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| Behavioral and Brain Sciences |
| Cambridge University Press |
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Volume 25
Issue 3 |
| Jun 01, 2002 |
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ISSN: 0140525x |
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Behavioral and Brain Sciences
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Volume 25 :
Issue 3
Table of Contents
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The self-organizing consciousness

Pierre Perruchet and Annie Vinter
Page 297-330
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Is the self-organizing consciousness framework compatible with human deductive reasoning?

Pierre Barrouillet and Henry Markovits
Page 330-331
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Varieties of consciousness

Paolo Bartolomeo and Gianfranco Dalla Barba
Page 331-332
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Consciousness organizes more than itself: Findings from subliminal mere exposure research

Robert F. Bornstein
Page 332-333
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Mentalism, information, and consciousness

Richard A. Carlson
Page 333-333
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The self-organizing conundrum

Arnaud Destrebecqz and Axel Cleeremans
Page 334-335
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Modeling consciousness

Frdric Dandurand and Thomas R. Shultz
Page 334-334
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What sort of representation is conscious?

Zoltan Dienes and Josef Perner
Page 336-337
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Mentalistic metatheory and strategies

Donelson E. Dulany
Page 337-338
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The limited roles of unconscious computation and representation in self-organizational theories of mind

Ralph D. Ellis
Page 338-339
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Natura non facit saltum: The need for the full continuum of mental representations

Robert M. French
Page 339-340
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Unconscious semantic access: A case against a hyperpowerful unconscious

Daniel Holender and Katia Duscherer
Page 340-341
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Consciousness and unconsciousness of logical reasoning errors in the human brain

Olivier Houd
Page 341-341
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Unconscious abstraction in motor learning

Aysha S. Keisler and Daniel T. Willingham
Page 342-343
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Surfing on consciousness, or, a deliberately shallow outline of cognition

Luis Jimnez
Page 342-342
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The conscious and the unconscious: A package deal

Martin Kurthen
Page 343-344
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The reported demise of the cognitive unconscious is premature

Anthony J. Lambert
Page 344-345
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Rules, abstractions, and evolution

Leonid Litman and Arthur S. Reber
Page 345-346
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What does isomorphism between conscious representations and the structure of the world mean?

Riccardo Manzotti and Giulio Sandini
Page 346-347
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The SOC framework and short-term memory

David J. Murray
Page 347-348
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The computational baby, the classical bathwater, and the middle way

Gerard OBrien and Jon Opie
Page 348-349
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Oral and visual language are not processed in like fashion: Constraints on the products of the SOC

Christophe Parisse and Henri Cohen
Page 349-350
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Neo-associativism: Limited learning transfer without binding symbol representations

Steven Phillips
Page 350-351
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Associative learning: A generalisation too far

Martin Redington
Page 351-352
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Is syntax a representation in itself?

Maritza Rivera-Gaxiola and Juan Felipe Silva-Pereyra
Page 352-353
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Does the SOC theory avoid unconscious rule use?

Carol A. Seger
Page 353-353
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Remember the old masters!

Benny Shanon
Page 353-354
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Hemineglect, extinction, and the importance of conscious processing

Eric Siroff
Page 354-355
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The emergence of consciousness: BUC versus SOC

Ron Sun
Page 355-356
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Trading automatic/nonautomatic for unconscious/conscious

Joseph Tzelgov
Page 356-357
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Could phenomenal consciousness function as a cognitive unconscious?

Max Velmans
Page 357-358
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Language heterogeneity and self-organizing consciousness

William S.-Y. Wang and Jinyun Ke
Page 358-359
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Contrasts and dissociations suggest qualitative differences between conscious and unconscious processes

Gezinus Wolters and R. Hans Phaf
Page 359-360
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The self-organizing consciousness entails additional intervening subsystems

Takashi Yamauchi
Page 360-360
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The self-organizing consciousness as an alternative model of the mind

Pierre Perruchet and Annie Vinter
Page 360-380
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Archaeology and cognitive evolution

Thomas Wynn
Page 389-402
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Rediscovery and the cognitive aspects of toolmaking: Lessons from the handaxe

William H. Calvin
Page 403-404
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Artifacts and cognition: Evolution or cultural progress?

Bruce Bridgeman
Page 403-403
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A complete theory of human evolution of intelligence must consider stage changes

Michael Lamport Commons and Patrice Marie Miller
Page 404-405
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Does complex behaviour imply complex cognitive abilities?

Kenny R. Coventry and John Clibbens
Page 406-406
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Is symmetry of stone tools merely an epiphenomenon of similarity?

J. B. Dergowski
Page 406-407
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Evolution of the reasoning hominid brain

Herman T. Epstein
Page 408-409
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Symmetry in knapped stones is real, not romanced

Diane Humphrey
Page 409-410
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Tacit symmetry detection and explicit symmetry processing

Jennifer M. Gurd, Gereon R. Fink and John C. Marshall
Page 409-409
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The explanatory limits of cognitive archaeology

Ben Jeffares
Page 410-412
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Deriving intentionality from artifacts

J. Scott Jordan
Page 412-412
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Was early man caught knapping during the cognitive (r)evolution?

Rich Masters and Jon Maxwell
Page 413-413
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Coincidental factors of handaxe morphology

April Nowell
Page 413-414
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Locating early Homo and Homo erectus tool production along the extractive foraging/cognitive continuum

Sue Taylor Parker
Page 414-415
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Reasons for the preference for symmetry

Rolf Reber
Page 415-416
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Putting meat on the bones: The necessity of empirical tests of hypotheses about cognitive evolution.

P. Thomas Schoenemann
Page 416-417
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Symmetry and human spatial cognition: An alternative perspective

Irwin Silverman
Page 418-418
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Tools evolve: The artificial selection and evolution of Paleolithic stone tools

Jorge Simo
Page 419-419
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Footloose and fossil-free no more: Evolutionary psychology needs archaeology

Valerie E. Stone
Page 420-421
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Thinking and doing in cognitive archaeology: Giving skill its due

Dietrich Stout
Page 421-422
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Natural selection of visual symmetries

Peter A. van der Helm
Page 422-423
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Symmetry for the sake of symmetry, or symmetry for the sake of behavior?

Jeffrey B. Wagman
Page 423-424
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The fossil evidence for spatial cognition

Anne H. Weaver
Page 424-425
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Intentions, goals, and the archaeological record

Rex Welshon
Page 425-426
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The devil in the details

Thomas Wynn
Page 426-432
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