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| Behavioral and Brain Sciences |
| Cambridge University Press |
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Volume 22
Issue 4 |
| Aug 01, 1999 |
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ISSN: 0140525x |
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Behavioral and Brain Sciences
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Volume 22 :
Issue 4
Table of Contents
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Perceptual symbol systems

Lawrence W. Barsalou
Page 577-660
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What makes perceptual symbols perceptual?

Murat Aydede
Page 610-611
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Modality and abstract concepts

Fred Adams and Kenneth Campbell
Page 610-610
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Perceptual symbols: The power and limitations of a theory of dynamic imagery and structured frames

William F. Brewer
Page 611-612
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Perceptual symbol systems and emotion

Louis C. Charland
Page 612-613
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Sort-of symbols?

Daniel C. Dennett and Christopher D. Viger
Page 613-613
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On the virtues of going all the way

Shimon Edelman and Elise M. Breen
Page 614-614
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Creativity, simulation, and conceptualization

Gilles Fauconnier
Page 615-615
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Spatial symbol systems and spatial cognition: A computer science perspective on perception-based symbol processing

Christian Freksa, Thomas Barkowsky and Alexander Klippel
Page 616-617
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Grounded in perceptions yet transformed into amodal symbols

Liane Gabora
Page 617-617
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Perceptual symbols in language comprehension

Arthur M. Glenberg
Page 618-619
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Perception as purposeful inquiry: We elect where to direct each glance, and determine what is encoded within and between glances

Julian Hochberg
Page 619-620
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Individuals are abstractions

James R. Hurford
Page 620-621
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Creativity of metaphor in perceptual symbol systems

Bipin Indurkhya
Page 621-622
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The uncanny power of words

Paul J. M. Jorion
Page 622-623
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Reinventing a broken wheel

Barbara Landau
Page 623-624
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Latent Semantic Analysis (LSA), a disembodied learning machine, acquires human word meaning vicariously from language alone

Thomas K. Landauer
Page 624-625
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A view from cognitive linguistics

Ronald W. Langacker
Page 625-625
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Can handicapped subjects use perceptual symbol systems?

F. Lowenthal
Page 625-626
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Whither structured representation?

Arthur B. Markman and Eric Dietrich
Page 626-627
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Development, consciousness, and the perception/mental representation distinction

Lorraine McCune
Page 627-628
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Simulations, simulators, amodality, and abstract terms

Robert W. Mitchell and Catherine A. Clement
Page 628-629
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Can metacognition be explained in terms of perceptual symbol systems?

Ruediger Oehlmann
Page 629-630
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Introspection and the secret agent

Natika Newton
Page 629-629
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Selecting is not abstracting

Stellan Ohlsson
Page 630-631
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A little mechanism can go a long way

David A. Schwartz, Mark Weaver and Stephen Kaplan
Page 631-632
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Truth and intra-personal concept stability

Mark Siebel
Page 632-633
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A perceptual theory of knowledge: Specifying some details

Aaro Toomela
Page 633-634
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External symbols are a better bet than perceptual symbols

A. J. Wells
Page 634-635
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Perceiving abstract concepts

Katja Wiemer-Hastings and Arthur C. Graesser
Page 635-636
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Perceptual symbols in language comprehension: Can an empirical case be made?

Rolf A. Zwaan, Robert A. Stanfield and Carol J. Madden
Page 636-637
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Perceptions of perceptual symbols

Lawrence W. Barsalou
Page 637-660
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A model of saccade generation based on parallel processing and competitive inhibition

John M. Findlay and Robin Walker
Page 661-674
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Change in motor plan with a change in the selection of the to-be-recognized word

C;eacute;cile Beauvillain
Page 674-675
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Temporal delays, not underactivation of detection processes may be responsible for neglect

I-han Chou and Peter H. Schiller
Page 675-676
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Linking covert and overt attention

James J. Clark
Page 676-677
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The effect of auditory distractors on saccades toward visual targets

H. Colonius and P. Arndt
Page 677-678
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Dopamine and impairment at the executive level

Trevor J. Crawford, Annelies Broerse and Jans Den Boer
Page 678-679
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Is attention required in a model of saccade generation?

David Crundall and Geoffrey Underwood
Page 679-680
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Where and When does the What system play a role in eye movement control?

K. Dor;eacute;-Mazars
Page 680-681
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Spatial programming and the representation of salience

Jay A. Edelman, Jacqueline Gottlieb and Michael E. Goldberg
Page 682-682
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Unwanted reflex-like saccades in visual extinction patients

Alessandra Fanini and Carlo Alberto Marzi
Page 683-683
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Voluntary and involuntary components in saccade and attention control

Burkhart Fischer
Page 684-685
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Can parallel processing and competitive inhibition explain the generation of saccades?

M. A. Frens, I. T. C. Hooge and H. H. L. M. Goossens
Page 685-686
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The role of executive control in saccade generation

Diane C. Gooding
Page 686-687
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Learning from cerebellar lesions about the temporal and spatial aspects of saccadic control

Alain Guillaume, Laurent Goffart and Denis P;eacute;lisson
Page 687-688
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Higher level influences on saccade generation in normals and patients with visual hemineglect

Wolfgang Heide, Andreas Sprenger and Detlef K;amp;ouml;mpf
Page 688-689
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Oculomotor capture by abrupt onsets reveals concurrent programming of voluntary and involuntary saccades

Arthur F. Kramer, David E. Irwin, Jan Theeuwes and Sowon Hahn
Page 689-690
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Contextual factors in the generation of express and regular saccades

Martin J;amp;uuml;ttner
Page 689-689
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Is there more to visual attention than meets the eye?

Cyril Latimer
Page 690-691
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Concurrent processing of saccades

Robert M. McPeek, Edward L. Keller and Ken Nakayama
Page 691-692
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Winner-takes-all and action selection

Daniel V. Meegan
Page 692-693
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Lateral interactions in the superior colliculus, not an extended fixation zone, can account for the remote distractor effect

E. Olivier, M. C. Dorris and D. P. Munoz
Page 694-695
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Is covert attention really unnecessary?

Alexander Pollatsek and Keith Rayner
Page 695-696
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Top-down influences on saccade generation in cognitive tasks

Ralph Radach
Page 697-698
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Ocular disengagement inhibited by target onset in periphery?

Wa James Tam
Page 698-698
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Salience, saccades, and the role of cortex

Kathleen Taylor
Page 698-699
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Frontal eye field: A cortical salience map

Kirk G. Thompson and Narcisse P. Bichot
Page 699-700
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Generating oculomotor and neuronal behavior in a neural field model of the superior colliculus

Thomas P. Trappenberg and Raymond M. Klein
Page 700-701
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Adding depth to the picture

J.A.M. Van Gisbergen and V. Chaturvedi
Page 701-702
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About saccade generation in reading

Fran;ccedil;oise Vitu
Page 702-703
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Exorcising the devil: Adding details to a descriptive account of oculomotor control

Gregory J. Zelinsky
Page 703-704
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Monocular and binocular mechanisms in saccade generation

Wu Zhou and W. M. King
Page 704-705
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How are saccades generated?

John M. Findlay and Robin Walker
Page 706-713
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Grammars rule O.K.

Neil Law Malcolm
Page 723-724
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Colour word usage within languages follows the Berlin and Kay ordering

I. C. McManus
Page 724-724
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Colour word trouble

B. A. C. Saunders and J. van Brakel
Page 725-728
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Identifying, reidentifying, and misidentifying

Eric Saidel
Page 730-731
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The common structure is the affordance in the ecology

Paul J. Treffner
Page 731-732
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On sympathies with J. J. Gibson and on focusing reference

Ruth Garrett Millikan
Page 732-733
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