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| Behavioral and Brain Sciences |
| Cambridge University Press |
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Volume 23
Issue 4 |
| Aug 01, 2000 |
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ISSN: 0140525x |
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Behavioral and Brain Sciences
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Volume 23 :
Issue 4
Table of Contents
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Connectionist modelling in psychology: A localist manifesto

Mike Page
Page 443
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Localist representation can improve efficiency for detection and counting

Horace Barlow and Anthony Gardner-Medwin
Page 467
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Neurons amongst the symbols?

C. Philip Beaman
Page 468
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Some counter-examples to Pages notion of localist

Istvan S. N. Berkeley
Page 470
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Further arguments in support of localist coding in connectionist networks

Jeffrey S. Bowers
Page 471
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The many ways to distribute distributed representations

A. Mike Burton
Page 472
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Combining distributed and localist computations in real-time neural networks

Gail A. Carpenter
Page 473
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Localist representations and theoretical clarity

Norman D. Cook
Page 474
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Efficiency, information theory, and neural representations

Joseph T. Devlin, Matt H. Davis, Stuart A. McLelland and Richard P. Russell
Page 475
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The case against distributed representations: Lack of evidence

Simon Farrell and Stephan Lewandowsky
Page 476
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Why localist connectionist models are inadequate for categorization

Robert M. French and Elizabeth Thomas
Page 477
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Some cautionary remarks on the localist model concept

Richard M. Golden
Page 478
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The Law of Practice and localist neural network models

Andrew Heathcote and Scott Brown
Page 479
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Localism as a first step toward symbolic representation

John E. Hummel
Page 480
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Integrating exemplars in category learning: Better late than never, but better early than late

J. Eric Ivancich, David A. Schwartz and Stephen Kaplan
Page 481
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Instance-based manifesto?

Mrk Jelasity
Page 482
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The elementary units of meaning

Paul J. M. Jorion
Page 483
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Localist network modelling in psychology: Ho-hum or hm-m-m?

Craig Leth-Steensen
Page 484
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Localist representations are a desirable emergent property of neurologically plausible neural networks

Colin Martindale
Page 485
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Localist models are already here

Stellan Ohlsson
Page 486
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A competitive manifesto

R. Hans Phaf and Gezinus Wolters
Page 487
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Dynamic thresholds for controlling encoding and retrieval operations in localist (or distributed) neural networks: The need for biologically plausible implementations

Alan D. Pickering
Page 488
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Stipulating versus discovering representations

David C. Plaut and James L. McClelland
Page 489
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What is the operating point? A discourse on perceptual organisation

Simon R. Schultz
Page 491
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An extended local connectionist manifesto: Embracing relational and procedural knowledge

Lokendra Shastri
Page 492
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Prototypes and portability in artificial neural network models

Thomas R. Shultz
Page 493
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Hidden Markov model interpretations of neural networks

Ingmar Visser
Page 494
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A population code with added grandmothers?

Malcolm P. Young, Stefano Panzeri and Robert Robertson
Page 495
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Sticking to the manifesto

Mike Page
Page 496
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Prcis of Neural organization: Structure, function, and dynamics

Michael A. Arbib and Pter rdi
Page 513
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The organization of Organization: Neuronal scaffold or cognitive straitjacket?

A. J. Amos and C. D. L. Wynne
Page 533
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Encyclopedia of computational neuroscience: The end of the second millennium

Roman Borisyuk
Page 534
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Neuroanatomy and function in two visual systems

Bruce Bridgeman
Page 535
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Cognitive incrementalism: The big issue

Andy Clark
Page 536
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A moveable feast

Peter F. Dominey
Page 537
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Brahe, looking for Kepler

Shimon Edelman
Page 538
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Analyzing the brain

Peter Gouras
Page 540
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Chaotic dynamics and psychophysical parallelism

Robert A. M. Gregson
Page 541
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Schema theory: Very promising

Alexander Grunewald
Page 542
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Studies of synaptic elimination identify an intersection of neurocomputational and neurodevelopmental perspectives

Ralph E. Hoffman
Page 543
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Lifting the screen on Neural organization: Is computational functional modeling necessary?

Damian Keil and Keith Davids
Page 544
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Multiple personalities and views of neural organization

Rolf Ktter
Page 545
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Meanings of function in neuroscience, cognition, and behaviour analysis

Julian C. Leslie
Page 546
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Is schema theory an appropriate framework for modeling the organization of the brain?

Pietro G. Morasso
Page 547
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Synthetic approaches to cognitive neuroscience

Olaf Sporns
Page 548
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Self-organisation or reflex theory?

George Szkely
Page 549
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Difficulties with synaptic theory of learning and memory and possible remedies

Mikhail N. Zhadin
Page 550
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Organizing the brains diversities

Michael A. Arbib and Peter rdi
Page 551
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The evolution of human mating: Trade-offs and strategic pluralism

Steven W. Gangestad and Jeffry A. Simpson
Page 573
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Variation in optimal human mating strategies: Effects of individual differences in competence and self-regulatory mechanisms

Thomas R. Alley
Page 587
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Strategic pluralism: Men and women start from a different point

John Archer and Mani Mehdikhani
Page 588
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Accounting for female strategic variation

J. Michael Bailey
Page 589
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Mating and marriage, husbands and lovers

Stephen Beckerman
Page 590
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Fixed versus flexible strategists: Individual differences in facultative responsiveness?

Jay Belsky
Page 591
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Individual differences in evolutionary perspective: The games people play

Diane S. Berry and Stan A. Kuczaj
Page 592
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A comprehensive theory of human mating must explain between-sex and within-sex differences in mating strategies

April L. Bleske and David M. Buss
Page 593
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The trade-off between frequency of intercourse and sexual partner accumulation may reflect evolutionary adaptations

Stuart Brody and Caterina Breitenstein
Page 594
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Eating their cake and having it too: Or, how women maximize reproductive success by simultaneous mating and dating

Gwen J. Broude
Page 595
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Putting people before parasites and places

Anne Campbell
Page 596
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Current versus future, not genes versus parenting

James S. Chisholm and David A. Coall
Page 597
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More women (and men) that never evolved

R. Elisabeth Cornwell, Craig T. Palmer and Hasker P. Davis
Page 598
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Adaptive flexibility, testosterone, and mating fitness: Are low FA individuals the pinnacle of evolution?

Michael R. Cunningham
Page 599
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Mating systems and fluctuating asymmetry: Firm foundations?

Innes C. Cuthill and Alasdair I. Houston
Page 600
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Do Don Juans have better genes than family men?

Alice H. Eagly
Page 601
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Human mating models can benefit from comparative primatology and careful methodology

Agustin Fuentes
Page 602
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Sexual strategic pluralism through a Brunswikian lens

Aurelio Jos Figueredo and W. Jake Jacobs
Page 603
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Sweet savage love: FA, BO, and SES in the EEA

Edward H. Hagen and Nicole Hess
Page 604
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Conditional mating strategies are contingent on return from investment

Elizabeth M. Hill
Page 605
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Are rigorous evolutionary histories of human mating possible?

Harmon R. Holcomb
Page 606
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Dynamical systems and mating decision rules

Douglas T. Kenrick, Norman Li and Jonathan E. Butner
Page 607
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Good genes, mating effort, and delinquency

Martin L. Lalumire and Vernon L. Quinsey
Page 608
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Variation in mating dispositions

Kevin MacDonald
Page 609
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Low fluctuating asymmetry (FA) and short-term benefits in fertility?

John T. Manning and Alex R. Gage
Page 610
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Good genes and parental care in human evolution

Frank Marlowe
Page 611
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I doubt evolutionary explanations

Allan Mazur
Page 612
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Mating strategies as game theory: Changing rules?

Linda Mealey
Page 613
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For the short-term: Are women just looking for a few pair of genes?

Lynn Carol Miller, William C. Pedersen, Allison R. Johnson and Anila D. Putcha
Page 614
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Evolution of mating strategies: Evidence from the fossil and archaeological records

Steven Mithen
Page 615
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Sweet FA: The trouble with fluctuating asymmetry

Robert Montgomerie
Page 616
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Is fluctuating asymmetry a signal or a marker of genetic fitness?

Ulrich Mueller
Page 617
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The limits imposed by culture: Are symmetry preferences evidence of a recent reproductive strategy or a common primate inheritance?

Lesley Newson and Stephen Lea
Page 618
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Idealized human mating strategies versus social complexity

Timothy Perper and Martha Cornog
Page 619
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Functional significance of human female orgasm still hypothetical

Nicholas Pound and Martin Daly
Page 620
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Analyses of mating differences within-sex and between-sex are complementary, not competing

Todd K. Shackelford, Gregory J. LeBlanc, Richard L. Michalski and Viviana A. Weekes
Page 621
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Whats love got to do with it? Self-awareness and human mating strategies

Ian Vine
Page 622
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The importance of reporting the distributional criteria of FA

Sally Walters
Page 623
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Trade-offs, the allocation of reproductive effort, and the evolutionary psychology of human mating

Steven W. Gangestad and Jeffry A. Simpson
Page 624
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