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CogNet Library: Journals
Behavioral and Brain Sciences
Cambridge University Press
Volume 30 Issue 4
Aug 01, 2007
ISSN: 0140525x
Behavioral and Brain Sciences
Volume 30 : Issue 4
Table of Contents
Précis of Evolution in Four Dimensions
Eva Jablonka and Marion J. Lamb
Page
353
Those dreaded memes: The advantage of memetics over symbolic inheritance
Susan Blackmore
Page
365
Genetics and the control of evolution
C. Loring Brace
Page
366
One-generation Lamarckism: The role of environment in genetic development
Bruce Bridgeman
Page
367
Designed calibration: Naturally selected flexibility, not non-genetic inheritance
Thomas E. Dickins and Benjamin J. A. Dickins
Page
368
Evolutionary string theory
Zen Faulkes and Anita Davelos Baines
Page
369
Only three dimensions and the mother of invention
Jeff Foss
Page
370
What is so informative about information?
Carlos M. Hamame, Diego Cosmelli and Francisco Aboitiz
Page
371
Evolution in the symbolic dimension: The devil is in the details
Susan Lappan and Jae Chun Choe
Page
373
Extended evolutionary theory makes human culture more amenable to evolutionary analysis
Alex Mesoudi
Page
374
Computational cognitive epigenetics
Aaron Sloman and Jackie Chappell
Page
375
Is symbolic inheritance similar to genetic inheritance?
Luc Steels
Page
376
The missing chapter: The interaction between behavioral and symbolic inheritance
Anne S. Warlaumont and Rick Dale
Page
377
Bridging the gap: The developmental aspects of evolution
Eva Jablonka and Marion J. Lamb
Page
378
Animal innovation defined and operationalized
Grant Ramsey, Meredith L. Bastian and Carel van Schaik
Page
393
Novelty transmittal and innovative species
Susan Cachel
Page
407
Behavioral innovation and phylogeography
Pierre Deleporte
Page
408
Knowing psychological disposition might help to find innovation
Gyula K. Gajdon
Page
409
Signs of culture
R. Allen Gardner
Page
410
Can a restrictive definition lead to biases and tautologies?
Luc-Alain Giraldeau, Louis Lefebvre and Julie Morand-Ferron
Page
411
Genetic assimilation of behaviour does not eliminate learning and innovation
Gavin R. Hunt and Russell D. Gray
Page
412
Objectivism should not be a casualty of innovation's operationalization
Rachel L. Kendal, Lewis Dean and Kevin N. Laland
Page
413
Animal innovation and rationality: Distinguishing productivity from efficiency
Elias L. Khalil
Page
414
Vocal innovation
John L. Locke
Page
415
Social learning is central to innovation, in primates and beyond
Corina J. Logan and John W. Pepper
Page
416
Innovation in sexual display
Joah R. Madden
Page
417
Individual invention versus socio-ecological innovation: Unifying the behavioral and evolutionary sciences
Lauren McCall
Page
418
Context-specific neophilia and its consequences for innovations
Claudia Mettke-Hofmann
Page
419
Environmentally invoked innovation and cognition
Simon M. Reader
Page
420
Is all learning innovation?
Luke Rendell, William Hoppitt and Jeremy Kendal
Page
421
Innovation and the grain problem
Anne Russon, Kristin Andrews and Brian Huss
Page
422
Defining and detecting innovation: Are cognitive and developmental mechanisms important?
Brooke L. Sargeant and Janet Mann
Page
423
The animal variations: When mechanisms matter in accounting for function
Hugo Viciana and Nicolas Claidiere
Page
424
On the concept of animal innovation and the challenge of studying innovation in the wild
Grant Ramsey, Meredith L. Bastian and Carel van Schaik
Page
425
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