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| Behavioral and Brain Sciences |
| Cambridge University Press |
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Volume 25
Issue 4 |
| Aug 01, 2002 |
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ISSN: 0140525x |
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Behavioral and Brain Sciences
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Volume 25 :
Issue 4
Table of Contents
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Facial expression of pain: An evolutionary account

Amanda C. de C. Williams
Page 439-455
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What role does intersubjectivity play in the facial expression of pain?

C. Richard Chapman and Yoshio Nakamura
Page 455-456
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Pain in the social animal

Kenneth D. Craig and Melanie A. Badali
Page 456-457
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To express or suppress may be function of others distress

Geert Crombez and Chris Eccleston
Page 457-458
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Psychophysical studies of expressions of pain

Temre N. Davies and Donald D. Hoffman
Page 458-459
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Pain, evolution, and the placebo response

Dylan Evans
Page 459-460
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What is pain facial expression for?

Nico H. Frijda
Page 460-460
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Intention and authenticity in the facial expression of pain

Mitchell S. Green
Page 460-461
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Pain facial expression: Individual variability undermines the specific adaptationist account

Christine R. Harris and Nancy Alvarado
Page 461-462
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Facial expression of pain more than a fuzzy expression of distress?

Christiane Hermann and Herta Flor
Page 462-463
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Continuity and change in infants facial expressions following an unanticipated aversive stimulus

Carroll E. Izard
Page 463-464
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Sex differences in pain: Evolutionary links to facial pain expression

Edmund Keogh and Anita Holdcroft
Page 465-465
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Facial expression of pain: Just So Stories, spandrels, and patient blaming

Patrick J. McGrath
Page 466-466
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A behavior-analytic developmental model is better

Gary Novak and Martha Pelez
Page 466-468
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Mindscoping pain and suffering

Jaak Panksepp and Marcia Smith Pasqualini
Page 468-469
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Machine understanding of facial expression of pain

Maja Pantic and Leon J. M. Rothkrantz
Page 469-470
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Pain behavior and the pretence of knowledge

Kenneth M. Prkachin
Page 470-470
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The feeling of pain and the emotion of distress

Eric A. Salzen
Page 471-471
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The evolutionarily novel context of clinical caregiving and facial displays of pain

Karen L. Schmidt
Page 471-472
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The meaning of facial expressions of pain lies in their use, not in their reference

Mark D. Sullivan
Page 472-473
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Childrens facial expressions of pain in the context of complex social interactions

Carl L. von Baeyer
Page 473-474
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An evolutionary theory of pain must consider sex differences

Martin Voracek and Todd K. Shackelford
Page 474-475
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Facial expression of pain, empathy, evolution, and social learning

Amanda C. de C. Williams
Page 475-480
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Adaptationism how to carry out an exaptationist program

Paul W. Andrews, Steven W. Gangestad and Dan Matthews
Page 489-504
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Modest adaptationism: Muddling through cognition and language

Scott Atran
Page 504-506
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Are all bases covered?

Louise Barrett and S. Peter Henzi
Page 506-507
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Use of phylogenetic analysis to distinguish adaptation from exaptation

Daniel G. Blackburn
Page 507-508
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There is no evidentiary silver bullet for the frequency adaptation hypothesis

Gary L. Brase
Page 508-509
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Development: The missing link between exaptationist and adaptationist accounts of organismal design

William Michael Brown
Page 509-510
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Troubles with exaptationism

Derek Browne
Page 510-511
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Musings on the concept of exaptation and creationism

Charles Crawford
Page 511-512
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Lack of evidentiary criteria for exaptations?

James L. Dannemiller
Page 512-513
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Does past selective efficacy matter to psychology?

Paul Sheldon Davies
Page 513-514
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Phylogenetics and the aptationist program

Pierre Deleporte
Page 514-515
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Is empirical imagination a constraint on adaptationist theory construction?

Thomas E. Dickins and David W. Dickins
Page 515-516
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Ontology is the problem

Page 516-517
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Just not so stories: Exaptations, spandrels, and constraints

Aurelio Jos Figueredo and Sarah Christine Berry
Page 517-518
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Towards an evolutionary pluralism? The need to establish evidentiary standards and avoid reification of assumptions

Agustin Fuentes
Page 518-519
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Special designs centuries of success

Edward H. Hagen
Page 519-520
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Adaptationism and inference to the best explanation

Brian Haig and Russil Durrant
Page 520-521
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Allocating presumptions

Owen D. Jones
Page 521-521
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Identifying adaptation by dysfunction

Donald F. Klein
Page 521-522
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Evolutionary analyses should include pluralistic and falsifiable hypotheses

Craig W. LaMunyon and Todd K. Shackelford
Page 522-523
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Yes, but it was never just about the science

Craig T. Palmer
Page 523-524
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When is a trait an adaptation?

Sergio M. Pellis
Page 524-524
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The importance of comparative and phylogenetic analyses in the study of adaptation

James R. Roney and Dario Maestripieri
Page 525-525
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Its adaptations all the way down

M. D. Rutherford
Page 526-526
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The evidentiary standard of special design is a little bit like heaven

Mark Schaller
Page 526-527
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Where are all the genes?

Jeffrey C. Schank
Page 527-528
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From exploration to justification: The importance of special design evidence

Jeffry A. Simpson
Page 528-529
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The fuzzy zone between exaptation and phenotypic adaptation

Eric Alden Smith
Page 529-530
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Adaptationism and molecular biology: An example based on ADHD

James Swanson, Robert Moyzis, John Fossella, Jin Fan and Michael I. Posner
Page 530-531
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Adaptation for, exaptation as

Nicholas S. Thompson
Page 531-532
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Why specific design is not the mark of the adaptational

Jerome C. Wakefield
Page 532-533
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A straw man on a dead horse: Studying adaptation then and now

Marlene Zuk
Page 533-534
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Adaptationism, exaptationism, and evolutionary behavioral science

Paul W. Andrews, Steven W. Gangestad and Dan Matthews
Page 534-547
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