive instinct

Ralf-Peter Behrendt

BBS 29 (2): 178-179.

 

Money as civilizing ritual

Russell Belk

BBS 29 (2): 180-180.

 

Money as tool, money as resource: The biology of collecting items for their own sake

David A. Booth

BBS 29 (2): 180-181.

 

Hoarding behavior: A better evolutionary account of money psychology?

Paul Bouissac

BBS 29 (2): 181-182.

 

Money, play, and instincts

Gordon M. Burghardt

BBS 29 (2): 182-183.

 

Money as epistemic structure

Sanjay Chandrasekharan

BBS 29 (2): 183-184.

 

Money and the autonomy instinct

Siegfried Dewitte

BBS 29 (2): 184-185.

 

Individual differences, affective and social factors

Adrian Furnham

BBS 29 (2): 185-186.

 

Metaphysics of money: A special case of emerging autonomy in evolving subsystems

Robert B. Glassman

BBS 29 (2): 186-187.

 

Keeping up with the Joneses: The Desire of the Desire for money

Paul Jorion

BBS 29 (2): 187-188.

 

Operant contingencies and “near-money”

Simon Kemp and Randolph C. Grace

BBS 29 (2): 188-188.

 

Show me the status: Money as a kind of currency

Kevin M. Kniffin

BBS 29 (2): 188-189.

 

Sacredness in an experimental chamber

Vladimir A. Lefebvre

BBS 29 (2): 189-190.

 

Money and motivational activation

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

BBS 29 (2): 190-190.

 

The investigation of neural correlates of monetary reward by using functional neuroimaging techniques

Harold Mouras

BBS 29 (2): 191-191.

 

Avoiding drug dependency

Paul Romanowich, Edmund Fantino and Stephanie Stolarz-Fantino

BBS 29 (2): 191-192.

 

Evolutionary psychology and functionally empty metaphors

Don Ross and David Spurrett

BBS 29 (2): 192-193.

 

Tools, drugs, and signals in the road from evolution to money

Federico Sanabria

BBS 29 (2): 193-194.

 

Memetics and money

Keith E. Stanovich

BBS 29 (2): 194-195.

 

Money motives, moral philosophy, and biological explanations

Adrian J. Walsh

BBS 29 (2): 195-196.

 

AuthorS’ Response

 

Money: Motivation, metaphors, and mores

Stephen E. G. Lea and Paul Webley

BBS 29 (2): 196-204.

 

 

Behavioral and Brain Sciences

Volume 29 – Issue 03 – June 2006

 

TARGET ARTICLE

 

Cruelty's rewards: The gratifications of perpetrators and spectators

Victor Nell

BBS 29 (3): 211-224.

 

Open Peer Commentary

 

Cruelty may be a self-control device against sympathy

George Ainslie

BBS 29 (3): 224-225.

 

A murky portrait of human cruelty

Albert Bandura

BBS 29 (3): 225-226.

 

Cruelty as by-product of ritualisation of intraspecific aggression in cultural evolution

Ralf-Peter Behrendt

BBS 29 (3): 226-227.

 

Make love, not war: Both serve to defuse stress-induced arousal through the dopaminergic “pleasure” network

Mary F. Dallman

BBS 29 (3): 227-228.

 

Neurobiological bases of aggression, violence, and cruelty

María Inés de Aguirre

BBS 29 (3): 228-229.

 

Compassion as an antidote to cruelty

Michael Allen Fox

BBS 29 (3): 229-230.

 

Cruelty: A dispositional or a situational behavior in man?

Mika Haritos-Fatouros

BBS 29 (3): 230-230.

 

Human–animal connections: Recent findings on the anthrozoology of cruelty

Harold Herzog and Arnold Arluke

BBS 29 (3): 230-231.

 

Considering the roles of affect and culture in the enactment and enjoyment of cruelty

Spee Kosloff, Jeff Greenberg and Sheldon Solomon

BBS 29 (3): 231-232.

 

Signifying nothing? Myth and science of cruelty

Boris Kotchoubey

BBS 29 (3): 232-233.

 

The cruelty of older infants and toddlers

Sebastian Kraemer

BBS 29 (3): 233-234.

 

Recent advances and hypotheses regarding the neural networks involved in cruelty and pathological aggression

Harold Mouras

BBS 29 (3): 234-234.

 

The affective neuroeconomics of social brains: One man's cruelty is another's suffering

Jaak Panksepp

BBS 29 (3): 234-235.

 

Human cruelty is rooted in the reinforcing effects of intraspecific aggression that subserves dominance motivation

Michael Potegal

BBS 29 (3): 236-237.

 

Shame, violence, and perpetrators' voices

Nancy Nyquist Potter

BBS 29 (3): 237-237.

 

Cruelty's utility: The evolution of same-species killing

Malcolm Potts

BBS 29 (3): 238-238.

 

Animal cruelty: Definitions and sociology

Andrew Nicholas Rowan

BBS 29 (3): 238-239.

 

Executive function and language deficits associated with aggressive-sadistic personality

Anthony C. Ruocco and Steven M. Platek

BBS 29 (3): 239-240.

 

Nice idea, but is it science?

Richard Schuster

BBS 29 (3): 240-241.

 

Sadistic cruelty and unempathic evil: Psychobiological and evolutionary considerations

Dan J. Stein

BBS 29 (3): 242-242.

 

Epigenetic effects of child abuse and neglect propagate human cruelty

James E. Swain

BBS 29 (3): 242-243.

 

Predation versus competition and the importance of manipulable causes

Katy Tapper

BBS 29 (3): 243-244.

 

Torturers, horror films, and the aesthetic legacy of predation

Lionel Tiger

BBS 29 (3): 244-245.

 

Cruelty, age, and thanatourism

Pierre L. van den Berghe

BBS 29 (3): 245-245.

 

Explaining human cruelty

Nick Zangwill

BBS 29 (3): 245-246.

 

Author’S Response

 

Cruelty and the psychology of history

Victor Nell

BBS 29 (3): 246-251.

 

 

TARGET ARTICLE

 

Language and life history: A new perspective on the development and evolution of human language

John L. Locke and Barry Bogin

BBS 29 (3): 259-280.

 

Open Peer Commentary

 

Invoking narrative transmission in oral societies

Ileana Benga

BBS 29 (3): 280-280.

 

Language use, not language, is what develops in childhood and adolescence

Derek Bickerton

BBS 29 (3): 280-281.

 

The role of developmental immaturity and plasticity in evolution

David F. Bjorklund and Jason Grotuss

BBS 29 (3): 281-282.

 

Reconciling vague and formal models of language evolution

Henry Brighton, Rui Mata and Andreas Wilke

BBS 29 (3): 282-282.

 

Interaction promotes cognition: The rise of childish minds

Stephen J. Cowley

BBS 29 (3): 283-283.

 

The phylogeny and ontogeny of adaptations

Thomas E. Dickins

BBS 29 (3): 283-284.

 

The evolution of language: Present behavioral evidence for past genetic reprogramming in the human lineage

Robert B. Eckhardt

BBS 29 (3): 284-285.

 

Road to language: Longer, more believable, more relevant

R. Allen Gardner

BBS 29 (3): 285-286.

 

Dynamic systems and the evolution of language

Lakshmi J. Gogate

BBS 29 (3): 286-287.

 

Why don't chimps talk and humans sing like canaries?

Sverker Johansson, Jordan Zlatev and Peter Gärdenfors

BBS 29 (3): 287-288.

 

The evolution of childhood as a by-product?

Peter Kappeler

BBS 29 (3): 288-289.

 

Apes, humans, and M. C. Escher: Uniqueness and continuity in the evolution of language

Barbara J. King

BBS 29 (3): 289-290.

 

Words are not costly displays: Shortcomings of a testosterone-fuelled model of language evolution

Chris Knight and Camilla Power

BBS 29 (3): 290-291.

 

Knowledge of language and phrasal vocabulary acquisition

Koenraad Kuiper

BBS 29 (3): 291-292.

 

From crying to words: Unique or multilevel selective pressures?

Daniela Lenti Boero and Luciana Bottoni

BBS 29 (3): 292-293.

 

About juvenility, the features of feminine speech, and a big leap

Pierre Liénard

BBS 29 (3): 293-293.

 

How the language capacity was naturally selected: Altriciality and long immaturity

D. Kimbrough Oller and Ulrike Griebel

BBS 29 (3): 293-294.

 

Comparative, continuity, and computational evidence in evolutionary theory: Predictive evidence versus productive evidence

David M. W. Powers

BBS 29 (3): 294-296.

 

Language and life history: Not a new perspective

Sonia Ragir and Patricia J. Brooks

BBS 29 (3): 296-297.

 

Life stages, put in words: Morning, four; noon, two; evening, three?

Wolfgang M. Schleidt

BBS 29 (3): 297-298.

 

Is it language that makes humans intelligent?

Jo Van Herwegen and Annette Karmiloff-Smith

BBS 29 (3): 298-298.

 

Uniqueness of human childhood and adolescence?

Glenn E. Weisfeld

BBS 29 (3): 298-299.

 

Melody as a primordial legacy from early roots of language

Kathleen Wermke and Werner Mende

BBS 29 (3): 300-300.

 

“Language impairment gene” does not necessarily equate to “language gene”

Lance Workman

BBS 29 (3): 301-301.

 

AuthorS’ Response

 

Life history and language: Selection in development

John L. Locke and Barry Bogin

BBS 29 (3): 301-311.

 

ERRATUM

BBS 29 (3): 327-327.

 

 

Behavioral and Brain Sciences

Volume 29 – Issue 04 – August 2006

 

TARGET ARTICLE

 

Towards a unified science of cultural evolution

Alex Mesoudi, Andrew Whiten and Kevin N. Laland

BBS 29 (4): 329-347.

 

Open Peer Commentary

 

Culture evolves only if there is cultural inheritance

Robert Aunger

BBS 29 (4): 347-348.

 

Vertical/compatible integration versus analogizing with biology

Jerome H. Barkow

BBS 29 (4): 348-349.

 

Why we need memetics

Susan Blackmore

BBS 29 (4): 349-350.

 

Analogies are powerful and dangerous things

Monique Borgerhoff Mulder, Richard McElreath and Kari Britt Schroeder

BBS 29 (4): 350-351.

 

Evolutionary theory and the riddle of the universe

Denny Borsboom

BBS 29 (4): 351-351.

 

It is not evolutionary models, but models in general that social science needs

Bruce Bridgeman

BBS 29 (4): 351-352.

 

Intelligent design in cultural evolution

Lee Cronk

BBS 29 (4): 352-353.

 

A continuum of mindfulness

Daniel Dennett and Ryan McKay

BBS 29 (4): 353-354.

 

Evolution is important but it is not simple: Defining cultural traits and incorporating complex evolutionary theory

Agustín Fuentes

BBS 29 (4): 354-355.

 

The role of psychology in the study of culture

Daniel Kelly, Edouard Machery, Ron Mallon, Kelby Mason and Stephen P. Stich

BBS 29 (4): 355-355.

 

Evolutionary social science beyond culture

Harold Kincaid

BBS 29 (4): 356-356.

 

Cultural evolution is more than neurological evolution

Thorbjørn Knudsen and Geoffrey M. Hodgson

BBS 29 (4): 356-357.

 

Cultural traits and cultural integration

R. Lee Lyman

BBS 29 (4): 357-358.

 

A long way to understanding cultural evolution

Werner Mende and Kathleen Wermke

BBS 29 (4): 358-359.

 

Archaeology and cultural macroevolution

Michael J. O'Brien

BBS 29 (4): 359-360.

 

Darwinian cultural evolution rivals genetic evolution

Mark Pagel

BBS 29 (4): 360-360.

 

Cultural evolution is not equivalent to Darwinian evolution

Dwight W. Read

BBS 29 (4): 361-361.

 

Evo-devo, modularity, and evolvability: Insights for cultural evolution

Simon M. Reader

BBS 29 (4): 361-362.

 

A unified science of cultural evolution should incorporate choice

Barry Sopher

BBS 29 (4): 362-363.

 

The uses of ethnography in the science of cultural evolution

Jamshid Tehrani

BBS 29 (4): 363-364.

 

Generative entrenchment and an evolutionary developmental biology for culture

William C. Wimsatt

BBS 29 (4): 364-366.

 

AuthorS’ Response

 

A science of culture: Clarifications and extensions

Alex Mesoudi, Andrew Whiten and Kevin N. Laland

BBS 29 (4): 366-375.

 

 

TARGET ARTICLE

 

Resolving the paradox of common, harmful, heritable mental disorders: Which evolutionary genetic models work best?

Matthew C. Keller and Geoffrey Miller

BBS 29 (4): 385-404.

 

Open Peer Commentary

 

Praise for a critical perspective

David C. Airey and Richard C. Shelton

BBS 29 (4): 405-405.

 

Genes for susceptibility to mental disorder are not mental disorder: Clarifying the target of evolutionary analysis and the role of the environment

Nicholas B. Allen and Paul B. T. Badcock

BBS 29 (4): 405-406.

 

The social environment compresses the diversity of genetic aberrations into the uniformity of schizophrenia manifestations

Ralf-Peter Behrendt

BBS 29 (4): 406-408.

 

Evolutionary psychiatry is dead – Long liveth evolutionary psychopathology

Martin Brüne

BBS 29 (4): 408-408.

 

The evolutionary genetics of personality: Does mutation load signal relationship load?

David M. Buss

BBS 29 (4): 409-409.

 

Finland's Galapagos: Founder effect, drift, and isolation in the inheritance of susceptibility alleles

Tom Campbell, Daria Osipova and Seppo Kähkönen

BBS 29 (4): 409-410.

 

The natural selection of psychosis

Bernard Crespi

BBS 29 (4): 410-411.

 

Why the adaptationist perspective must be considered: The example of morbid jealousy

Judith A. Easton, Lucas D. Schipper and Todd K. Shackelford

BBS 29 (4): 411-412.

 

Mutations, developmental instability, and the Red Queen

Steven W. Gangestad and Ronald A. Yeo

BBS 29 (4): 412-413.

 

Autism: Common, heritable, but not harmful

Morton Ann Gernsbacher, Michelle Dawson and Laurent Mottron

BBS 29 (4): 413-414.

 

Heritable mental disorders: You can't choose your relatives, but it is they who may really count

Ester I. Klimkeit and John L. Bradshaw

BBS 29 (4): 414-415.

 

Are common, harmful, heritable mental disorders common relative to other such non-mental disorders, and does their frequency require a special explanation?

Oliver Mayo and Carolyn Leach

BBS 29 (4): 415-416.

 

The romance of balancing selection versus the sober alternatives: Let the data rule

John J. McGrath

BBS 29 (4): 417-418.

 

Reconciling the mutation-selection balance model with the schizotypy-creativity connection

Daniel Nettle

BBS 29 (4): 418-418.

 

Mental disorders are not a homogeneous construct

Joseph Polimeni

BBS 29 (4): 418-419.

 

Mental disorders, evolution, and inclusive fitness

Antonio Preti and Paola Miotto

BBS 29 (4): 419-420.

 

Behavioural ecology as a basic science for evolutionary psychiatry

John S. Price

BBS 29 (4): 420-421.

 

Bipolar disorder evolved as an adaptation to severe climate

Julia A. Sherman

BBS 29 (4): 421-422.

 

Adaptationism and medicalization: The Scylla and Charybdis of Darwinian psychiatry

Alfonso Troisi

BBS 29 (4): 422-423.

 

Population genetical musings on suicidal behavior as a common, harmful, heritable mental disorder

Martin Voracek

BBS 29 (4): 423-424.

 

High mental disorder rates are based on invalid measures: Questions about the claimed ubiquity of mutation-induced dysfunction

Jerome C. Wakefield

BBS 29 (4): 424-426.

 

Multiple timescales of evolution

Jonathan Williams

BBS 29 (4): 426-427.

 

The evolution of evolutionary epidemiology: A defense of pluralistic epigenetic modes of transmission

Daniel R. Wilson

BBS 29 (4): 427-429.

 

AuthorS’ Response

 

An evolutionary framework for mental disorders: Integrating adaptationist and evolutionary genetic models

Matthew C. Keller and Geoffrey Miller

BBS 29 (4): 429-441.

 

 

Behavioral and Brain Sciences

Volume 29 – Issue 05 – October 2006

 

TARGET ARTICLE

 

The folk psychology of souls

Jesse M. Bering

BBS 29 (5): 453-462.

 

Open Peer Commentary

 

Simulation constraints, afterlife beliefs, and common-sense dualism

Michael V. Antony

BBS 29 (5): 462-463.

 

Social cognition of religion

William Sims Bainbridge

BBS 29 (5): 463-464.

 

Parenting, not religion, makes us into moral agents

Benjamin Beit-Hallahmi

BBS 29 (5): 464-465.

 

Religion and morality: An anthropological comment

Maurice Bloch

BBS 29 (5): 465-466.

 

Prosocial aspects of afterlife beliefs: Maybe another by-product

Pascal Boyer

BBS 29 (5): 466-466.

 

The principle of ontological commitment in pre- and postmortem multiple agent tracking

Nicolas J. Bullot

BBS 29 (5): 466-468.

 

Ecological variability and religious beliefs

Adam B. Cohen, Douglas T. Kenrick and Yexin Jessica Li

BBS 29 (5): 468-468.

 

Production of supernatural beliefs during Cotard's syndrome, a rare psychotic depression

David Cohen and Angèle Consoli

BBS 29 (5): 468-470.

 

Evidence for early dualism and a more direct path to afterlife beliefs

David Estes

BBS 29 (5): 470-470.

 

A case of stunted development? Existential reasoning is contingent on a developing theory of mind

E. Margaret Evans and Henry M. Wellman

BBS 29 (5): 471-472.

 

Culture and development matter to understanding souls, no matter what our evolutionary design

Michel Ferrari

BBS 29 (5): 472-472.

 

Autism, language, and the folk psychology of souls

Stephen Flusberg and Helen Tager-Flusberg

BBS 29 (5): 473-473.

 

The supernatural guilt trip does not take us far enough

Nathalia L. Gjersoe and Bruce M. Hood

BBS 29 (5): 473-474.

 

Souls do not live by cognitive inclinations alone, but by the desire to exist beyond death as well

Jeff Greenberg, Daniel Sullivan, Spee Kosloff and Sheldon Solomon

BBS 29 (5): 474-475.

 

Learning that there is life after death

Paul L. Harris and Rita Astuti

BBS 29 (5): 475-476.

 

Folk psychology meets folk Darwinism

Jay Hegdé and Norman A. Johnson

BBS 29 (5): 476-477.

 

Natural selection and religiosity: Validity issues in the empirical examination of afterlife cognitions

Brian M. Hughes

BBS 29 (5): 477-478.

 

Transcendental self-organization

Carl N. Johnson and Melanie Nyhof

BBS 29 (5): 478-478.

 

Six feet over: Out-of-body experiences and their relevance to the folk psychology of souls

David Kemmerer and Rupa Gupta

BBS 29 (5): 478-479.

 

Cultural adaptation and evolved, general-purpose cognitive mechanisms are sufficient to explain belief in souls

Kenneth R. Livingston

BBS 29 (5): 479-480.

 

Beliefs in afterlife as a by-product of persistence judgments

George E. Newman, Sergey V. Blok and Lance J. Rips

BBS 29 (5): 480-481.

 

Do children think of the self as the soul?

Shaun Nichols

BBS 29 (5): 481-482.

 

The Godfather of soul

Jesse Preston, Kurt Gray and Daniel M. Wegner

BBS 29 (5): 482-483.

 

No evidence of a specific adaptation

Ilkka Pyysiäinen

BBS 29 (5): 483-484.

 

An unconstrained mind: Explaining belief in the afterlife

Philip Robbins and Anthony I. Jack

BBS 29 (5): 484-484

 

Evolution's lost souls

Lloyd E. Sandelands

BBS 29 (5): 484-485.

 

Reasoning about dead agents: A cross-cultural perspective

Harvey Whitehouse

BBS 29 (5): 485-486.

 

Author's Response

 

The cognitive science of souls: Clarifications and extensions of the evolutionary model

Jesse M. Bering

BBS 29 (5): 486-493.

 

 

TARGET ARTICLE

 

The unified theory of repression

Matthew Hugh Erdelyi

BBS 29 (5): 499-511.

 

Open Peer Commentary

 

Encouraging the nascent cognitive neuroscience of repression

Michael C. Anderson and Benjamin J. Levy

BBS 29 (5): 511-513.

 

Can repression become a conscious process?

Simon Boag

BBS 29 (5): 513-514.

 

Motive and consequence in repression

Joseph M. Boden

BBS 29 (5): 514-515.

 

The illusion of repressed memory

George A. Bonanno

BBS 29 (5): 515-516.

 

What Erdelyi has repressed

Frederick Crews

BBS 29 (5): 516-517.

 

Freud did not anticipate modern reconstructive memory processes

Allen Esterson and Stephen J. Ceci

BBS 29 (5): 517-518.

 

The social psychology of cognitive repression

Jennifer J. Freyd

BBS 29 (5): 518-519.

 

Forging a link between cognitive and emotional repression

Esther Fujiwara and Marcel Kinsbourne

BBS 29 (5): 519-520.

 

Dialectical repression theory

David H. Gleaves

BBS 29 (5): 520-521.

 

On the continuing lack of scientific evidence for repression

Harlene Hayne, Maryanne Garry and Elizabeth F. Loftus

BBS 29 (5): 521-522.

 

Reduced autobiographical memory specificity, avoidance, and repression

Dirk Hermans, Filip Raes, Carlos Iberico and J. Mark G. Williams

BBS 29 (5): 522-522.

 

Repression: A unified theory of a will-o'-the-wisp

John F. Kihlstrom

BBS 29 (5): 523-523.

 

Universal repression from consciousness versus abnormal dissociation from self-consciousness

Robert G. Kunzendorf

BBS 29 (5): 523-524.

 

Repression and the unconscious

Robert Langnickel and Hans Markowitsch

BBS 29 (5): 524-525.

 

Is Erdelyi's swan a goose?

Malcolm Macmillan

BBS 29 (5): 525-526.

 

Let Freud rest in peace

Richard J. McNally

BBS 29 (5): 526-527.

 

Learning from repression: Emotional memory and emotional numbing

Nick Medford and Anthony S. David

BBS 29 (5): 527-528.

 

The United States of Repression

Sadia Najmi and Daniel M. Wegner

BBS 29 (5): 528-529.

 

Social incoherence and the narrative construction of memory

Judith Pintar and Steven Jay Lynn

BBS 29 (5): 529-529.

 

From repression and attention to culture and automaticity

Amir Raz and Horacio Fabrega

BBS 29 (5): 530-530.

 

Towards a post-Freudian theory of repression: Reflections on the role of inhibitory functions

Ralph E. Schmidt and Martial Van der Linden

BBS 29 (5): 530-531.

 

Repression and dreaming: An open empirical question

Michael Schredl

BBS 29 (5): 531-532.