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| Behavioral and Brain Sciences |
| Cambridge University Press |
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Volume 25
Issue 5 |
| Oct 01, 2002 |
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ISSN: 0140525x |
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Behavioral and Brain Sciences
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Volume 25 :
Issue 5
Table of Contents
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What catatonia can tell us about top-down modulation: A neuropsychiatric hypothesis

Georg Northoff
Page 555-577
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Nonconscious processing, anterior cingulate, and catatonia

Rajendra D. Badgaiyan
Page 578-579
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Top-down modulation, emotion, and hallucination

Andr Aleman and Ren S. Kahn
Page 578-578
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Catatonia isnt ready for a unified theory

Carrie E. Bearden and John R. Monterosso
Page 579-580
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Does catatonia have a specific brain biology?

Bernhard Bogerts
Page 580-581
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What medical catatonias tell us about top-down modulation

Brendan T. Carroll
Page 581-582
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Catatonia: A window into the cerebral underpinnings of will

Ricardo de Oliveira-Souza, Jorge Moll, Ftima Azevedo Igncio and Paul J. Eslingerc
Page 582-584
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Catatonia: A disorder of motivation and movement

Gregory Fricchione
Page 584-585
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Top-down versus bottom-up is not the same thing as psychological versus biological

Valerie Gray Hardcastle
Page 585-586
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Dopamine, Parkinsons disease, and volition

Jon C. Horvitz
Page 586-586
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Does the form of akinetic mutism linked to mesodiencephalic injuries bridge the double dissociation of Parkinsons disease and catatonia?

Ayeesha K. Kamal and Nicholas D. Schiff
Page 586-587
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Catatonia, motor neglect, and hysterical paralysis: Some similarities and differences

John C. Marshall, Jennifer M. Gurd and Gereon R. Fink
Page 587-588
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Catatonia in Alzheimers disease: The role of the amygdalo-hippocampal circuits

Andrei C. Miu and Adrian I. Olteanu
Page 588-589
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A self frozen in time and space: Catatonia as a kinesthetic analog to mirrored self-misidentification

Steven M. Platek and Gordon G. Gallup
Page 589-590
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The disease status of catatonia

Irwin Savodnik
Page 590-591
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Do neurodegenerative cascades in Parkinsons disease really reflect bottom-up processing?

Christopher A. Shaw
Page 591-591
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Neurophysiology, neuropsychiatry and neurophilosophy of catatonia

Georg Northoff
Page 592-599
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The emergence of a new paradigm in ape language research

Stuart G. Shanker and Barbara J. King
Page 605-620
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Ethnography should replace experimentation

David F. Armstrong
Page 620-621
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A new paradigm?

John D. Bonvillian and Francine G. P. Patterson
Page 621-622
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Language evolution in apes and autonomous agents

Angelo Cangelosi
Page 622-623
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Dynamic systems theory places the scientist in the system

Alan Fogel, Ilse de Koeyer, Cory Secrist and Ryan Nagy
Page 623-624
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The proper study of chimpkind

R. Allen Gardner
Page 624-625
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Is there empirical evidence for the dynamic nature of communication systems?: The role of synchronization and inferential communication

Karl Grammer
Page 625-626
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Information, information transfer, and information processing

Ulrike Hahn
Page 626-627
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Communication and communion

Tim Ingold
Page 627-628
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The Vygotskian advantage in cognitive modeling: Participation precedes and thus prefigures understanding

Christine M. Johnson
Page 628-629
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What ape language research means for representations

Edward Kako
Page 629-629
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Dancing on thin ice

Stan A. Kuczaj, Joana A. Ramos and Robin L. Paulos
Page 629-630
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You can dance if you want to

Valerie Kuhlmeier and Paul Bloom
Page 630-631
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On the public nature of communication

David A. Leavens
Page 631-632
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Dancing with humans: Interaction as unintended consequence

John L. Locke
Page 632-633
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Can dancing replace scientific approach: Lost (again) in chimpocentrism

A. Miklsi
Page 633-634
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Could dancing be coupled oscillation? the interactive approach to linguistic communication and dynamical systems theory

Erik Myin and Sonja Smets
Page 634-635
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Does the new paradigm in ape-language research ape behaviorism?

Joseph J. Pear
Page 635-636
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Research scientist

Irene M. Pepperberg
Page 636-636
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Metaphor muddles in communication theory

Drew Rendall and Paul Vasey
Page 637-637
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Great ape communication: Cognitive and evolutionary approaches

Anne E. Russon and David R. Begun
Page 638-638
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Contribution of plasticity of sensorimotor cerebral cortex to development of communication skills

Barry J. Sessle and Dongyuan Yao
Page 638-639
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Information processing and dynamical systems approaches are complementary

David Spurrett
Page 639-640
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Information, representation, and the dynamic systems approach to language

John Symons
Page 640-641
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Doesnt a dance require dancers?

N. S. Thompson and Jaan Valsiner
Page 641-642
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Does the use of the dynamic system approach really help fill in the gap between human and nonhuman primate language?

Jacques Vauclair
Page 642-643
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Human expression and experience: What does it mean to have language?

Yves-Marie Visetti and Victor Rosenthal
Page 643-644
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Making meaning

Gabriel Waters and Sherman Wilcox
Page 644-645
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Blind men, elephants, and dancing information processors

Chris Westbury
Page 645-646
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A multichannel information-processing system is simpler and more easily tested

Thomas R. Zentall
Page 646-646
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The emergence of a new paradigm in ape language research: Beyond interactionism

Stuart G. Shanker and Barbara J. King
Page 646-651
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