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| Behavioral and Brain Sciences |
| Cambridge University Press |
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Volume 30
Issue 1 |
| Feb 01, 2007 |
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ISSN: 0140525x |
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Behavioral and Brain Sciences
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Volume 30 :
Issue 1
Table of Contents
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A framework for the unification of the behavioral sciences

Herbert Gintis
Page 1
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Game theory can build higher mental processes from lower ones1

George Ainslie
Page 16
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The behavioral sciences are historical sciences of emergent complexity

Larry Arnhart
Page 18
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Towards uniting the behavioral sciences with a gene-centered approach to altruism

R. Michael Brown and Stephanie L. Brown
Page 19
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Evolutionary theory and the social sciences

Robert L. Burgess and Peter C. M. Molenaar
Page 20
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Against the unification of the behavioral sciences

Steve Clarke
Page 21
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Love is not enough: Other-regarding preferences cannot explain payoff dominance in game theory

Andrew M. Colman
Page 22
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The place of ethics in a unified behavioral science

Peter Danielson
Page 23
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Game theory for reformation of behavioral science based on a mistake

Jeffrey Foss
Page 24
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In evolutionary games, enlightened self-interests are still ultimately self-interests

Thomas Getty
Page 25
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Diversity, reciprocity, and degrees of unity in wholes, parts, and their scientific representations: System levels

Robert B. Glassman
Page 26
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Do the cognitive and behavioral sciences need each other?

David W. Jr. Gow
Page 27
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Rationality versus program-based behavior

Geoffrey M. Hodgson
Page 29
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Implications for law of a unified behavioral science

Owen D. Jones
Page 30
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Disciplinary stereotypes and reinventing the wheel on culture

David P. Kennedy
Page 31
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The flight from reasoning in psychology

Joachim I. Krueger
Page 32
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The limitations of unification

Arthur B. Markman
Page 33
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Probabilistic equilibria for evolutionarily stable strategies

Roger A. McCain
Page 34
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Extending the behavioral sciences framework: Clarification of methods, predictions, and concepts

Alex Mesoudi and Kevin N. Laland
Page 36
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Selection of human prosocial behavior through partner choice by powerful individuals and institutions

Ronald No
Page 37
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Considering cooperation: Empiricism as a foundation for unifying the behavioral sciences

John W. Pepper
Page 38
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The integrative framework for the behavioural sciences has already been discovered, and it is the adaptationist approach

Michael E. Price, William M. Brown and Oliver S. Curry
Page 39
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Information processing as one key for a unification?

Michael Schulte-Mecklenbeck
Page 40
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More obstacles on the road to unification

Eric Alden Smith
Page 41
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Evolutionary psychology, ecological rationality, and the unification of the behavioral sciences

John Tooby and Leda Cosmides
Page 42
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Emotions, not just decision-making processes, are critical to an evolutionary model of human behavior

Glenn E. Weisfeld and Peter LaFreniere
Page 43
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The indeterminacy of the beliefs, preferences, and constraints framework

Daniel John Zizzo
Page 44
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Unifying the behavioral sciences II

Herbert Gintis
Page 45
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Consciousness without a cerebral cortex: A challenge for neuroscience and medicine

Bjorn Merker
Page 63
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The mesencephalon as a source of preattentive consciousness

Francisco Aboitiz, Javier Lpez-Caldern and Vladimir Lpez
Page 81
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Consciousness, cortical function, and pain perception in nonverbal humans

K. J. S. Anand
Page 82
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Theoretical sequelae of a chronic neglect and unawareness of prefrontotectal pathways in the human brain

Francisco Barcel and Robert T. Knight
Page 83
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The hypthalamo-tectoperiaqueductal system: Unconscious underpinnings of conscious behaviour

Ralf-Peter Behrendt
Page 85
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Subcortical consciousness: Implications for fetal anesthesia and analgesia

Roland R. Brusseau and George A. Mashour
Page 86
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Consciousness without a cortex, but what kind of consciousness is this?

Anton M. L. Coenen
Page 87
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Do multiple corticalsubcortical interactions support different aspects of consciousness?

Daniel Collerton and Elaine Perry
Page 88
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Pain, cortex, and consciousness

Marshall Devor
Page 89
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Corticothalamic necessity, qualia, and consciousness

Sam M. Doesburg and Lawrence M. Ward
Page 90
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Consciousness without corticocentrism: Beating an evolutionary path

David B. Edelman
Page 91
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Roles of allocortex and centrencephalon in intentionality and consciousness

Walter J. Freeman
Page 92
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A brain for all seasons

R. Allen Gardner
Page 93
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Cognitive achievements with a miniature brain: The lesson of jumping spiders

Emmanuel Gilissen
Page 94
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I Promethean, bound deeply and fluidly among the brains associative robotic networks

Robert B. Glassman
Page 95
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Levels of emotion and levels of consciousness

Carroll Izard
Page 96
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Target selection, attention, and the superior colliculus

Richard J. Krauzlis
Page 98
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Consciousness is more than wakefulness

Alain Morin
Page 99
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Subcortical regions and the self

Georg Northoff
Page 100
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Emotional feelings originate below the neocortex: Toward a neurobiology of the soul

Jaak Panksepp
Page 101
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The ontology of creature consciousness: A challenge for philosophy

Gualtiero Piccinini
Page 103
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Who dominates who in the dark basements of the brain?

Tony J. Prescott and Mark D. Humphries
Page 104
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Should the superficial superior colliculus be part of Merkers mesodiencephalic system?

John Schlag
Page 105
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The functional utility of consciousness depends on content as well as on state

Anil K. Seth
Page 106
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Raw feeling: A model for affective consciousness

Jack van Honk, Barak E. Morgan and Dennis J. L. G. Schutter
Page 107
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Affirmative-action for the brainstem in the neuroscience of consciousness: The zeitgeist of the brainstem as a dumb arousal system

Douglas F. Watt
Page 108
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Grounding consciousness: The mesodiencephalon as thalamocortical base

Bjorn Merker
Page 110
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