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| Behavioral and Brain Sciences |
| Cambridge University Press |
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Volume 22
Issue 2 |
| Apr 01, 1999 |
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ISSN: 0140525x |
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Behavioral and Brain Sciences
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Volume 22 :
Issue 2
Table of Contents
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Risk-taking, fear, dominance, and testosterone

John Archer
Page 214-215
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When women win

Laura Betzig
Page 217-217
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The relevance of sex differences in risk-taking to the military and the workplace

Kingsley R. Browne
Page 218-219
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Aggression in female mammals: Is it really rare?

Paul F. Brain
Page 218-218
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Warrior values and social identity

Linnda R. Caporael
Page 220-221
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How women compete

Elizabeth Cashdan
Page 221-221
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Social and psychiatric implications of sex-differentials in aggression

Bruce G. Charlton
Page 221-222
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The origins of aggression sex differences: Evolved dispositions versus social roles

Alice H. Eagly and Wendy Wood
Page 223-224
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Defending the young: Female aggression, resources, dominance, and the emptiness of patriarchy

Robin Fox
Page 224-225
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Explaining gender differences in aggression: An ambitious but inconclusive attempt

Mary B. Harris
Page 225-226
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Saturday night social constructivism

Douglas T. Kenrick
Page 227-228
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Do we owe it all to Darwin? The adequacy of evolutionary psychology as an explanation for gender differences in aggression

Candace Kruttschnitt
Page 228-229
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Theories of male and female aggression

Kirsti M. J. Lagerspetz
Page 229-230
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Individual differences and the adaptiveness of patriarchal ideology

Kevin MacDonald
Page 230-230
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Costs and benefits of female aggressiveness in humans and other mammals

Dario Maestripieri and Kelly A. Carroll
Page 231-232
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Novel status contests, archaic evolved psychologies

Richard Machalek
Page 231-231
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Some reflections on sex differences in aggression and violence

Stephen C. Maxson
Page 232-233
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How deep is your love?

J. McKnight and N. W. Bond
Page 233-234
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Evolutionary models of female intrasexual competition

Linda Mealey
Page 234-234
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The dual selection model: Questions about necessity and completeness

Jeffry A. Simpson
Page 235-235
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How is maternal survival related to reproductive success?

X. T. Wang and Ralph Hertwig
Page 236-237
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The last days of discord? Evolution and culture as accounts of female;female aggression

Anne Campbell
Page 237-246
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Words in the brain are not just labelled concepts

Manfred Bierwisch
Page 280-282
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Function and content words evoke different brain potentials

Robert M. Chapman
Page 282-284
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The dynamics of language

Peter W. Culicover and Andrzej Nowak
Page 284-285
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Experimental and theoretical evidence for a similar localization of words encoded through different modalities

Page 285-286
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Word versus task representation in neural networks

Thomas Elbert, Christian Dobell, Alessandro Angrilli, Luciano Stegagno and Brigitte Rockstroh
Page 286-287
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Other brain effects of words

Herman T. Epstein
Page 287-288
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Which phonology? Evidence for a dissociation between articulatory and auditory phonology from word-form deafness

Giordana Grossi
Page 290-291
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What else should a neurobiological theory of language account for?

Vitor Geraldi Haase and Rui Rothe-Neves
Page 291-292
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Cell assemblies as building blocks of larger cognitive structures

J. Eric Ivancich, Christian R. Huyck and Stephen Kaplan
Page 292-293
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Homogeneous neural networks cannot provide complex cognitive functions

Alexey M. Ivanitsky and Andrey R. Nikolaev
Page 293-293
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Thought as word dynamics

Paul J. M. Jorion
Page 295-295
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Semantic typing via neuronal assemblies

Martin Kurthen
Page 296-297
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Unifying cell assembly theory with observations of brain dynamics

R. Miller
Page 297-298
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Flexible neural circuitry in word processing

Michael I. Posner and Gregory J. DiGirolamo
Page 299-300
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Bihemispheric representation, foveal splitting, and visual word recognition

Richard Shillcock and Padraic Monaghan
Page 300-301
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Only time can tell ; words in context

Riitta Salmelin, P;auml;ivi Helenius and Kari Kuukka
Page 300-300
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Early effects of semantic meaning on electrical brain activity

Wolfgang Skrandies
Page 301-302
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On computational and behavioral evidence regarding Hebbian transcortical cell assemblies

Michael Spivey, Mark Andrews and Daniel Richardson
Page 302-302
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The neurobiology of knowledge retrieval

Daniel Tranel and Antonio R. Damasio
Page 303-303
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Locating meaning in interaction, not in the brain

William Turnbull and Jeremy I. M. Carpendale
Page 304-305
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Structure and dynamics of language representation

Don M. Tucker
Page 304-304
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Gamma band suppression by pseudowords: Evidence for lexical cell assemblies?

Thomas P. Urbach, Robert E. Davidson and Robert M. Drake
Page 305-306
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A spy to spy on a spy: From type to token representation with cell assemblies

Frank van der Velde
Page 306-307
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Toward a cognitive neuroscience of language

Friedemann Pulverm;amp;uuml;ller
Page 307-327
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Are sense-specific reference frames so mutually exclusive?

Xavier M. Sauvan
Page 337-338
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