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| Behavioral and Brain Sciences |
| Cambridge University Press |
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Volume 21
Issue 5 |
| Oct 01, 1998 |
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ISSN: 0140525x |
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Behavioral and Brain Sciences
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Volume 21 :
Issue 5
Table of Contents
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The dynamical hypothesis in cognitive science

Tim van Gelder
Page 615-628
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Dynamicists versus computationalists: Whither mechanists?

William Bechtel
Page 629-629
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Why the dynamical hypothesis cannot qualify as a law of qualitative structure

Nick Braisby, Richard Cooper and Bradley Franks
Page 630-631
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Framing the debate between computational and dynamical approaches to cognitive science

Randall D. Beer
Page 630-630
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The dynamical model is a Perceptron

Bruce Bridgeman
Page 631-632
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Leaky virtual machines and the best of both worlds

Alan Bundy
Page 632-633
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What is the dynamical hypothesis?

Nick Chater and Ulrike Hahn
Page 633-634
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What might dynamical intentionality be, if not computation?

Ronald L. Chrisley
Page 634-635
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Dynamical embodiments of computation in cognitive processes

James P. Crutchfield
Page 635-635
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Revolution, no! Reform, si!

Daniel C. Dennett
Page 636-637
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The dynamical hypothesis: The role of biological constraints on cognition

Keith Davids and Simon Bennett
Page 636-636
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All information processing entails computation, or, If R. A. Fisher had been a cognitive scientist . . .

Eric Dietrich and Arthur B. Markman
Page 637-638
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The dynamical hypothesis in social cognition

J. Richard Eiser
Page 638-638
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Interlevel connections and agent evolution should not be overlooked

Donald R. Franceschetti
Page 639-640
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The dynamical hypothesis: One battle behind

Robert M. French and Elizabeth Thomas
Page 640-641
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Why dynamical implementation matters

James W. Garson
Page 641-642
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Cognitive dynamics: A psychological perspective

Richard A. Heath
Page 642-642
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Resisting the tyranny of terminology: The general dynamical hypothesis in cognitive science

Terence Horgan and John Tienson
Page 643-643
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The dynamics of what?

Fred A. Keijzer, Sacha Ben and Lex van der Heijden
Page 644-645
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Theories of structure versus theories of change

Melanie Mitchell
Page 645-646
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Is the dynamical hypothesis falsifiable? On unification in theories of cognition

David C. Noelle
Page 647-648
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Digital computers versus dynamical systems: A conflation of distinctions

Page 648-649
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Distinguishing between the computational and dynamical hypotheses: What difference makes the difference?

Steven R. Quartz
Page 649-650
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Dynamical modeling and morphological analysis

Jean Petitot
Page 649-649
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The intrinsic temporality of human cognition

Benny Shanon
Page 650-651
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In time and over time

Tim Smithers
Page 651-652
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Disentangling dynamics, computation, and cognition

Tim van Gelder
Page 654-661
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Learning by imitation: A hierarchical approach

Richard W. Byrne and Anne E. Russon
Page 667-684
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If it is inevitable, it need not be imitated

Patricia J. Bauer
Page 684-685
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Priming primates: Human and otherwise

Mark Chen, Tanya L. Chartrand, Annette Y. Lee-Chai and John A. Bargh
Page 685-686
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Modelling imitation with sequential games

Andrew M. Colman
Page 686-687
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Can humans form hierarchically embedded mental representations?

Denise Dellarosa Cummins
Page 687-688
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A neurobiological approach to imitation

Jean Decety and Julie Gr;egrave;zes
Page 688-689
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A Piagetian view of imitation

Harold D. Fishbein
Page 689-690
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No imitation without identification

Frans B. M. de Waal
Page 689-689
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Splitting, lumping, and priming

Mark Gardner and Cecilia Heyes
Page 690-691
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When actions are carved at the joints

Merideth Gattis, Harold Bekkering and Andreas Wohlschl;auml;ger
Page 691-692
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Out of the mouths of babes: A hierarchical view of imitation by human infants

Harlene Hayne
Page 692-693
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When is imitation imitation and who has the right to imitate?

Mikael Heimann
Page 693-693
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Movement imitation as faithful copying in the absence of insight

Ludwig Huber
Page 694-694
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A methodological behaviourist model for imitation

Paul J. M. Jorion
Page 695-695
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Imitation without attitudes

Eoghan Mac Aog;aacute;in
Page 696-697
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High-level social learning in apes: Imitation or observation-assisted planning?

Peter E. Midford
Page 698-699
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In the search for the functional homology of human imitation: Take play seriously!

Page 699-700
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The neural basis of Imitative behavior: Parietal actions and frontal programs

Naoyasu Motomura
Page 700-701
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Mechanisms of imitation: The relabeled story

Herbert L. Roitblat
Page 701-702
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Hierarchical learning of song in birds: A case of vocal imitation?

Dietmar Todt
Page 702-703
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Emulation learning and cultural learning

Michael Tomasello
Page 703-704
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Hoist by their own petard: The constraints of hierarchical models

B. Vereijken and H. T. A. Whiting
Page 705-705
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Toward a microanalysis of imitative actions

Stefan Vogt and David Carey
Page 705-706
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Indices of program-level comprehension

Stephen C. Want and Paul L. Harris
Page 706-707
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How imitators represent the imitated: The vital experiments

Andrew Whiten
Page 707-708
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Common ground on which to approach the origins of higher cognition

Richard W. Byrne and Anne E. Russon
Page 709-717
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