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| Behavioral and Brain Sciences |
| Cambridge University Press |
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Volume 30
Issue 3 |
| Jun 01, 2007 |
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ISSN: 0140525x |
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Behavioral and Brain Sciences
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Volume 30 :
Issue 3
Table of Contents
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Base-rate respect: From ecological rationality to dual processes

Aron K. Barbey and Steven A. Sloman
Page 241
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A statistical taxonomy and another chance for natural frequencies

Adrien Barton, Shabnam Mousavi and Jeffrey R. Stevens
Page 255
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From base-rate to cumulative respect

C. Philip Beaman and Rachel McCloy
Page 256
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Kissing cousins but not identical twins: The denominator neglect and base-rate respect models

C. J. Brainerd
Page 257
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Omissions, conflations, and false dichotomies: Conceptual and empirical problems with the Barbey Sloman account

Gary L. Brase
Page 258
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Why frequencies are natural

Brian Butterworth
Page 259
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Nested sets and base-rate neglect: Two types of reasoning?

Wim De Neys
Page 260
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Dual-processing explains base-rate neglect, but which dual-process theory and how?

Jonathan St. B. T. Evans and Shira Elqayam
Page 261
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Enhancing sensitivity to base-rates: Natural frequencies are not enough

Edmund Fantino and Stephanie Stolarz-Fantino
Page 262
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Ecologically structured information: The power of pictures and other effective data presentations

Wolfgang Gaissmaier, Nils Straubinger and David C. Funder
Page 263
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The role of representation in Bayesian reasoning: Correcting common misconceptions

Gerd Gigerenzer and Ulrich Hoffrage
Page 264
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How to elicit sound probabilistic reasoning: Beyond word problems

Vittorio Girotto and Michel Gonzalez
Page 268
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One wrong does not justify another: Accepting dual processes by fallacy of false alternatives

Gideon Keren, Iris van Rooij and Yaacov Schul
Page 269
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Implications of natural sampling in base-rate tasks

Gernot D. Kleiter
Page 270
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Dual concerns with the dualist approach

David A. Lagnado and David R. Shanks
Page 271
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Ordinary people do not ignore base rates

Donald Laming
Page 272
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The underinformative formulation of conditional probability

Laura Macchi and Maria Bagassi
Page 274
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Nested sets theory, full stop: Explaining performance on Bayesian inference tasks without dual-systems assumptions1

David R. Mandel
Page 275
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Naturally nested, but why dual process?

Ben Newell and Brett Hayes
Page 276
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The versatility and generality of nested set operations

Richard Patterson
Page 277
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Converging evidence supports fuzzy-trace theory's nested sets hypothesis, but not the frequency hypothesis

Valerie F. Reyna and Britain Mills
Page 278
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Varieties of dual-process theory for probabilistic reasoning

Richard Samuels
Page 280
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The effect of base rate, careful analysis, and the distinction between decisions from experience and from description

Amos Schurr and Ido Erev
Page 281
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Implications of real-world distributions and the conversation game for studies of human probability judgments

John C. Thomas
Page 282
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Why the empirical literature fails to support or disconfirm modular or dual-process models

David Trafimow
Page 283
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The motivated use and neglect of base rates

Eric Luis Uhlmann, Victoria L. Brescoll and David Pizarro
Page 284
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Base-rate respect meets affect neglect

Paul Whitney, John M. Hinson and Allison L. Matthews
Page 285
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Adaptive redundancy, denominator neglect, and the base-rate fallacy

Christopher R. Wolfe
Page 286
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Base-rate respect: From statistical formats to cognitive structures

Aron K. Barbey and Steven A. Sloman
Page 287
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The evolution of foresight: What is mental time travel, and is it unique to humans?

Thomas Suddendorf and Michael C. Corballis
Page 299
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Foresight has to pay off in the present moment1

George Ainslie
Page 313
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How developmental science contributes to theories of future thinking

Cristina M. Atance and Andrew N. Meltzoff
Page 314
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The continuum of looking forward, and paradoxical requirements from memory

Moshe Bar
Page 315
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Is mental time travel a frame-of-reference issue?

Doris Bischof-Köhler and Norbert Bischof
Page 316
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The costs of mental time travel

Martin Brüne and Ute Brüne-Cohrs
Page 317
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Prospection and the brain

Randy L. Buckner
Page 318
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A unique role for the hippocampus in recollecting the past and remembering the future

Valerie A. Carr and Indre V. Viskontas
Page 319
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Emotional aspects of mental time travel

Arnaud D'Argembeau and Martial Van der Linden
Page 320
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Storing events to retell them

Jean-Louis Dessalles
Page 321
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Mental time travel in the rat: Dissociation of recall and familiarity

Madeline J. Eacott and Alexander Easton
Page 322
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The meaning of time in episodic memory and mental time travel

William J. Friedman
Page 323
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Past and future, human and nonhuman, semantic/procedural and episodic

James R. Hurford, Molly Flaherty and Giorgis Argyropoulos
Page 324
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Memory, imagination, and the asymmetry between past and future

Bjorn Merker
Page 325
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Has mental time travel really affected human culture?

Alex Mesoudi
Page 326
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Developing past and future selves for time travel narratives

Katherine Nelson
Page 327
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Prospection or projection: Neurobiological basis of stimulus-independent mental traveling

Jiro Okuda
Page 328
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What are the evolutionary causes of mental time travel?

Mathias Osvath and Peter Gärdenfors
Page 329
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Empirical evaluation of mental time travel

Caroline Raby, Dean Alexis, Anthony Dickinson and Nicola Clayton
Page 330
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On the constructive episodic simulation of past and future events

Daniel L. Schacter and Donna Rose Addis
Page 331
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Studying mental states is not a research program for comparative cognition

Sara J. Shettleworth
Page 332
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First test, then judge future-oriented behaviour in animals

Elisabeth H. M. Sterck and Valérie Dufour
Page 333
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The medium and the message of mental time travel

Endel Tulving and Alice Kim
Page 334
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Mental time travel across the disciplines: The future looks bright

Thomas Suddendorf and Michael C. Corballis
Page 335
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