 |
| Behavioral and Brain Sciences |
| Cambridge University Press |
|
Volume 26
Issue 1 |
| Feb 01, 2003 |
|
ISSN: 0140525x |
 |
|
Behavioral and Brain Sciences
|  |
Volume 26 :
Issue 1
Table of Contents
|
-
Valedictory Editorial

Stevan Harnad
Page 1-1
-
A Message From The New Editors

Barbara Finlay, Paul Bloom and Jeffrey Gray
Page 2-2
-
Color realism and color science

Alex Byrne and David R. Hilbert
Page 3-21
-
Perceptual variation and access to colors

Edward Wilson Averill
Page 22-22
-
Perceptual objects may have nonphysical properties

Aaron Ben-Zeev
Page 22-23
-
Color realism shows a subjectivist mode of thinking

Michael H. Brill
Page 23-24
-
Ecological considerations support color physicalism

James J. Clark
Page 24-25
-
Perceptual variation, realism, and relativization, or: How I learned to stop worrying and love variations in color vision

Jonathan Cohen
Page 25-26
-
True color only exists in the eye of the observer

Frans W. Cornelissen, Eli Brenner and Jeroen Smeets
Page 26-27
-
Orange laser beams are not illusory: The need for a plurality of real color ontologies

Lieven Decock and Jaap van Brakel
Page 27-28
-
Productance physicalism and a posteriori necessity

Don Dedrick
Page 28-29
-
Imprecise color constancy versus color realism

Brian V. Funt
Page 29-30
-
Do metamers matter?

Martin Hahn
Page 30-31
-
Parallels between hearing and seeing support physicalism

Stephen Handel and Molly L. Erickson
Page 31-32
-
Byrne and Hilberts chromatic ether

C. L. Hardin
Page 32-33
-
In favor of an ecological account of color

Scott Huettel, Thomas Polger and Michael Riley
Page 33-33
-
Color and content

Frank Jackson
Page 34-34
-
Why not color physicalism without color absolutism?

Zoltn Jakab and Brian P. McLaughlin
Page 34-35
-
Olive green or chestnut brown?

Rolf G. Kuehni
Page 35-36
-
Hue magnitudes and Revelation

John Kulvicki
Page 36-37
-
Color as a material, not an optical, property

Bruce J. MacLennan
Page 37-38
-
Surface color perception in constrained environments

Laurence T. Maloney
Page 38-39
-
Color nominalism, pluralistic realism, and color science

Mohan Matthen
Page 39-40
-
Clarifying the problem of color realism

Barry Maund
Page 40-41
-
Can a physicalist notion of color provide any insight into the nature of color perception?

Rainer Mausfeld and Reinhard Niedere
Page 41-42
-
An account of color without a subject?

Erik Myin
Page 42-43
-
Spatial position and perceived color of objects

Romi Nijhawan
Page 43-44
-
Have Byrne Hilbert answered Hardins challenge?

Adam Pautz
Page 44-45
-
Reflectance-to-color mappings depend critically on spatial context

Michael E. Rudd
Page 46-47
-
Color as a factor analytic approximation to Nature

Adam Reeves
Page 46-46
-
Surreptitious substitution

Barbara Saunders
Page 47-48
-
Color: A vision scientists perspective

Davida Y. Teller
Page 48-49
-
Color realism and color illusions

Dejan Todorovi
Page 49-50
-
Beautiful red squares

Robert Van Gulick
Page 50-51
-
Confusion of sensations and their physical correlates

Richard M. Warren
Page 51-51
-
Color realism redux

Alex Byrne and David R. Hilbert
Page 52-59
-
Convergence of biological and psychological perspectives on cognitive coordination in schizophrenia

William A. Phillips and Steven M. Silverstein
Page 65-82
-
The ketamine model for schizophrenia

Murray Alpert and Burt Angrist
Page 82-83
-
Where the rubber meets the road: The importance of implementation

Deanna M. Barch and Todd S. Braver
Page 83-84
-
A wide-spectrum coordination model of schizophrenia

Hendrik Pieter Barendregt
Page 84-85
-
Context rules

Steven L. Bressler
Page 85-85
-
Spatial integration in perception and cognition: An empirical approach to the pathophysiology of schizophrenia

Yue Chen
Page 86-87
-
Mechanisms of disrupted language comprehension in schizophrenia

Ruth Condray and Stuart R. Steinhauer
Page 87-88
-
Setting domain boundaries for convergence of biological and psychological perspectives on cognitive coordination in schizophrenia

J. P. Ginsberg
Page 88-89
-
Cognitive coordination deficits: A necessary but not sufficient factor in the development of schizophrenia

Diane C. Gooding and Jacqueline G. Braun
Page 89-90
-
Linking brain to mind in normal behavior and schizophrenia

Stephen Grossberg
Page 90-90
-
Schizophrenic cognition: Taken out of context?

David R. Hemsley
Page 91-91
-
NMDA-receptor hypofunction versus excessive synaptic elimination as models of schizophrenia

Ralph E. Hoffman and Thomas H. McGlashan
Page 92-92
-
Peeling the onion: NMDA dysfunction as a unifying model in schizophrenia

Daniel C. Javitt
Page 93-94
-
Is sensory gating a form of cognitive coordination?

Michael A. Kisley and Deana B. Davalos
Page 94-95
-
Theory of mind in schizophrenia: Damaged module or deficit in cognitive coordination?

David Leiser and Udi Bonshtein
Page 95-96
-
Reconciling schizophrenic deficits in top-down and bottom-up processes: Not yet

Angus W. MacDonald
Page 96-96
-
Context, connection, and coordination: The need to switch

Robert D. Oades, Bernd Rpcke and Ljubov Oknina
Page 97-97
-
Schizophrenia: Putting context in context

Sohee Park, Junghee Lee, Bradley Folley and Jejoong Kim
Page 98-99
-
Inferring contextual field interactions from scalp EEG

Mark E. Pflieger
Page 99-100
-
NMDA synapses can bias competition between object representations and mediate attentional selection

Antonino Raffone, Jaap M. J. Murre and Gezinus Wolters
Page 100-101
-
Why do schizophrenic patients hallucinate?

Pieter R. Roelfsema and Hans Supr
Page 101-103
-
No blind schizophrenics: Are NMDA-receptor dynamics involved?

Glenn S. Sanders, Steven M. Platek and Gordon G. Gallup
Page 103-104
-
Phenomenology, context, and self-experience in schizophrenia

Louis A. Sass and Peter J. Uhlhaas
Page 104-105
-
Cortical connectivity in high-frequency beta-rhythm in schizophrenics with positive and negative symptoms

Valeria Strelets
Page 105-106
-
Synchronous dynamics for cognitive coordination: But how?

M.-A. Tagamets and Barry Horwitz
Page 106-107
-
Combating fuzziness with computational modeling

L. M. Talamini, M. Meeter and J. M. J. Murre
Page 107-108
-
Guarding against over-inclusive notions of context: Psycholinguistic and electrophysiological studies of specific context functions in schizophrenia

Debra Titone and J. Bruno Debruille
Page 108-109
-
High-frequency synchronisation in schizophrenia: Too much or too little?

Leanne M. Williams, Kwang-Hyuk Lee, Albert Haig and Evian Gordon
Page 109-110
-
Cognitive coordination and its neurobiological bases: A new continent to explore

Steven M. Silverstein and William A. Phillips
Page 110-125
|
|