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| Behavioral and Brain Sciences |
| Cambridge University Press |
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Volume 23
Issue 1 |
| Feb 01, 2000 |
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ISSN: 0140525x |
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Behavioral and Brain Sciences
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Volume 23 :
Issue 1
Table of Contents
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The neurology of syntax: Language use without Brocas area

Yosef Grodzinsky
Page 1
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Which grammar has been chosen for neurological feasibility?

Zoltn Bnrti
Page 21
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Trace deletion and Friedericis (1995) model of syntactic processing

Dorit Ben Shalom
Page 22
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Why the TDH fails to contribute to a neurology of syntax

Alan Beretta
Page 23
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Sentence comprehension in Brocas aphasia: A critique of the evidence

Rita Sloan Berndt
Page 24
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Brocas demotion does not doom universal grammar

Derek Bickerton
Page 25
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Brocas aphasia, Brocas area, and syntax: A complex relationship

Stefano F. Cappa, Andrea Moro, Daniela Perani and Massimo Piattelli-Palmarini
Page 27
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Brocas area and language evolution

Andrew Carstairs-McCarthy
Page 28
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Grodzinskys latest stand or, just how specific are lesion-specific deficits?

Frederic Dick and Elizabeth Bates
Page 29
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The gratuitous relationship between Brocas aphasia and Brocas area

Nina F. Dronkers
Page 30
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Intact grammars but intermittent access

Susan Edwards and David Lightfoot
Page 31
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Syntax in the brain: Linguistic versus neuroanatomical specificity

Angela D. Friederici and D. Yves von Cramon
Page 32
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Agrammatic comprehension of OVS and OSV structures in Hebrew

Naama Friedmann
Page 33
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Cutting a long story (too) short

Stefan Frisch, Douglas Saddy and Angela D. Friederici
Page 34
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The left frontal convolution plays no special role in syntactic comprehension

Gregory Hickok
Page 35
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The grammar of agrammatism

Dieter Hillert
Page 36
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Comprehension deficits of Brocas aphasics provide no evidence for traces

Paul Kay
Page 37
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Could grammatical encoding and grammatical decoding be subserved by the same processing module?

Gerard Kempen
Page 38
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Agrammatic sentence processing: Severity, complexity, and priming

Herman H. J. Kolk and Robert J. Hartsuiker
Page 39
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The brain does not serve linguistic theory so easily

Willem J. M. Levelt
Page 40
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Agrammatism, syntactic theory, and the lexicon: Brocas area and the development of linguistic ability in the human brain

Claudio Luzzatti and Maria Teresa Guasti
Page 41
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A big housing problem and a trace of neuroimaging: Brocas area is more than a transformation center

Ralph-Axel Mller
Page 42
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The Trace Deletion Hypothesis in relation to partial matching theory

David J. Murray
Page 43
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Agent-assignment, tree-pruning, and Brocas aphasia

Frederick J. Newmeyer
Page 44
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Scrambling, indirect passives, and wanna contraction

Yukio Otsu
Page 45
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Unpruned trees in German Brocas aphasia

Martina Penke
Page 46
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No evidence for traces in sentence comprehension

Martin J. Pickering
Page 47
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On the proper generalization for Brocas aphasia comprehension pattern: Why argument movement may not be at the source of the Brocas deficit

Maria Mercedes Piango
Page 48
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From Brocas aphasia to the language module: A transformation too large?

Fred H. Previc
Page 49
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Aphasia research and theoretical linguistics guiding each other

Jeannette Schaeffer
Page 50
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Sentence comprehension and the left inferior frontal gyrus: Storage, not computation

Laurie A. Stowe
Page 51
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Temporal perception: A key to understanding language

Elzbieta Szelag and Ernst Pppel
Page 52
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The need to consider additional variables when summarizing agrammatism research

M. Cherilyn Young and Judith A. Hutchinson
Page 54
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The Trace Deletion Hypothesis and the Tree-Pruning Hypothesis: Still valid characterizations of Brocas aphasia

Yosef Grodzinsky
Page 55
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Behavioral momentum and the Law of Effect

John A. Nevin and Randolph C. Grace
Page 73
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The stimulus-reinforcer hypothesis of behavioral momentum: Some methodological considerations

Carlos F. Aparicio
Page 90
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Newton and Darwin: Can this marriage be saved?

William M. Baum and Suzanne H. Mitchell
Page 91
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Gaining (on) momentum

Marc N. Branch
Page 92
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To augment yet not contradict

David A. Case
Page 93
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Metaphors, models, and mathematics in the science of behavior

A. Charles Catania
Page 94
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Behavioral momentum: Issues of generality

Steven L. Cohen
Page 95
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The role of context in choice

Edmund Fantino
Page 96
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Experimenter momentum and the effect of laws

Gregory Galbicka and Robert Kessel
Page 97
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Momentum feeds forward

R. Allen Gardner and Matthew H. Scheel
Page 98
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Amassing the masses

Scott Hall
Page 99
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Problems with the concept of force in the momentum metaphor

David Harper
Page 100
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Implications of behavioral momentum for understanding the behavioral pharmacology of abused drugs

Stephen T. Higgins and Stacey C. Sigmon
Page 101
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A passel of metaphors: Some old, some new, some borrowed . . .

Peter R. Killeen
Page 102
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Does conditioned suppression measure the resistance to change of operant behaviour?

Julian C. Leslie
Page 103
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Self-controls momentum outside of the laboratory

A. W. Logue
Page 104
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Clinical applications of behavioral momentum

F. Charles Mace
Page 105
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The partial reinforcement effect and behavioral momentum: Reconcilable?

Charlotte Mandell
Page 106
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Happiest thought: Dynamics and behavior

Jack Marr
Page 107
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Contextual choice and other models of preference

James E. Mazur
Page 108
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Behavioral momentum and multiple stimulus control topographies

William J. McIlvane and William V. Dube
Page 109
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Two cheers for behavioral momentum

Howard Rachlin
Page 110
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Toward a deconstruction of the metaphor of behavioral momentum

Charles P. Shimp
Page 111
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Preference and resistance to change do not always covary

Masaharu Takahashi
Page 112
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Strength, limits, and resistance to change of operant theory

Franois Tonneau
Page 113
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Behavioral momentum and behavioral economic metaphors for excessive consumption

Rudy E. Vuchinich
Page 114
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Resistance to change, contrast, and intrinsic motivation

K. Geoffrey White and Judy Cameron
Page 115
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The uncertain domain of resistance to change

Ben A. Williams and Matthew C. Bell
Page 116
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Behavioral momentum: Empirical, theoretical, and metaphorical issues

John A. Nevin and Randolph C. Grace
Page 117
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Niche construction, biological evolution, and cultural change

Kevin N. Laland, John Odling-Smee and Marcus W. Feldman
Page 131
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Gene-culture coevolution does not replace standard evolutionary theory

Mauro Adenzato
Page 146
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Phenogenotypes break up under countervailing evolutionary pressures

Robert Aunger
Page 147
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Our shared species-typical evolutionary psychology

Jerome H. Barkow
Page 148
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Can niche-construction theory live in harmony with human equipotentiality?

Gwen J. Broude
Page 149
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Evolutionary simulation modelling clarifies interactions between parallel adaptive processes

Seth Bullock and Jason Noble
Page 150
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Evolution, the criterion problem, and complexity

Stephen M. Colarelli
Page 151
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The interwoven conceptual matrix of the cultural replicator

Liane Gabora
Page 152
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Niche construction, social co-construction, and the development of the human mind

Mary Gauvain
Page 153
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Another frame shift: From cultural transmission to cultural co-construction

Barbara J. King
Page 154
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Big brains as shelters for odd genes: How fast does complex behavior evolve?

H.-P. Lipp
Page 155
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Selection: Units, modes, and levels

Richard Pocklington
Page 156
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The meaning of hominid species culture as process and product?

Kate Robson Brown
Page 157
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The compound interest effect: Why cultural evolution is not niche construction

Eric Saidel
Page 158
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Human creativity, cultural evolution, and niche construction

Dean Keith Simonton
Page 159
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An evolutionary interpretation of intelligence, creativity, and wisdom: A link between the evolution of organisms and the evolution of ideas

Robert J. Sternberg
Page 160
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Niche construction and group selection

Nicholas S. Thompson
Page 161
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Adaptation and intracultural variation

John Marshall Townsend
Page 162
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The challenge of understanding complexity

David Sloan Wilson
Page 163
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Niche construction earns its keep

Kevin N. Laland, John Odling-Smee and Marcus W. Feldman
Page 164
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