 |
| Behavioral and Brain Sciences |
| Cambridge University Press |
|
Volume 27
Issue 4 |
| Aug 01, 2004 |
|
ISSN: 0140525x |
 |
|
Behavioral and Brain Sciences
|  |
Volume 27 :
Issue 4
Table of Contents
|
-
The signal functions of early infant crying

Joseph Soltis
Page 443-458
-
What is the evolutionary basis for colic?

Kim A. Bard
Page 459-459
-
Early infant crying as a behavioral state rather than a signal

Ronald G. Barr
Page 460-460
-
Changing brain activation needs determine early crying: A hypothesis

Elliott M. Blass
Page 460-461
-
Prelinguistic evolution in hominin mothers and babies: For cryin out loud!

Dean Falk
Page 461-462
-
Infant crying in hunter-gatherer cultures

Hillary N. Fouts, Michael E. Lamb and Barry S. Hewlett
Page 462-463
-
Is excessive infant crying an honest signal of vigor, one extreme of a continuum, or a strategy to manipulate parents?

Edward H. Hagen
Page 463-464
-
Sleep-wake processes play a key role in early infant crying

Oskar G. Jenni
Page 464-465
-
Imagine imaging neural activity in crying infants and in their caring parents

Steven Laureys and Serge Goldman
Page 465-467
-
From an undifferentiated cry towards a modulated signal

Johannes Lehtonen
Page 467-467
-
Infant colic: Re-evaluating the adaptive hypotheses

Dario Maestripieri and Kristina M. Durante
Page 468-469
-
Can reinforcement learning explain variation in early infant crying?

Arnon Lotem and David W. Winkler
Page 468-468
-
Infant crying in context

Rami Nader, Elizabeth A. Job, Melanie Badali and Kenneth D. Craig
Page 469-470
-
Infant crying and colic: What lies beneath

John D. Newman
Page 470-471
-
Infant vocalizations: Contrasts between crying and laughter

Robert R. Provine
Page 471-472
-
Crying and tears mimic the neonate

Frans L. Roes
Page 472-472
-
The development of parent-infant attachment through dynamic and interactive signaling loops of care and cry

James Edward Swain, Linda C. Mayes and James F. Leckman
Page 472-473
-
Shouldnt mother know best?

Nicholas S. Thompson, Rosemarie Sokol and Donald H. Owings
Page 473-474
-
Developmental changes of infant cries the evolution of complex vocalizations

Kathleen Wermke and Angela D. Friederici
Page 474-475
-
On the utility of an evolutionary approach to infant crying

Rebecca M. Wood
Page 475-476
-
Colic and the early crying curve: A developmental account

Debra M. Zeifman
Page 476-477
-
The developmental mechanisms and the signal functions of early infant crying

Joseph Soltis
Page 477-484
-
Prelinguistic evolution in early hominins: Whence motherese?

Dean Falk
Page 491-503
-
Prelinguistic evolution and motherese: A hypothesis on the neural substrates

Francisco Aboitiz and Carolina G Schrter
Page 503-504
-
Mothering plus vocalization doesnt equal language

Derek Bickerton
Page 504-505
-
Which came first: Infants learning language or motherese?

Heather Bortfeld
Page 505-506
-
How plausible is the motherese hypothesis?

Paul Bouissac
Page 506-507
-
Bipedalism, canine tooth reduction, and obligatory tool use

C. Loring Brace
Page 507-508
-
Hominin infant decentration hypothesis: Mirror neurons system adapted to subserve mother-centered participation

Stein Braten
Page 508-509
-
Prosody does not equal language

Robbins Burling
Page 509-509
-
Early hominins, utterance-activity, and niche construction

Stephen J. Cowley
Page 509-510
-
Continuity, displaced reference, and deception

Lee Cronk
Page 510-511
-
Syntax: An evolutionary stepchild

Danielle Dilkes and Steven M. Platek
Page 511-512
-
Motherese is but one part of a ritualized, multimodal, temporally organized, affiliative interaction

Ellen Dissanayake
Page 512-513
-
Chimpanzees are not proto-hominins and early human mothers may not have foraged alone

Agustn Fuentes
Page 513-513
-
Aspects of human language: Where motherese?

Emmanuel Gilissen
Page 514-514
-
Beyond prosody and infant-directed speech: Affective, social construction of meaning in the origins of language

Barbara J. King and Stuart Shanker
Page 515-515
-
Trickle-up phonetics: A vocal role for the infant

John L. Locke
Page 516-516
-
In the beginning was the song: The complex multimodal timing of mother-infant musical interaction

Elena Longhi and Annette Karmiloff-Smith
Page 516-517
-
Baby talk and the emergence of first words

Peter F. MacNeilage and Barbara L. Davis
Page 517-518
-
Affective prosody: Whence motherese

Marilee Monnot, Robert Foley and Elliott Ross
Page 518-519
-
Motherese by any other name: Mother-infant communication in non-hominin mammals

John D. Newman
Page 519-520
-
Walkie-talkie evolution: Bipedalism and vocal production

Robert R. Provine
Page 520-521
-
Prosody as an intermediary evolutionary stage between a manual communication system and a fully developed language faculty

Andreas Rogalewski, Caterina Breitenstein, Agnes Floel and Stefan Knecht
Page 521-522
-
Did australopithecines (or early Homo) sling?

Karen R. Rosenberg, Roberta M. Golinkoff and Jennifer M. Zosh
Page 522-522
-
Cached, carried, or crched

Rosemarie Sokol and Nicholas S. Thompson
Page 523-523
-
Is it always really mothers fault?

Caterina Spiezio and Alberta Lunardelli
Page 523-524
-
Putting infants in their place

David Spurrett and Andrew Dellis
Page 524-525
-
Language from gesture

Sherman Wilcox
Page 525-526
-
The putting the baby down hypothesis: Bipedalism, babbling, and baby slings

Dean Falk
Page 526-534
-
To give and to give not: The behavioral ecology of human food transfers

Michael Gurven
Page 543-559
-
Good hunters keep smaller shares of larger pies

Michael Alvard
Page 560-561
-
Wheres the beef? Its less about cooperation, more about conflict

Laura Betzig
Page 561-562
-
Tolerated scrounging in nonhuman primates

Gillian R. Brown
Page 562-563
-
Key variables in tests of food sharing

Margaret Franzen
Page 563-563
-
A kind man benefits himself but how? Evolutionary models of human food sharing

Thomas Getty
Page 563-564
-
The purpose of exchange helps shape the mode of exchange

Raymond Hames
Page 564-565
-
On sharing a pie: Modeling costly prosocial behavior

Vladimir A. Lefebvre
Page 565-566
-
The history of human food transfers: Tinbergens other question

Jim Moore
Page 566-567
-
The complexity of human sharing

Eric Alden Smith
Page 567-568
-
Insights from Ifaluk: Food sharing among cooperative fishers

Richard Sosis
Page 568-569
-
Cognitive constraints on reciprocity and tolerated scrounging

Jeffrey R. Stevens and Fiery A. Cushman
Page 569-570
-
The details of food-sharing interactions their cost in social prestige

Amotz Zahavi
Page 570-571
-
Nonmarket cooperation in the indigenous food economy of Taimyr, Arctic Russia: Evidence for control and benefit

John Ziker
Page 571-571
-
Tolerated reciprocity, reciprocal scrounging, and unrelated kin: Making sense of multiple models

Michael Gurven
Page 572-579
-
Complexity is a cue to the mind

George Kampis
Page 585-586
-
Chaotic itinerancy is a key to mental diversity

Ichiro Tsuda
Page 586-587
-
Does TEC explain the emergence of distal representations?

Mark Siebel
Page 588-589
-
Spatial inference: No difference between mental images and mental models

Markus Knauff and Christoph Schlieder
Page 589-590
-
From reifying mental pictures to reifying spatial models

Zenon W. Pylyshyn
Page 590-591
-
Autism and schizophrenia: Similar perceptual consequence, different neurobiological etiology?

Armando Bertone, Laurent Mottron and Jocelyn Faubert
Page 592-593
-
A common link between aging, schizophrenia, and autism?

Jocelyn Faubert and Armando Bertone
Page 593-594
-
Unity and diversity in disorders of cognitive coordination

William A. Phillips and Steven M. Silverstein
Page 594-599
-
Lets not forget about sensory consciousness

Anil K. Seth, David B. Edelman and Bernard J. Baars
Page 601-602
|
|