Behavioral and Brain
Sciences
Volume 30 – Issue 01 –
February 2007
Target Article
A framework for the
unification of the behavioral sciences
Herbert Gintis
BBS 30 (1): 1-16
Open Peer
Commentary
Game theory can build higher
mental processes from lower ones1
George Ainslie
BBS 30 (1):16-18
The behavioral sciences
are historical sciences of emergent complexity
Larry Arnhart
BBS 30 (1): 18-19
Social complexity in
behavioral models
R. Alexander Bentley
BBS 30 (1): 19-19
Towards uniting the
behavioral sciences with a gene-centered approach to altruism
R. Michael Brown and
Stephanie L. Brown
BBS 30 (1): 19-20
Evolutionary theory and
the social sciences
Robert L. Burgess and
Peter C. M. Molenaar
BBS 30 (1): 20-21
Against the unification of
the behavioral sciences
Steve Clarke
BBS 30 (1): 21-22
Love is not enough:
Other-regarding preferences cannot explain payoff dominance in game theory
Andrew M. Colman
BBS 30 (1): 22-23
The place of ethics in a unified
behavioral science
Peter Danielson
BBS 30 (1): 23-24
Game theory for
reformation of behavioral science based on a mistake
Jeffrey Foss
BBS 30 (1): 24-25
In evolutionary games,
enlightened self-interests are still ultimately self-interests
Thomas Getty
BBS 30 (1): 25-26
Diversity, reciprocity,
and degrees of unity in wholes, parts, and their scientific representations:
System levels
Robert B. Glassman
BBS 30 (1): 26-27
Do the cognitive and
behavioral sciences need each other?
David W. Jr. Gow
BBS 30 (1): 27-28
Gintis meets Brunswik –
but fails to recognize him
Kenneth R. Hammond
BBS 30 (1): 29-29
Rationality versus
program-based behavior
Geoffrey M. Hodgson
BBS 30 (1): 29-30
Implications for law of a
unified behavioral science
Owen D. Jones
BBS 30 (1): 30-31
Disciplinary stereotypes
and reinventing the wheel on culture
David P. Kennedy
BBS 30 (1): 31-32
The flight from reasoning
in psychology
Joachim I. Krueger
BBS 30 (1): 32-33
The limitations of
unification
Arthur B. Markman
BBS 30 (1): 33-34
Probabilistic equilibria
for evolutionarily stable strategies
Roger A. McCain
BBS 30 (1): 34-36
Extending the behavioral
sciences framework: Clarification of methods, predictions, and concepts
Alex Mesoudi and Kevin N.
Laland
BBS 30 (1): 36-37
Selection of human
prosocial behavior through partner choice by powerful individuals and
institutions
Ronald Noë
BBS 30 (1): 37-38
Considering cooperation:
Empiricism as a foundation for unifying the behavioral sciences
John W. Pepper
BBS 30 (1): 38-39
The integrative framework
for the behavioural sciences has already been discovered,
and it is the adaptationist approach
Michael E. Price, William
M. Brown and Oliver S. Curry
BBS 30 (1): 39-40
Information processing as
one key for a unification?
Michael
Schulte-Mecklenbeck
BBS 30 (1): 40-40
More obstacles on the road
to unification
Eric Alden Smith
BBS 30 (1): 41-41
The psychology of decision
making in a unified behavioral science
Keith E. Stanovich
BBS 30 (1): 41-42
Evolutionary psychology,
ecological rationality, and the unification of the behavioral sciences
John Tooby and Leda
Cosmides
BBS 30 (1): 42-43
Emotions, not just
decision-making processes, are critical to an evolutionary model of human
behavior
Glenn E. Weisfeld and
Peter LaFreniere
BBS 30 (1): 43-44
The indeterminacy of the
beliefs, preferences, and constraints framework
Daniel John Zizzo
BBS 30 (1): 44-45
Author's Response
Unifying the behavioral
sciences II
Herbert Gintis
BBS 30 (1): 45-53
Target Article
Consciousness without a
cerebral cortex: A challenge for neuroscience and medicine
Bjorn Merker
BBS 30 (1): 63-81
Open Peer Commentary
The mesencephalon as a
source of preattentive consciousness
Francisco Aboitiz, Javier
López-Calderón and Vladimir López
BBS 30 (1): 81-82
Consciousness, cortical
function, and pain perception in nonverbal humans
K. J. S. Anand
BBS 30 (1): 82-83
Theoretical sequelae of a chronic
neglect and unawareness of prefrontotectal pathways in the human brain
Francisco Barceló and
Robert T. Knight
BBS 30 (1): 83-85
The
hypthalamo-tectoperiaqueductal system: Unconscious underpinnings of conscious
behaviour
Ralf-Peter Behrendt
BBS 30 (1): 85-86
Subcortical consciousness:
Implications for fetal anesthesia and analgesia
Roland R. Brusseau and
George A. Mashour
BBS 30 (1): 86-87
Consciousness without a
cortex, but what kind of consciousness is this?
Anton M. L. Coenen
BBS 30 (1): 87-88
Do multiple
cortical–subcortical interactions support different aspects of consciousness?
Daniel Collerton and
Elaine Perry
BBS 30 (1): 88-89
Pain, cortex, and
consciousness
Marshall Devor
BBS 30 (1): 89-90
Corticothalamic necessity,
qualia, and consciousness
Sam M. Doesburg and
Lawrence M. Ward
BBS 30 (1): 90-91
Consciousness without
corticocentrism: Beating an evolutionary path
David B. Edelman
BBS 30 (1): 91-92
Roles of allocortex and centrencephalon
in intentionality and consciousness
Walter J. Freeman
BBS 30 (1): 92-93
A brain for all seasons
R. Allen Gardner
BBS 30 (1): 93-94
Cognitive achievements
with a miniature brain: The lesson of jumping spiders
Emmanuel Gilissen
BBS 30 (1): 94-95
I Promethean, bound deeply
and fluidly among the brain's associative robotic networks
Robert B. Glassman
BBS 30 (1): 95-96
Levels of emotion and
levels of consciousness
Carroll Izard
BBS 30 (1): 96-98
Target selection,
attention, and the superior colliculus
Richard J. Krauzlis
BBS 30 (1): 98-99
Consciousness is more than
wakefulness
Alain Morin
BBS 30 (1): 99-99
Supracortical
consciousness: Insights from temporal dynamics, processing-content, and
olfaction
Ezequiel Morsella and John
A. Bargh
BBS 30 (1): 100-100
Subcortical regions and
the self
Georg Northoff
BBS 30 (1): 100-101
Emotional
feelings originate below the
neocortex: Toward a neurobiology of the soul
Jaak Panksepp
BBS 30 (1): 101-103
The ontology of creature
consciousness: A challenge for philosophy
Gualtiero Piccinini
BBS 30 (1): 103-104
Who dominates who in the dark basements of the brain?
Tony J. Prescott and Mark
D. Humphries
BBS 30 (1): 104-105
Should the superficial
superior colliculus be part of Merker's mesodiencephalic system?
John Schlag
BBS 30 (1): 105-106
The functional utility of
consciousness depends on content as well as on state
Anil K. Seth
BBS 30 (1): 106-106
Raw feeling: A model for
affective consciousness
Jack van Honk, Barak E. Morgan
and Dennis J. L. G. Schutter
BBS 30 (1): 107-108
The
human superior colliculus: Neither necessary, nor sufficient for consciousness?
Susanne Watkins and
Geraint Rees
BBS 30 (1): 108-108
Affirmative-action for the brainstem in the neuroscience of
consciousness: The zeitgeist of the brainstem as a “dumb arousal” system
Douglas F. Watt
BBS 30 (1): 108-110
Author's Response
Grounding consciousness:
The mesodiencephalon as thalamocortical base
Bjorn Merker
BBS 30 (1): 110-120
Behavioral and Brain
Sciences
Volume 30 – Issue 02 –
April 2007
Target Article
The Parieto-Frontal
Integration Theory (P-FIT) of intelligence: Converging neuroimaging evidence
Rex E. Jung and Richard J.
Haier
BBS 30(2): 135-154
Open Peer Commentary
Inherent limits on the
identification of a neural basis for general intelligence
Clancy Blair
BBS 30(2): 154-155
Selecting between
intelligent options
Roi Cohen Kadosh, Vincent
Walsh and Avishai Henik
BBS 30(2): 155-155
Intelligence? What intelligence?
Roberto Colom
BBS 30(2): 155-156
A roadmap for integrating
the brain with mind maps
Andreas Demetriou and
Antigoni Mouyi
BBS 30(2): 156-158
P-FIT: A major
contribution to theories of intelligence
Earl Hunt
BBS 30(2): 158-159
The sleeping brain, the
states of consciousness, and the human intelligence
Roumen Kirov
BBS 30(2): 159-159
What
about the neural basis of crystallized intelligence?
Kun Ho Lee, Yu Yong Choi
and Jeremy R. Gray
BBS 30(2): 159-161
Integrative action in the fronto-parietal
network: A cure for a scattered mind
Hamid Reza Naghavi and
Lars Nyberg
BBS 30(2): 161-162
On images from
correlations
Sarah Norgate and Ken
Richardson
BBS 30(2): 162-163
Intelligence and reasoning
are not one and the same
Ira A. Noveck and Jérôme
Prado
BBS 30(2): 163-164
Intelligence, hormones,
sex, brain size, and biochemistry: It all needs to have equal causal standing
before integration is possible
Helmuth Nyborg
BBS 30(2): 164-165
P-FIT and the neuroscience
of intelligence: How well does P fit?
Vivek Prabhakaran and Bart
Rypma
BBS 30(2): 166-167
Piece of mind; a full
systems approach is required
Caroline Rae
BBS 30(2): 167-168
Can the
Parieto-Frontal Integration Theory be extended to account for individual differences in skilled
and expert performance in everyday life?
Roy W. Roring, Kiruthiga
Nandagopal and K. Anders Ericsson
BBS 30(2): 168-169
Functional connectivity in
the brain and human intelligence
Vincent J. Schmithorst
BBS 30(2): 169-170
Right answer to the wrong
question: A reply to Jung and Haier
Robert J. Sternberg
BBS 30(2): 170-171
Plasticity in high-order
cognition: Evidence of dissociation in aphasia
Rosemary Varley
BBS 30(2): 171-172
The
neuronal basis of intelligence: A riddle, wrapped in a mystery?
Marko Wilke
BBS 30(2): 172-173
Overall intelligence and
localized brain damage
Dahlia W. Zaidel
BBS 30(2): 173-174
Authors' Response
Beautiful minds (i.e.,
brains) and the neural basis of intelligence
Richard J. Haier and Rex
E. Jung
BBS 30(2): 174-178
Target Article
Somatosensory processes
subserving perception and action
H. Chris Dijkerman and
Edward H. F. de Haan
BBS 30(2): pp 189-201
Open Peer Commentary
Tactile agnosia and tactile
apraxia: Cross talk between the action and perception streams in the anterior
intraparietal area
Ferdinand Binkofski,
Kathrin Reetz and Annabelle Blangero
BBS 30(2): 201-202
Divide et impera? Towards integrated multisensory perception and
action
Claudio Brozzoli,
Alessandro Farnè and Yves Rossetti
BBS 30(2): 202-203
Early development of body
representations
Tamara Christie and
Virginia Slaughter
BBS 30(2): 203-204
How many
representations of the body?
Frédérique de Vignemont
BBS 30(2): 204-205
Disentangling functional
from structural descriptions, and the coordinating role of attention
Knut Drewing and Werner X.
Schneider
BBS 30(2): 205-206
Where are somatosensory
representations stored and reactivated?
Katja Fiehler, Annerose Engel
and Frank Rösler
BBS 30(2): 206-207
Considering general
organizational principles for dorsal-ventral systems within an action framework
Elizabeth A. Franz
BBS 30(2): 207-208
Revisiting parallel and
serial processing in the somatosensory system
BBS 30(2): 208-209
Coming to grips with
vision and touch
Melvyn A. Goodale and
Jonathan S. Cant
BBS 30(2): 209-210
Close coordination between
recognition and action: Really two separate streams?
Markus Graf
BBS 30(2): 210-211
Dissociating body image
and body schema with rubber hands
Nicholas Paul Holmes and
Charles Spence
BBS 30(2): 211-212
Skin stimulation, objects
of perception, and the blind
Barry Hughes
BBS 30(2): 212-213
Do intention and exploration
modulate the pathways to haptic object identification?
Roberta L. Klatzky and
Susan J. Lederman
BBS 30(2): 213-214
A call to arms:
Somatosensory perception and action
Gerry Leisman and Robert
Melillo
BBS 30(2): 214-215
The perception-action
interaction comes first
Ludovic Marin and Julien
Lagarde
BBS 30(2): 215-216
Taking a conscious look at
the body schema
Jonathan P. Maxwell,
Richard S. W. Masters and John van der Kamp
BBS 30(2): 216-217
Central role of
somatosensory processes in sexual arousal as identified by neuroimaging
techniques
Harold Mouras
BBS 30(2): 217-217
Divisions within the
posterior parietal cortex help touch meet vision
Catherine L. Reed
BBS 30(2): 218-218
Pathways of tactile-visual
crossmodal interaction for perception
Norihiro Sadato, Satoru
Nakashita and Daisuke N. Saito
Multifaceted functional
specialization of somatosensory information processing
K. Sathian, Simon Lacey,
Gregory Gibson and Randall Stilla
BBS 30(2): 219-220
The multiple relations
between vision and touch: Neonatal behavioral evidence and adult neuroimaging
data
Arlette Streri and Coralie
Sann
BBS 30(2): 220-221
Body image and body
schema: The shared representation of body image and the role of dynamic body
schema in perspective and imitation
Alessia Tessari and Anna
M. Borghi
BBS 30(2): 221-222
Haptic perception is a
dynamic system of cutaneous, proprioceptive, and motor components
David Travieso, M. Pilar
Aivar and Antoni Gomila
BBS 30(2): 222-223
A hemispheric asymmetry in
somatosensory processing
Giuseppe Vallar
BBS 30(2): 223-224
Authors’ Response
Somatosensory processing
subserving perception and action: Dissociations, interactions, and integration
H. Chris Dijkerman and
Edward H. F. de Haan
BBS 30(2): 224-230
Behavioral and Brain
Sciences
Volume 30 – Issue 03 –
June 2007
Target Article
Base-rate respect: From
ecological rationality to dual processes
Aron K. Barbey and Steven
A. Sloman
BBS 30(3): 241-254
A statistical taxonomy and
another “chance” for natural frequencies
Adrien Barton, Shabnam
Mousavi and Jeffrey R. Stevens
BBS 30(3): 255-256
From base-rate to
cumulative respect
C. Philip Beaman and
Rachel McCloy
BBS 30(3): 256-257
Kissing cousins but not
identical twins: The denominator neglect and base-rate respect models
C. J. Brainerd
BBS 30(3): 257-258
Omissions, conflations,
and false dichotomies: Conceptual and empirical problems with the Barbey &
Sloman account
Gary L. Brase
BBS 30(3): 258-259
Why frequencies are
natural
Brian Butterworth
BBS 30(3): 259-260
Nested
sets and base-rate neglect: Two types of reasoning?
Wim De Neys
BBS 30(3): 260-261
Dual-processing explains base-rate neglect, but which dual-process
theory and how?
Jonathan
BBS 30(3): 261-262
Enhancing sensitivity to
base-rates: Natural frequencies are not enough
Edmund Fantino and
Stephanie Stolarz-Fantino
BBS 30(3): 262-263
Ecologically structured
information: The power of pictures and other effective data presentations
Wolfgang Gaissmaier, Nils
Straubinger and David C. Funder
BBS 30(3): 263-264
The role of representation
in Bayesian reasoning: Correcting common misconceptions
Gerd Gigerenzer and Ulrich
Hoffrage
BBS 30(3): 264-267
How to elicit sound
probabilistic reasoning: Beyond word problems
Vittorio Girotto and
Michel Gonzalez
BBS 30(3): 268-268
Frequency formats are a
small part of the base rate story
Dale Griffin, Derek J.
Koehler and Lyle Brenner
BBS 30(3): 268-269
One wrong does not justify
another: Accepting dual processes by fallacy of false alternatives
Gideon Keren, Iris van
Rooij and Yaacov Schul
BBS 30(3): 269-270
Implications of natural
sampling in base-rate tasks
Gernot D. Kleiter
BBS 30(3): 270-271
Dual concerns with the
dualist approach
David A. Lagnado and David
R. Shanks
BBS 30(3): 271-272
Ordinary people do not
ignore base rates
Donald Laming
BBS 30(3): 272-274
The underinformative
formulation of conditional probability
Laura Macchi and Maria
Bagassi
BBS 30(3): 274-275
Nested sets theory, full
stop: Explaining performance on Bayesian inference tasks without dual-systems
assumptions
David R. Mandel
BBS 30(3): 275-276
Naturally nested, but why
dual process?
Ben Newell and Brett Hayes
BBS 30(3): 276-277
The logic of natural
sampling
David E. Over
BBS 30(3): 277-277
The versatility and
generality of nested set operations
Richard Patterson
BBS 30(3): 277-278
Converging evidence
supports fuzzy-trace theory's nested sets hypothesis, but not the frequency
hypothesis
Valerie F. Reyna and
BBS 30(3): 278-280
Varieties of dual-process
theory for probabilistic reasoning
Richard Samuels
BBS 30(3): 280-281
The effect of base rate,
careful analysis, and the distinction between decisions from experience and
from description
Amos Schurr and Ido Erev
BBS 30(3): 281-281
Base-rate neglect and
coarse probability representation
Yanlong Sun and Hongbin
Wang
BBS 30(3): 282-282
Implications of real-world
distributions and the conversation game for studies of human probability
judgments
John C. Thomas
BBS 30(3): 282-283
Why the empirical
literature fails to support or disconfirm modular or dual-process models
David Trafimow
BBS 30(3): 283-284
The motivated use and
neglect of base rates
Eric Luis Uhlmann,
Victoria L. Brescoll and David Pizarro
BBS 30(3): 284-285
Base-rate respect meets
affect neglect
Paul Whitney, John M.
Hinson and Allison L. Matthews
BBS 30(3): 285-286
Adaptive redundancy,
denominator neglect, and the base-rate fallacy
Christopher R. Wolfe
BBS 30(3): 286-287
Base-rate respect: From
statistical formats to cognitive structures
Aron K. Barbey and Steven
A. Sloman
BBS 30(3): 287-292
The evolution of
foresight: What is mental time travel, and is it unique to humans?
Thomas Suddendorf and
Michael C. Corballis
BBS 30(3): 299-313
Foresight has to pay off
in the present moment
George Ainslie
BBS 30(3): 313-314
How developmental science
contributes to theories of future thinking
Cristina M. Atance and
Andrew N. Meltzoff
BBS 30(3): 314-315
The continuum of “looking
forward,” and paradoxical requirements from memory
Moshe Bar
BBS 30(3): 315-316
Is mental time travel a frame-of-reference issue?
Doris Bischof-Köhler and
Norbert Bischof
BBS 30(3): 316-317
The costs of mental time
travel
Martin Brüne and Ute
Brüne-Cohrs
BBS 30(3): 317-318
Prospection and the brain
Randy L. Buckner
BBS 30(3): 318-319
A unique role for the
hippocampus in recollecting the past and remembering the future
Valerie A. Carr and Indre
V. Viskontas
BBS 30(3): 319-320
Emotional aspects of
mental time travel
Arnaud D'Argembeau and
Martial Van der Linden
BBS 30(3): 320-321
Storing events to retell
them
Jean-Louis Dessalles
BBS 30(3): 321-322
Mental time travel in the
rat: Dissociation of recall and familiarity
Madeline J. Eacott and
Alexander Easton
BBS 30(3): 322-323
The meaning of “time” in
episodic memory and mental time travel
William J. Friedman
BBS 30(3): 323-323
Mental time travel
sickness and a Bayesian remedy
Jay Hegdé
BBS 30(3): 323-324
Past and future, human and
nonhuman, semantic/procedural and episodic
James R. Hurford, Molly
Flaherty and Giorgis Argyropoulos
BBS 30(3): 324-325
Memory, imagination, and
the asymmetry between past and future
Bjorn Merker
BBS 30(3): 325-326
Has mental time travel
really affected human culture?
Alex Mesoudi
BBS 30(3): 326-327
Developing past and future
selves for time travel narratives
Katherine Nelson
BBS 30(3): 327-328
Prospection or projection:
Neurobiological basis of stimulus-independent mental traveling
Jiro Okuda
BBS 30(3): 328-329
What are the evolutionary
causes of mental time travel?
Mathias Osvath and Peter
Gärdenfors
BBS 30(3): 329-330
Empirical evaluation of
mental time travel
Caroline Raby, Dean
Alexis, Anthony Dickinson and Nicola Clayton
BBS 30(3): 330-331
On the constructive
episodic simulation of past and future events
Daniel L. Schacter and
Donna Rose Addis
BBS 30(3): 331-332
Studying mental states is
not a research program for comparative cognition
Sara J. Shettleworth
BBS 30(3): 332-333
First test, then judge
future-oriented behaviour in animals
Elisabeth H. M. Sterck and
Valérie Dufour
BBS 30(3): 333-334
The medium and the message
of mental time travel
Endel Tulving and Alice
Kim
BBS 30(3): 334-335
Authors’ Response
Mental time travel across
the disciplines: The future looks bright
Thomas Suddendorf and
Michael C. Corballis
BBS 30(3): 335-345
Behavioral and Brain
Sciences
Volume 30 – Issue 04 –
August 2007
Précis Article for
Multiple Book Review
Précis of Evolution in Four Dimensions
Eva Jablonka and Marion J.
Lamb
BBS 30(4): pp 353-365
Open Peer Commentary
Those dreaded memes: The
advantage of memetics over “symbolic inheritance”
Susan Blackmore
BBS 30(4): 365-366
Genetics and the control
of evolution
C. Loring Brace
BBS 30(4): 366-367
One-generation Lamarckism:
The role of environment in genetic development
Bruce Bridgeman
BBS 30(4): 367-368
Designed calibration:
Naturally selected flexibility, not non-genetic inheritance
Thomas E. Dickins and
Benjamin J. A. Dickins
BBS 30(4): 368-369
Evolutionary string theory
Zen Faulkes and Anita
Davelos Baines
BBS 30(4): 369-370
Only three dimensions and
the mother of invention
Jeff Foss
BBS 30(4): 370-370
Epigenetic and cultural evolution are non-Darwinian
Liane Gabora
BBS 30(4): 371-371
What is so informative
about information?
Carlos M. Hamame, Diego
Cosmelli and Francisco Aboitiz
BBS 30(4): 371-372
Evolution in the symbolic
dimension: The devil is in the details
Susan Lappan and Jae Chun
Choe
BBS 30(4): 373-374
Extended evolutionary
theory makes human culture more amenable to evolutionary analysis
Alex Mesoudi
BBS 30(4): 374-374
Computational cognitive
epigenetics
Aaron Sloman and Jackie
Chappell
BBS 30(4): 375-376
Is symbolic inheritance
similar to genetic inheritance?
Luc Steels
BBS 30(4): 376-377
The missing chapter: The
interaction between behavioral and symbolic inheritance
Anne S. Warlaumont and
Rick Dale
BBS 30(4): 377-378
Authors’ Response
Bridging the gap: The developmental
aspects of evolution
Eva Jablonka and Marion J.
Lamb
BBS 30(4): 378-389
Target Article
Animal innovation defined
and operationalized
Grant Ramsey, Meredith L.
Bastian and Carel van Schaik
BBS 30(4): 393-407
Open Peer Commentary
Novelty transmittal and
innovative species
Susan Cachel
BBS 30(4): 407-408
Behavioral innovation and
phylogeography
Pierre Deleporte
BBS 30(4): 408-409
Knowing psychological
disposition might help to find innovation
Gyula K. Gajdon
BBS 30(4): 409-410
Signs of culture
R. Allen Gardner
BBS 30(4): 410-411
Can a restrictive
definition lead to biases and tautologies?
Luc-Alain Giraldeau, Louis
Lefebvre and Julie Morand-Ferron
BBS 30(4): 411-412
Genetic assimilation of
behaviour does not eliminate learning and innovation
Gavin R. Hunt and Russell
D. Gray
BBS 30(4): 412-413
Objectivism should not be
a casualty of innovation's operationalization
Rachel L. Kendal, Lewis
Dean and Kevin N. Laland
BBS 30(4): 413-414
Animal innovation and
rationality: Distinguishing productivity from efficiency
Elias L. Khalil
BBS 30(4): 414-415
Vocal innovation
John L. Locke
BBS 30(4): 415-416
Social learning is central
to innovation, in primates and beyond
Corina J. Logan and John
W. Pepper
BBS 30(4): 416-417
Innovation in sexual
display
Joah R. Madden
BBS 30(4): 417-418
Individual invention
versus socio-ecological innovation: Unifying the behavioral and evolutionary
sciences
Lauren McCall
BBS 30(4): 418-419
Context-specific neophilia
and its consequences for innovations
Claudia Mettke-Hofmann
BBS 30(4): 419-420
Environmentally invoked
innovation and cognition
Simon M. Reader
BBS 30(4): 420-421
Is all learning
innovation?
Luke Rendell, William
Hoppitt and Jeremy Kendal
BBS 30(4): 421-422
Innovation and the grain
problem
Anne Russon, Kristin
Andrews and Brian Huss
BBS 30(4): 422-423
Defining and detecting
innovation: Are cognitive and developmental mechanisms important?
Brooke L. Sargeant and
Janet Mann
BBS 30(4): 423-424
The animal variations:
When mechanisms matter in accounting for function
Hugo Viciana and Nicolas
Claidiere
BBS 30(4): 424-425
Authors’ Response
On the concept of animal
innovation and the challenge of studying innovation in the wild
Grant Ramsey, Meredith L.
Bastian and Carel van Schaik
BBS 30(4): 425-432
Behavioral and Brain
Sciences
Volume 30 – Issue 04/05
– December 2007
Précis Article for
Multiple Book Review
Précis of The Rational Imagination: How People Create
Alternatives to Reality
Ruth M. J. Byrne
BBS
30(4): 439-453
Open Peer Commentary
Imagination and reason
Joseph Agassi
BBS
30(4): 453-453
Reasons to act and the
mental representation of consequentialist aberrations
Jean-François Bonnefon
BBS
30(4): 453-454
Counterfactuals in science
and engineering
Sanjay Chandrasekharan and
Nancy J. Nersessian
BBS
30(4): 454-455
What we imagine versus how we imagine, and a problem for explaining counterfactual
thoughts with causal ones
Winston Chang and Patricia
Herrmann
BBS
30(4): 455-456
Three steps to rational imagining?
Jennifer Church
BBS
30(4): 456-456
Beyond rationality:
Counterfactual thinking and behavior regulation
Kai Epstude and Neal J.
Roese
BBS
30(4): 457-458
Semifactual: Byrne's
account of even-if
Simon J. Handley and Aidan
Feeney
BBS
30(4): 458-459
The goals of
counterfactual possibilities
Paolo Legrenzi
BBS
30(4): 459-460
Differential
focus in causal and counterfactual thinking: Different possibilities or
different functions?
David R. Mandel
BBS
30(4): 460-461
Counterfactuals need not
be comparative: The case of “As if”
Keith D. Markman and
Matthew N. McMullen
BBS
30(4): 461-462
Imagination as a source of
rationality in development
Henry Markovits
BBS
30(4): 462-463
Thinking developmentally
about counterfactual possibilities
Kevin J. Riggs and Sarah
R. Beck
BBS
30(4): 463-463
When imagination is
difficult: Metacognitive experiences at the fault lines of reality
BBS
30(4): 464-465
Imagination is only as
rational as the purpose to which it is put
Andrew Shtulman
BBS
30(4): 465-466
On the relation between
counterfactual and causal reasoning
Barbara A. Spellman and
Dieynaba G. Ndiaye
BBS
30(4): 466-467
How rational is the
imagination?
Robert J. Sternberg
BBS
30(4): 467-467
The development of the
counterfactual imagination
Jennifer Van Reet, Ashley
M. Pinkham and Angeline S. Lillard
BBS
30(4): 468-468
Is considering true
possibilities a truly explanatory principle for imaginative thought?
Thomas B. Ward
BBS
30(4): 468-469
Emotional consequences of
alternatives to reality: Feeling is for doing
Marcel Zeelenberg
BBS
30(4): 469-470
Author’s Response
The rational imagination
and other possibilities
Ruth M. J. Byrne
BBS
30(4): 470-476
Target Article
Consciousness,
accessibility, and the mesh between psychology and neuroscience
Ned Block
BBS
30(5-6): 481-499
Open Peer Commentary
Access
to phenomenality: A necessary condition of phenomenality?
Katalin Balog
BBS 30(5-6):
499-500
Psychology supports
independence of phenomenal consciousness
Tyler Burge
BBS
30(5-6): 500-501
Do we see more than we can
access?
Alex Byrne, David R.
Hilbert and Susanna Siegel
BBS
30(5-6): 501-502
Experience and agency:
Slipping the mesh
Andy Clark and Julian
Kiverstein
BBS
30(5-6): 502-503
Why babies are more
conscious than we are
Alison Gopnik
BBS
30(5-6): 503-504
A plug for generic
phenomenology
Rick Grush
BBS
30(5-6): 504-505
What is
cognitively accessed?
Gilbert Harman
BBS
30(5-6): 505-505
The “mesh” as evidence –
model comparison and alternative interpretations of feedback
Oliver J. Hulme and Louise
Whiteley
BBS
30(5-6): 505-506
Many ways to awareness: A
developmental perspective on cognitive access
Carroll
E. Izard, Paul C. Quinn and Steven B. Most
BBS
30(5-6): 506-507
What is “cognitive
accessibility” accessibility to?
Pierre Jacob
BBS
30(5-6): 508-508
Incomplete stimulus
representations and the loss of cognitive access in cerebral achromatopsia
Robert William Kentridge
BBS
30(5-6): 508-509
Phenomenology without
conscious access is a form of consciousness without top-down attention
Christof Koch and Naotsugu
Tsuchiya
BBS
30(5-6): 509-510
Partial awareness and the
illusion of phenomenal consciousness
Sid Kouider, Vincent de
Gardelle and Emmanuel Dupoux
BBS
30(5-6): 510-511
Sue Ned Block!: Making a better case for P-consciousness
Victor A. F. Lamme
BBS
30(5-6): 511-512
Can we equate iconic
memory with visual awareness?
Rogier Landman and Ilja G.
Sligte
BBS
30(5-6): 512-513
Broken telephone in the
brain: The need for metacognitive measures
Hakwan Lau and Navindra
Persaud
BBS
30(5-6): 513-514
Two kinds of access
Joseph Levine
BBS
30(5-6): 514-515
Phenomenality
without access?
William G. Lycan
BBS
30(5-6): 515-516