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| Behavioral and Brain Sciences |
| Cambridge University Press |
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Volume 29
Issue 3 |
| Jun 01, 2006 |
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ISSN: 0140525x |
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Behavioral and Brain Sciences
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Volume 29 :
Issue 3
Table of Contents
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Crueltys rewards: The gratifications of perpetrators and spectators

Victor Nell
Page 211
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Cruelty may be a self-control device against sympathy

George Ainslie
Page 224
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A murky portrait of human cruelty

Albert Bandura
Page 225
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Cruelty as by-product of ritualisation of intraspecific aggression in cultural evolution

Ralf-Peter Behrendt
Page 226
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Make love, not war: Both serve to defuse stress-induced arousal through the dopaminergic pleasure network

Mary F. Dallman
Page 227
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Neurobiological bases of aggression, violence, and cruelty

Mara Ins de Aguirre
Page 228
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Compassion as an antidote to cruelty

Michael Allen Fox
Page 229
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Cruelty: A dispositional or a situational behavior in man?

Mika Haritos-Fatouros
Page 230
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Considering the roles of affect and culture in the enactment and enjoyment of cruelty

Spee Kosloff, Jeff Greenberg and Sheldon Solomon
Page 231
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Signifying nothing? Myth and science of cruelty

Boris Kotchoubey
Page 232
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The cruelty of older infants and toddlers

Sebastian Kraemer
Page 233
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Recent advances and hypotheses regarding the neural networks involved in cruelty and pathological aggression

Harold Mouras
Page 234
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Human cruelty is rooted in the reinforcing effects of intraspecific aggression that subserves dominance motivation

Michael Potegal
Page 236
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Shame, violence, and perpetrators voices

Nancy Nyquist Potter
Page 237
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Animal cruelty: Definitions and sociology

Andrew Nicholas Rowan
Page 238
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Executive function and language deficits associated with aggressive-sadistic personality

Anthony C. Ruocco and Steven M. Platek
Page 239
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Nice idea, but is it science?

Richard Schuster
Page 240
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Epigenetic effects of child abuse and neglect propagate human cruelty

James E. Swain
Page 242
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Predation versus competition and the importance of manipulable causes

Katy Tapper
Page 243
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Torturers, horror films, and the aesthetic legacy of predation

Lionel Tiger
Page 244
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Explaining human cruelty

Nick Zangwill
Page 245
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Cruelty and the psychology of history

Victor Nell
Page 246
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Language and life history: A new perspective on the development and evolution of human language

John L. Locke and Barry Bogin
Page 259
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Invoking narrative transmission in oral societies

Ileana Benga
Page 280
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The role of developmental immaturity and plasticity in evolution

David F. Bjorklund and Jason Grotuss
Page 281
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Reconciling vague and formal models of language evolution

Henry Brighton, Rui Mata and Andreas Wilke
Page 282
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Interaction promotes cognition: The rise of childish minds

Stephen J. Cowley
Page 283
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The evolution of language: Present behavioral evidence for past genetic reprogramming in the human lineage

Robert B. Eckhardt
Page 284
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Road to language: Longer, more believable, more relevant

R. Allen Gardner
Page 285
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Dynamic systems and the evolution of language

Lakshmi J. Gogate
Page 286
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Why dont chimps talk and humans sing like canaries?

Sverker Johansson, Jordan Zlatev and Peter Grdenfors
Page 287
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The evolution of childhood as a by-product?

Peter Kappeler
Page 288
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Apes, humans, and M. C. Escher: Uniqueness and continuity in the evolution of language

Barbara J. King
Page 289
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Words are not costly displays: Shortcomings of a testosterone-fuelled model of language evolution

Chris Knight and Camilla Power
Page 290
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Knowledge of language and phrasal vocabulary acquisition

Koenraad Kuiper
Page 291
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From crying to words: Unique or multilevel selective pressures?

Daniela Lenti Boero and Luciana Bottoni
Page 292
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About juvenility, the features of feminine speech, and a big leap

Pierre Linard
Page 293
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Comparative, continuity, and computational evidence in evolutionary theory: Predictive evidence versus productive evidence

David M. W. Powers
Page 294
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Language and life history: Not a new perspective

Sonia Ragir and Patricia J. Brooks
Page 296
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Life stages, put in words: Morning, four; noon, two; evening, three?

Wolfgang M. Schleidt
Page 297
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Is it language that makes humans intelligent?

Jo Van Herwegen and Annette Karmiloff-Smith
Page 298
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Melody as a primordial legacy from early roots of language

Kathleen Wermke and Werner Mende
Page 300
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Life history and language: Selection in development

John L. Locke and Barry Bogin
Page 301
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Erratum

Page 327
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