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| Behavioral and Brain Sciences |
| Cambridge University Press |
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Volume 22
Issue 1 |
| Feb 01, 1999 |
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ISSN: 0140525x |
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Behavioral and Brain Sciences
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Volume 22 :
Issue 1
Table of Contents
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A theory of lexical access in speech production

Willem J. M. Levelt, Ardi Roelofs and Antje S. Meyer
Page 1-38
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Grossberg and colleagues solved the hyperonym problem over a decade ago

Jeffrey S. Bowers
Page 38-39
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How does weaver pay attention?

Thomas H. Carr
Page 39-40
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Binding, attention, and exchanges

Gary S. Dell, Victor S. Ferreira and Kathryn Bock
Page 41-42
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Prosody and word production

Fernanda Ferreira
Page 43-44
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Naming versus referring in the selection of words

Peter C. Gordon
Page 44-44
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Will one stage and no feedback suffice in lexicalization?

Trevor A. Harley
Page 45-45
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What exactly are lexical concepts?

Graeme Hirst
Page 45-46
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Strictly discrete serial stages and contextual appropriateness

J. D. Jescheniak and H. Schriefers
Page 47-48
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Incremental encoding and incremental articulation in speech production: Evidence based on response latency and initial segment duration

Alan H. Kawamoto
Page 48-49
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Indirect representation of grammatical class at the lexeme level

Michael H. Kelly
Page 49-50
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The lexicon from a neurophysiological view

Horst M. M;amp;uuml;ller
Page 50-51
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Parsimonious feedback

Page 51-52
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Lexical access as a brain mechanism

Friedemann Pulverm;amp;uuml;ller
Page 52-54
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Decontextualised data IN, decontextualised theory OUT

Benjamin Roberts, Mike Kalish, Kathryn Hird and Kim Kirsner
Page 54-55
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Constraining production theories: Principled motivation, consistency, homunculi, underspecification, failed predictions, and contrary data

Julio Santiago and Donald G. MacKay
Page 55-56
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Lemma theory and aphasiology

Carlo Semenza, Claudio Luzzatti and Sara Mondini
Page 56-56
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What about phonological facilitation, response-set membership, and phonological coactivation?

Peter A. Starreveld and Wido La Heij
Page 56-58
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Contact points between lexical retrieval and sentence production

Gabriella Vigliocco and Marco Zorzi
Page 58-59
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Competitive processes during word-form encoding

Linda R. Wheeldon
Page 59-60
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Multiple perspectives on word production

Willem J. M. Levelt, Ardi Roelofs and Antje S. Meyer
Page 61-69
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Verbal working memory and sentence comprehension

David Caplan and Gloria S. Waters
Page 77-94
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Complexity effects are found in all relative-clause sentence forms

Glenda Andrews and Graeme S. Halford
Page 95-95
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Not so fast: Domain-general factors can account for selective deficits in grammatical processing

Elizabeth Bates, Frederic Dick and Beverly Wulfeck
Page 96-97
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Interfaces in memory

Page 96-96
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Distinguishing interpretive and post-interpretive processes

Fernanda Ferreira
Page 98-99
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Modularity, segregation, and interactions

Karl J. Friston
Page 99-100
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Interpretative and post-interpretative processes in sentence comprehension

Edward Gibson and Rose Roberts
Page 100-101
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What do working-memory tests really measure?

Michael J. Kane, Andrew R. A. Conway and Randall W. Engle
Page 101-102
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The age invariance of working memory measures and noninvariance of producing complex syntax

Susan Kemper and Karen A. Kemtes
Page 102-103
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Is it timing after all?

Sonja A. Kotz and D. Yves von Cramon
Page 103-104
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Aphasia, prefrontal dysfunction, and the use of word-order strategies

Herman H. H. J. Kolk and Robert J. Hartsuiker
Page 103-103
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In-line measures of syntactic processing using event-related brain potentials

Marta Kutas and Jonathan W. King
Page 104-105
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Accounting for the fine structure of syntactic working memory: Similarity-based interference as a unifying principle

Richard L. Lewis
Page 105-106
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Further fractionations of verbal working memory

Randi C. Martin
Page 106-107
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Backtracking? Rehearsing and replaying some old arguments about short-term memory

Rosaleen A. McCarthy and E. K. Warrington
Page 107-108
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Good interactions are hard to find

Akira Miyake, Michael J. Emerson and Naomi P. Friedman
Page 108-109
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Problems with plausibility and alternatives to working memory

Neal J. Pearlmutter
Page 109-109
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Components of verbal working memory

Aaro Toomela and J;amp;uuml;ri Allik
Page 110-110
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The Resource King is dead! Long live the Resource King!

John N. Towse, Graham J. Hitch and Una Hutton
Page 111-111
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Sources of variability in correlating syntactic complexity and working memory

Matthew Walenski and David Swinney
Page 112-112
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Working memory and sentence comprehension: Whose burden of proof?

Arthur Wingfield
Page 113-114
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A separate language-interpretation resource: Premature fractionation?

Paul Whitney and Desiree Budd
Page 113-113
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Issues regarding general and domain-specific resources

David Caplan and Gloria Waters
Page 114-122
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A connectionist theory of phenomenal experience

Jonathan Opie
Page 127-148
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Consciousness and agency: Explaining what and explaining who

Richard A. Carlson
Page 148-149
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What, exactly, is explicitness?

Hugh Clapin
Page 150-151
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Stability and explicitness: In defense of implicit representation

Axel Cleeremans and Luis Jim;eacute;nez
Page 151-152
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Trains, planes, and brains: Attention and consciousness

Max Coltheart
Page 152-153
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Stability is not intrinsic

D. C. Dennett and C. F. Westbury
Page 153-154
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Consciousness, connectionism, and intentionality

Donelson E. Dulany
Page 154-155
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A note on imaginability arguments: Building a bridge to the hard solution

Ralph Ellis
Page 155-155
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Network stability and consciousness?

Daniel Gilman
Page 155-156
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When is information represented explicitly in blindsight and cerebral achromatopsia?

R. W. Kentridge
Page 156-157
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The gap into dissolution: The real story

Martin Kurthen
Page 157-158
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Consciousness should not mean, but be

Dan Lloyd
Page 158-159
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Information and appearance

Eoghan Mac Aog;aacute;in
Page 159-160
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A vehicle with no wheels

Drew McDermott
Page 161-161
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Arguing about consciousness: A blind alley and a red herring

Natika Newton
Page 162-163
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What about the unconscious?

Chris Mortensen
Page 162-162
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Why information?

Page 163-164
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Higher order thinking

Josef Perner and Zoltan Dienes
Page 164-165
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Sorites paradox and conscious experience

Page 165-165
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What has consciousness to do with explicit representations and stable activation vectors?

Page 166-167
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What unifies experiences generated by different parts of my brain?

Eric Schwitzgebel
Page 167-168
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The slippery slopes of connectionist consciousness

John G. Taylor
Page 168-169
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Quantities of qualia

Michael S. C. Thomas and Anthony P. Atkinson
Page 169-170
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Vehicles, processes, and neo-classical revival

Robert Van Gulick
Page 170-171
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Brute association is not identity

Bram van Heuveln and Eric Dietrich
Page 171-171
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Neural activation, information, and phenomenal consciousness

Max Velmans
Page 172-173
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What about consciousness during learning?

Annie Vinter and Pierre Perruchet
Page 173-173
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Priming in neglect is problematic for linking consciousness to stability

Marco Zorzi and Carlo Umilt;agrave;
Page 174-175
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Constructing consciousness

Gezinus Wolters and R. Hans Phaf
Page 174-174
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Putting content into a vehicle theory of consciousness

Jonathan Opie
Page 175-192
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Consciousness as a social construction

Martin Kurthen, Thomas Grunwald and Christian E. Elger
Page 197-199
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Ridiculing social constructivism about phenomenal consciousness

Ned Block
Page 199-201
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