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| Behavioral and Brain Sciences |
| Cambridge University Press |
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Volume 27
Issue 3 |
| Jun 01, 2004 |
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ISSN: 0140525x |
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Behavioral and Brain Sciences
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Volume 27 :
Issue 3
Table of Contents
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Towards a balanced social psychology: Causes, consequences, and cures for the problem-seeking approach to social behavior and cognition

Joachim I. Krueger and David C. Funder
Page 313-327
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Beware of individual differences

Peter Borkenau and Nadine Mauer
Page 328-328
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Functional clothes for the emperor

Gary L. Brase
Page 328-329
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Additional requirements for a balanced social psychology

Siu L. Chow
Page 329-331
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Psychologists seek the unexpected, not the negative, to provoke innovative theory construction

John Darley and Alexander Todorov
Page 331-332
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But what would a balanced approach look like?

David Dunning
Page 332-333
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Balance where it really counts

Nicholas Epley, Leaf Van Boven and Eugene M. Caruso
Page 333-333
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Beyond negative and positive ideologies

Klaus Fiedler
Page 334-334
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Apes and angels: Adaptationism versus Panglossianism

Aurelio Jos Figueredo, Mark J. Landau and Jon A. Sefcek
Page 334-335
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The bias bias in social psychology: Adaptive when and how?

James Friedrich
Page 335-336
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The irrationality paradox

Gerd Gigerenzer
Page 336-338
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Null hypothesis statistical testing and the balance between positive and negative approaches

Adam S. Goodie
Page 338-339
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Another route to broadening the scope of social psychology: Ecologically valid research

Samuel D. Gosling
Page 339-340
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Is social psychological research really so negatively biased?

Aiden P. Gregg and Constantine Sedikides
Page 340-341
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The wrong standard: Science, not politics, needed

Kenneth R. Hammond
Page 341-341
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Beyond balance: To understand bias, social psychology needs to address issues of politics, power, and social perspective

Alexander Haslam, Tom Postmes and Jolanda Jetten
Page 341-342
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Out of the theoretical cul-de-sac

Ralph Hertwig and Annika Wallin
Page 342-343
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Asch and the balance of values

Bert H. Hodges
Page 343-344
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The goodness of judgment index

Lee Jussim
Page 344-345
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Building an even better conceptual foundation

Tatsuya Kameda and Reid Hastie
Page 345-346
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One path to balance and order in social psychology: An evolutionary perspective

Douglas T. Kenrick and Jon K. Maner
Page 346-347
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Is there a People are Stupid school in social psychology?

John F. Kihlstrom
Page 348-348
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Not just a passion for negativity

Yechiel Klar and Uzi Levi
Page 349-349
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The reign of error in social psychology: On the real versus imagined consequences of problem-focused research

Justin Kruger and Kenneth Savitsky
Page 349-350
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Accuracy and error: Constraints on process models in social psychology

Alan J. Lambert, B. Keith Payne and Larry L. Jacoby
Page 350-351
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People actually are about as bad as social psychologists say, or worse

Michael P. Maratsos
Page 351-352
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Proper experimental design and implementation are necessary conditions for a balanced social psychology

Andreas Ortmann and Michal Ostatnicky
Page 352-353
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Multi-process models in social psychology provide a more balanced view of social thought and action

Richard E. Petty
Page 353-354
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Social psychological research isnt negative, and its message fosters compassion, not cynicism

Dennis T. Regan and Thomas Gilovich
Page 354-355
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Errors of judgment and the logic of conversation

Norbert Schwarz
Page 355-355
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From disorder to coherence in social psychology

Todd K. Shackelford and Robin R. Vallacher
Page 356-356
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Goodness has nothing to do with it: Why problem orientation need not make for parochial theory

Carol Slater
Page 357-357
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Balance in psychological research: The dual process perspective

Keith E. Stanovich
Page 357-358
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The role of learning in normative and non-normative behavior

Stephanie Stolarz-Fantino and Edmund Fantino
Page 358-359
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Why is aint ought, or: Is Homo sapiens a rational humanist?

Oliver Vitouch
Page 359-360
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Social cognitive neuroscience: The perspective shift in progress

Jacqueline N. Wood
Page 360-361
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Social psychology: A field in search of a center

Joachim I. Krueger and David C. Funder
Page 361-367
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The emulation theory of representation: Motor control, imagery, and perception

Rick Grush
Page 377-396
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Redundancy in the nervous system: Where internal models collapse

Ramesh Balasubramaniam
Page 396-397
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Issues of implementation matter for representation

Francisco Calvo Garzn
Page 397-398
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Testable corollaries, a conceptual error, and neural correlates of Grushs synthesis

Thomas G. Campbell and John D. Pettigrew
Page 398-400
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Dualitys hidden influences in models of the mind

Eric Charles
Page 400-401
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Epistemology, emulators, and extended minds

Terry Dartnall
Page 401-402
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Where in the brain does the forward model lurk?

Opher Donchin and Amir Raz
Page 402-403
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Emulators as sources of hidden cognitive variables

Peter Grdenfors
Page 403-403
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Does the brain implement the Kalman filter?

Valeri Goussev
Page 404-405
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From semantic analogy to theoretical confusion?

Valrie Gaveau, Michel Desmurget and Pierre Baraduc
Page 404-404
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Amodal imagery in rostral premotor areas

Takashi Hanakawa, Manabu Honda and Mark Hallett
Page 406-407
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The size-weight illusion, emulation, and the cerebellum

Edward M. Hubbard and Vilayanur S. Ramachandran
Page 407-408
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The role of prespecification in an embodied cognition

J. Scott Jordan
Page 408-409
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Computational ideas developed within the control theory have limited relevance to control processes in living systems

Mark L. Latash and Anatol G. Feldman
Page 409-409
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Internal models and spatial orientation

Daniel M. Merfeld
Page 410-410
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The art of representation: Support for an enactive approach

Natika Newton
Page 411-411
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Emulation theory offers conceptual gains but needs filters

Catherine L. Reed, Jefferson D. Grubb and Piotr Winkielman
Page 411-412
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Emulation of kinesthesia during motor imagery

Norihiro Sadato and Eiichi Naito
Page 412-413
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Modality, quo vadis?

K. Sathian
Page 413-414
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Brains have emulators with brains: Emulation economized

Ricarda I. Schubotz and D. Yves von Cramon
Page 414-415
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Emulator as body schema

Virginia Slaughter
Page 415-416
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Evidence for the online operation of imagery: Visual imagery modulates motor production in drawing

Alastair D. Smith and Iain D Gilchrist
Page 416-417
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If emulation is representation, does detail matter?

Lynn Andrea Stein
Page 417-417
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Representation: Emulation and anticipation

Georgi Stojanov and Mark H. Bickhard
Page 418-418
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A neuropsychological approach to motor control and imagery

Barbara Tomasino, Corrado Corradi-DellAcqua, Alessia Tessari, Caterina Spiezio and Raffaella Ida Rumiati
Page 419-419
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Sensation and emulation of coordinated actions

Charles B. Walter
Page 419-420
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Representing is more than emulating

Hongbin Wang and Yingrui Yang
Page 420-421
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Small brains and minimalist emulation: When is an internal model no longer a model?

Barbara Webb
Page 421-422
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Two distinctions concerning emulators

Mark Wexler
Page 422-422
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Computing the motor-sensor map

Oswald Wiener and Thomas Raab
Page 423-424
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Motoric emulation may contribute to perceiving imitable stimuli

Margaret Wilson
Page 424-424
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Further explorations of the empirical and theoretical aspects of the emulation theory

Rick Grush
Page 425-435
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