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| Behavioral and Brain Sciences |
| Cambridge University Press |
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Volume 28
Issue 6 |
| Dec 01, 2005 |
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ISSN: 0140525x |
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Behavioral and Brain Sciences
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Volume 28 :
Issue 6
Table of Contents
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Why people see things that are not there: A novel Perception and Attention Deficit model for recurrent complex visual hallucinations

Daniel Collerton, Elaine Perry and Ian McKeith
Page 737
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Common or distinct deficits for auditory and visual hallucinations?

Johanna C. Badcock and Murray T. Maybery
Page 757
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Attentional deficit versus impaired reality testing: What is the role of executive dysfunction in complex visual hallucinations?

Ralf-Peter Behrendt
Page 758
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Catatonia is the Rosetta Stone of psychosis

Brendan T. Carroll and Tressa D. Carroll
Page 759
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Neural correlates of visual hallucinatory phenomena: The role of attention

Miguel Castelo-Branco
Page 760
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A signal-detection-theory representation of normal and hallucinatory perception

Igor Dolgov and Michael K. McBeath
Page 761
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Perception is far from perfection: The role of the brain and mind in constructing realities

Itiel E. Dror
Page 763
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Hallucinations and perceptual inference

Karl J. Friston
Page 764
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Waking hallucinations could correspond to a mild form of dreaming sleep stage hallucinatory activity

Claude Gottesmann
Page 766
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The emergence of proto-objects in complex visual hallucinations

Glenda Halliday
Page 767
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Two kinds of memory images: Experimental models for hallucinations?

David Ingle
Page 768
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Mental images: Always present, never there

Fred W. Mast
Page 769
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Now you see it, now you dont: More data at the cognitive level needed before the PAD model can be accepted

Jason Morrison and Anthony S. David
Page 770
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Complex hallucinations in waking suggest mechanisms of dream construction

Edward F. Pace-Schott
Page 771
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Hallucinating objects versus hallucinating subjects

Alexei V. Samsonovich
Page 772
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The role of acetylcholine in hallucinatory perception

John Raymond Smythies
Page 773
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Visual hallucinations, attention, and neural circuitry: Perspectives from schizophrenia research

Kevin M. Spencer and Robert W. McCarley
Page 774
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Believing is seeing in schizophrenia: The role of top-down processing

Duje Tadin, Peiyan Wong, Michael W. Mebane, Michael J. Berkowitz, Hollister Trott and Sohee Park
Page 775
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Still PADing along: Perception and attention remain key factors in understanding complex visual hallucinations

Daniel Collerton, Elaine Perry and Ian McKeith
Page 776
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Economic man in cross-cultural perspective: Behavioral experiments in 15 small-scale societies

Joseph Henrich, Robert Boyd, Samuel Bowles, Colin Camerer, Ernst Fehr, Herbert Gintis, Richard McElreath, Michael Alvard, Abigail Barr, Jean Ensminger, Natalie Smith Henrich, Kim Hill, Francisco Gil-White, Michael Gurven, Frank W. Marlowe, John Q. Patton and David Tracer
Page 795
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You cant give permission to be a bastard: Empathy and self-signaling as uncontrollable independent variables in bargaining games

George Ainslie
Page 815
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Economic man or straw man?

Ken Binmore
Page 817
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A cross-species perspective on the selfishness axiom

Sarah F. Brosnan and Frans B. M. de Waal
Page 818
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Psychology and groups at the junction of genes and culture

Linnda R. Caporael
Page 819
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Radical contingency in sharing behavior and its consequences

Todd Davies
Page 821
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Measuring fairness across cultural contexts

Edmund Fantino, Stephanie Stolarz-Fantino and Arthur Kennelly
Page 822
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Is the Ultimatum Game a three-body affair?

Gerd Gigerenzer and Thalia Gigerenzer
Page 823
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What does the Ultimatum Game mean in the real world?

Randolph C. Grace and Simon Kemp
Page 824
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The ecological rationality of strategic cognition

Christophe Heintz
Page 825
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Market integration, cognitive awareness, and the expansion of moral empathy

William Jankowiak
Page 826
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How do cultural variations emerge from universal mechanisms?

Douglas T. Kenrick and Jill M. Sundie
Page 827
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Lets add some psychology (and maybe even some evolution) to the mix

Daniel Brian Krupp, Pat Barclay, Martin Daly, Toko Kiyonari, Greg Dingle and Margo Wilson
Page 828
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Born selfish? Rationality, altruism, and the initial state

Margery Lucas and Laura Wagner
Page 829
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Moral realism and cross-cultural normative diversity

Edouard Machery, Daniel Kelly and Stephen P. Stich
Page 830
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Culture and individual differences

Arthur B. Markman, Serge Blok, John Dennis, Micah Goldwater, Kyungil Kim, Jeff Laux, Lisa Narvaez and Eric Taylor
Page 831
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Making it real: Interpreting economic experiments

Eric Alden Smith
Page 832
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Sociality and self interest

Vernon L. Smith
Page 833
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Methods do matter: Variation in experimental methodologies and results

Richard Sosis
Page 834
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Economic models are not evolutionary models

Roger J. Sullivan and Henry F. Lyle, III
Page 836
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Economic man: Self-interest and rational choice

Daniel John Zizzo
Page 837
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Models of decision-making and the coevolution of social preferences

Joseph Henrich, Robert Boyd, Samuel Bowles, Colin Camerer, Ernst Fehr, Herbert Gintis, Richard McElreath, Michael Alvard, Abigail Barr, Jean Ensminger, Natalie Smith Henrich, Kim Hill, Francisco Gil-White, Michael Gurven, Frank W. Marlowe, John Q. Patton and David Tracer
Page 838
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Refinements and confinements in a two-stage model of memory consolidation

Ullrich Wagner, Steffen Gais and Jan Born
Page 857
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