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| Behavioral and Brain Sciences |
| Cambridge University Press |
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Volume 27
Issue 2 |
| Apr 01, 2004 |
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ISSN: 0140525x |
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Behavioral and Brain Sciences
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Volume 27 :
Issue 2
Table of Contents
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Toward a mechanistic psychology of dialogue

Martin J. Pickering and Simon Garrod
Page 169-190
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Is language processing different in dialogue?

Dale J. Barr and Boaz Keysar
Page 190-191
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Full alignment of some but not all representations in dialogue

Holly P. Branigan
Page 191-192
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Two steps forward, one step back: Partner-specific effects in a psychology of dialogue

Susan E. Brennan and Charles A. Metzing
Page 192-193
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Priming and alignment: Mechanism or consequence?

Sarah Brown-Schmidt and Michael K. Tanenhaus
Page 193-194
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A call for more dialogue and more details

J. Cooper Cutting
Page 194-194
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Situation alignment and routinization in language acquisition

Peter F. Dominey
Page 195-195
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Production-comprehension asymmetries

Fernanda Ferreira
Page 196-196
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Visual copresence and conversational coordination

Susan R. Fussell and Robert E. Kraut
Page 196-197
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Intrinsic misalignment in dialogue: Why there is no unique context in a conversation

Jonathan Ginzburg
Page 197-199
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Resonance within and between linguistic beings

Stephen D. Goldinger and Tamiko Azuma
Page 199-200
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Dialogue: Can two be cheaper than one?

Sam Glucksberg
Page 199-199
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Dialogue in the degenerate case?

Patrick G. T. Healey
Page 201-201
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Interactive alignment: Priming or memory retrieval?

Michael Kaschak and Arthur Glenberg
Page 201-202
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Grammars with parsing dynamics: A new perspective on alignment

Ruth Kempson
Page 202-203
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Is alignment always the result of automatic priming?

Robert M. Krauss and Jennifer S. Pardo
Page 203-204
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One alignment mechanism or many?

Arthur B. Markman, Kyungil Kim, Levi B. Larkey, Lisa Narvaez and C. Hunt Stilwell
Page 204-205
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Beyond linguistic alignment

Allan Mazur
Page 205-206
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Correspondences between the interactive alignment account and Skinners in Verbal Behavior

Joseph J. Pear
Page 206-207
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Putting the interaction back into dialogue

Emanuel A. Schegloff
Page 207-208
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Some notes on priming, alignment, and self-monitoring

Niels O. Schiller and Jan Peter de Ruiter
Page 208-209
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Just how aligned are interlocutors representations?

Michael F. Schober
Page 209-210
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Dialogue processing: Automatic alignment or controlled understanding?

Hadas Shintel and Howard C. Nusbaum
Page 210-211
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Top-down influences in the interactive alignment model: The power of the situation model

Tessa Warren and Keith Rayner
Page 211-211
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The interactive-alignment model: Developments and refinements

Martin J. Pickering and Simon Garrod
Page 212-225
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Self-experimentation as a source of new ideas: Ten examples about sleep, mood, health, and weight

Seth Roberts
Page 227-262
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How observations on oneself can be scientific

David A. Booth
Page 262-263
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Dionysians and Apollonians

Michel Cabanac
Page 263-264
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From methodology to data analysis: Prospects for the n = 1 intrasubject design

Joseph Glicksohn
Page 264-266
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Linking self-experimentation to past and future science: Extended measures, individual subjects, and the power of graphical presentation

Sigrid S. Glenn
Page 264-264
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Self-experimentation and self-management: Allies in combination therapies

Irene Grote
Page 266-267
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Self-experimentation chronomics for health surveillance and science; also transdisciplinary civic duty?

Franz Halberg, Germaine Cornlissen and Barbara Schack
Page 267-269
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Why does self-experimentation lead to creative ideas?

Todd I. Lubart and Christophe Mouchiroud
Page 269-270
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Self-experimentation as science

Harold L. Miller, Jr.
Page 270-271
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Experimentation or observation? Of the self alone or the natural world?

Emanuel A. Schegloff
Page 271-272
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Can the process of experimentation lead to greater happiness?

Simon C. Moore and Joselyn L. Sellen
Page 271-271
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Ideas galore: Examining the moods of a modern caveman

Peter Totterdell
Page 272-273
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The birth of a confounded idea: The joys and pitfalls of self-experimentation

Martin Voracek and Maryanne L. Fisher
Page 273-274
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Introspection and intuition in the decision sciences

Daniel John Zizzo
Page 274-275
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Self-experimentation: Friend or foe?

Seth Roberts
Page 275-287
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Sidestepping the semantics of consciousness

Michael V. Antony
Page 289-290
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Superblindsight, Inverse Anton, and tweaking A-consciousness further

Oliver Kauffmann
Page 290-294
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Imposed intelligibility and strong claims concerning cognitive systems

Roy Lachman
Page 294-295
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Response to Lachman

Tim van Gelder
Page 295-295
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Syntactic representation in the lemma stratum

Holly P. Branigan and Martin J. Pickering
Page 296-297
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Lexical access as a brain mechanism

Friedemann Pulvermller
Page 297-299
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Relations of lexical access to neural implementation and syntactic encoding

Willem J. M. Levelt, Antje S. Meyer and Ardi Roelofs
Page 299-301
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Explicitness and nonconnectionist vehicle theories of consciousness

Fernando Martnez-Manrique
Page 302-303
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Vehicle, process, and hybrid theories of consciousness

Gerard OBrien and Jonathan Opie
Page 303-305
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Hierarchy disruption: Women and men

Jnos M. Rthelyi and Mria S. Kopp
Page 305-307
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Perceptual fluency and lexical access for function versus content words

Sidney J. Segalowitz and Korri Lane
Page 307-308
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Determinants of ignition times: Topographies of cell assemblies and the activation delays they imply

Friedemann Pulvermller and Bettina Mohr
Page 308-311
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Could the neural ABC explain the mind?

Maurice K. D. Schouten and Huib Looren de Jong
Page 311-312
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