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.