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| Behavioral and Brain Sciences |
| Cambridge University Press |
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Volume 23
Issue 2 |
| Apr 01, 2000 |
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ISSN: 0140525x |
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Behavioral and Brain Sciences
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Volume 23 :
Issue 2
Table of Contents
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Pr;cis of The brain and emotion

Edmund T. Rolls
Page 177-191
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Emotions or emotional feelings?

Murat Aydede
Page 192-194
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Is reward an emotion?

Ralph Adolphs
Page 192-192
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Consciousness, higher-order thought, and stimulus reinforcement

Page 194-195
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Are emotions so simple?

Page 194-194
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Conceptualizing motivation and emotion

Ross Buck
Page 195-196
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Roads not taken: The case for multiple functional-level routes to emotion

Tim Dalgleish
Page 196-197
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Affect programs, intentionality, and consciousness

Craig DeLancey
Page 197-198
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Emotional networks: The heart of brain design

John C. Fentress
Page 198-199
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Emotion theory?

Nico H. Frijda
Page 199-200
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Structuring an emotional world

Jordan Grafman
Page 200-201
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Adaptive accounts of physiology and emotion

Alasdair I. Houston and John M. McNamara
Page 201-202
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Reinforcement, emotion, and consciousness

Carroll Izard
Page 202-204
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Emotion, representation, and consciousness

Leonard D. Katz
Page 204-205
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Reinforcement and punishment: Dissociable systems for action and emotion?

Simon Killcross
Page 205-205
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The essential roles of emotion in cognitive architecture

Kevin B. Korb and Ann E. Nicholson
Page 205-206
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A taste of things to come

Jerald D. Kralik and Marc D. Hauser
Page 207-208
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Reward: Wanted ; a better definition

Irving Kupfermann
Page 208-208
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On the behavioural interpretation of neurophysiological observation

Donald R. J. Laming
Page 209-209
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Intelligence and emotion

Eucaly Mogi
Page 210-211
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Emotion, cognition, and free representation

Eoghan Mac Aog;aacute;in
Page 210-210
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Neural behaviorism: From brain evolution to human emotion at the speed of an action potential

Jaak Panksepp
Page 212-213
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The amygdala ; responsible for memories of reward as well as punishment?

Amanda Parker
Page 213-214
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Awareness may be existence as well as (higher-order) thought

Jordan B. Peterson
Page 214-215
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The causal status of emotions in consciousness

Jason T. Ramsay and Marc D. Lewis
Page 215-216
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Affect systems and neural systems

Eric A. Salzen
Page 216-217
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Emotions and reward ; but no arousal?

Holger Ursin
Page 217-218
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Is the higher order of linguistic thought model of feeling adequate?

Robert Van Gulick
Page 218-219
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Innate psychology and open-ended processes: Finding the middle ground

David Sloan Wilson
Page 219-219
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On The brain and emotion

Edmund T. Rolls
Page 219-228
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Pavlovian feed-forward mechanisms in the control of social behavior

Michael Domjan, Brian Cusato and Ronald Villarreal
Page 235-249
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Social play is more than a Pavlovian romp

Marc Bekoff and Colin Allen
Page 250-251
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Ecological heuristics for learning

Paul M. Bronstein
Page 251-251
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Adaptiveness, law-of-effect theory, and control-system theory

S. R. Coleman
Page 253-253
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Fish displaying and infants sucking: The operant side of the social behavior coin

Edmund Fantino and Stephanie Stolarz-Fantino
Page 254-255
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Extending the model: Pavlovian social learning

Dorothy M. Fragaszy
Page 255-256
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Feeding forward versus feeding backward

R. Allen Gardner
Page 256-257
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The breadth-depth tradeoff: Gains and losses as the unidirectional shift in Pavlovian conditioning continues

Adam S. Goodie
Page 257-258
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Strategies for integrating biological theory, control systems theory, and Pavlovian conditioning

Karen L. Hollis
Page 258-259
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Boxing Day

Peter R. Killeen
Page 259-260
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On levels of analysis and theoretical integration: Models of social behavior

Dennis Krebs
Page 260-261
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It is time to inhibit Pavlovian conditioning

John Limber
Page 261-261
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Pavlovian conditioning as a product of selection

William J. Rowland
Page 262-263
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Pavlovian perceptions and primate realities

Frank E. Poirier and Michelle Field
Page 262-262
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How useful is an individual perspective for explaining the control of social behavior?

Richard Schuster
Page 263-264
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It still takes at least two to tango

Stephen M. Siviy
Page 264-265
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Feed-forward and the evolution of social behavior

C. N. Slobodchikoff
Page 265-266
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Bottoms-up! A refreshing change in models

Charles T. Snowdon
Page 266-267
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How is the feed-forward Pavlovian control system instantiated in neurobiology?

Joseph E. Steinmetz, Gabrielle B. Britton and John T. Green
Page 267-267
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An integrative approach to the modeling of behavior

William Timberlake, Norman Pecoraro and Matthew Tinsley
Page 268-268
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Extensions, elaborations, and explanations of the role of evolution and learning in the control of social behavior

Michael Domjan, Brian Cusato and Ronald Villarreal
Page 269-276
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Mental model theory and pragmatics

Jean-Baptiste van der Henst
Page 283-284
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Mental models and pragmatics

P. N. Johnson-Laird and Ruth M. J. Byrne
Page 284-285
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LTP ; A mechanism in search of a function

Kathryn J. Jeffery
Page 286-287
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LTP and reinforcement: Possible role of the monoaminergic systems

Mikhail N. Zhadin
Page 287-288
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The status of LTP as a mechanism of memory formation in the mammalian brain

Tracey J. Shors and Louis D. Matzel
Page 288-290
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Statistical significance testing, hypothetico-deductive method, and theory evaluation

Brian D. Haig
Page 292-293
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Does the finding of statistical significance justify the rejection of the null hypothesis?

David Sohn
Page 293-294
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The Popperian framework, statistical significance, and rejection of chance

Siu L. Chow
Page 294-298
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