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| Behavioral and Brain Sciences |
| Cambridge University Press |
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Volume 27
Issue 6 |
| Dec 01, 2004 |
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ISSN: 0140525x |
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Behavioral and Brain Sciences
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Volume 27 :
Issue 6
Table of Contents
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Religions evolutionary landscape: Counterintuition, commitment, compassion, communion

Scott Atran and Ara Norenzayan
Page 713
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Gods are more flexible than resolutions

George Ainslie
Page 730
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Counterfactuality in counterintuitive religious concepts

Justin L. Barrett
Page 731
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Supernatural agents may have provided adaptive social information

Jesse M. Bering and Todd K. Shackelford
Page 732
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Future research in cognitive science and religion

Kelly Bulkeley
Page 733
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Different religions, different emotions

Adam B. Cohen, Dacher Keltner and Paul Rozin
Page 734
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The embodied bases of supernatural concepts

Brian R. Cornwell, Aron K. Barbey and W. Kyle Simmons
Page 735
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Consciousness and emotions are minimized

Horacio Fabrega, Jr.
Page 736
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Good behavioral science has room for theology: Any room for God?

Robert B. Glassman
Page 737
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The superstitions of everyday life

Robert Hogan
Page 738
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Counterintuition, existential anxiety, and religion as a by-product of the designing mind

Deborah Kelemen
Page 739
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Lions, tigers, and bears, oh God!: How the ancient problem of predator detection may lie beneath the modern link between religion and horror

Timothy Ketelaar
Page 740
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The evolutionary social psychology of religious beliefs

Lee A. Kirkpatrick
Page 741
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We need behavioural ecology to explain the institutional authority of the gods

Chris Knight
Page 742
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The motivational underpinnings of religion

Mark Jordan Landau, Jeff Greenberg and Sheldon Solomon
Page 743
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Toward a new scientific study of religion

Luther H. Martin
Page 744
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Who is mind blind?

Nicholas Nicastro
Page 745
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Religion is neither costly nor beneficial

Ilkka Pyysiinen
Page 746
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Religions evolutionary landscape needs pruning with Ockhams razor

William A. Rottschaefer
Page 747
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Cognition and communication in cultures evolutionary landscape

Mark Schaller
Page 748
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Is religion adaptive?

Richard Sosis and Candace Alcorta
Page 749
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Agency, religion, and magic

Dan Sperber
Page 750
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After the fall: Religious capacities and the error theory of morality

Michael Stingl and John Collier
Page 751
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Locating the causes of religious commitment

Harvey Whitehouse
Page 752
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A proper faith operates with the acknowledgement of risk, and, hence, a true religion with that of sacrifice

Edmond Wright
Page 753
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Why minds create gods: Devotion, deception, death, and arational decision making

Scott Atran and Ara Norenzayan
Page 754
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Hallucinations in schizophrenia, sensory impairment, and brain disease: A unifying model

Ralf-Peter Behrendt and Claire Young
Page 771
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Underconstrained perception or underconstrained theory?

Andr Aleman, Edward H. F. de Haan and Ren S. Kahn
Page 787
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Underconstraint and overconstraint in psychiatry

Elena Bezzubova and Gordon Globus
Page 788
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Thalamocortical dysfunction and complex visual hallucinations in brain disease Are the primary disturbances in the cerebral cortex?

Daniel Collerton and Elaine Perry
Page 789
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Hallucinations and acetylcholine: Signal or noise?

Anita A. Disney and Simon R. Schultz
Page 790
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Good science, bad philosophy

Jeffrey Foss
Page 791
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Perception and psychoses: The role of glutamatergic transmission within the nucleus accumbens septi

Pascual Angel Gargiulo and Adriana Ines Landa de Gargiulo
Page 792
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Absorption, hallucinations, and the continuum hypothesis

Joseph Glicksohn
Page 793
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Paradoxical sleep and schizophrenia have the same neurobiological support

Claude Gottesmann
Page 794
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Hallucinations and antipsychotics: The role of the 5-HT2A receptor

Andrew James Goudie and Jonathan Charles Cole
Page 795
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Hallucinations and nonsensory correlates of neural activity

Kenneth D. Harris
Page 796
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Cortico (thalamo) cortical interactions, gamma resonance, and auditory hallucinations in schizophrenia

Ralph E. Hoffman, Daniel H. Mathalon, Judith M. Ford and John H. Krystal
Page 797
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A possible role for non-gamma oscillations in conscious perception: Implications for hallucinations in schizophrenia

Ian J. Kirk
Page 798
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Probing cortico-cortical interactions that underlie the multiple sensory, cognitive, and everyday functional deficits in schizophrenia

Gregory A. Light
Page 799
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Deregulation of the balance between data and conceptually driven processing: A shift toward the conceptual

Anthony C. Meis
Page 800
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Getting real about experience

Inez Myin-Germeys and Erik Myin
Page 801
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Belief in the primacy of fantasy is misleading and unnecessary

William A. Phillips
Page 802
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Underconstrained thalamic activation underconstrained top-down modulation of cortical input processing underconstrained perceptions

Martin Sarter and Gary G. Berntson
Page 803
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Schizophrenia: A disorder of affective consciousness

Dennis J. L. G. Schutter and Jack van Honk
Page 804
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Distinguishing schizophrenia from the mechanisms underlying hallucinations

Steven M. Silverstein and William A. Phillips
Page 805
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Brainstem-thalamic neurons implicated in hallucinations

Mircea Steriade
Page 806
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Gamma rhythms as liminal operators in sensory processing

Miles A. Whittington
Page 807
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Psychopathology of psychosis: Towards integration from an idealist perspective

Ralf-Peter Behrendt and Claire Young
Page 808
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An evolutionary theory of schizophrenia: Cortical connectivity, metarepresentation, and the social brain

Jonathan Kenneth Burns
Page 831
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Genes can disconnect the social brain in more than one way

Andr Aleman and Ren S. Kahn
Page 855
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Schizophrenia is a disease of general connectivity more than a specifically social brain network

Conrado Bosman, Enzo Brunetti and Francisco Aboitiz
Page 856
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Understanding the symptoms of schizophrenia in evolutionary terms

Martin Brne
Page 857
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Threat, safeness, and schizophrenia: Hidden issues in an evolutionary story

Paul Gilbert
Page 858
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Schizophrenia: A benign trait

Valerie Gray Hardcastle
Page 859
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Auditory hallucinations, network connectivity, and schizophrenia

Ralph E. Hoffman, Maxine Varanko, Thomas H. McGlashan and Michelle Hampson
Page 860
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Evolutionary theories of schizophrenia must ultimately explain the genes that predispose to it

Matthew C. Keller
Page 861
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Cliff-edged fitness functions and the persistence of schizophrenia

Randolph M. Nesse
Page 862
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Schizophrenia: The elusive disease

Jaak Panksepp and Joseph Moskal
Page 863
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The ontogeny and asymmetry of the highest brain skills and the pathogenesis of schizophrenia

Vadim S. Rotenberg
Page 864
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Natural selection and schizophrenia

Roger J. Sullivan and John S. Allen
Page 865
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Are the DTI results positive evidence for George Bernard Shaws view?

Rolf Verleger and Rebekka Lencer
Page 866
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Some ethological perspectives on the fitness consequences and social emotional symptoms of schizophrenia

Glenn E. Weisfeld
Page 867
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Elaborating the social brain hypothesis of schizophrenia

Jonathan Kenneth Burns
Page 868
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Specificity in a global array is only one possibility

Eric L. Amazeen and Guy C. Van Orden
Page 887
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Teleological perception without a biological perceiver?

Thophile Ohlmann, Bernard Amblard and Brice Isableu
Page 888
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On the subject of perceptual illusions, and the ambiguity of perceptual information

Arve Vorland Pedersen and Hermundur Sigmundsson
Page 889
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Retinae dont see

John T. Sanders
Page 890
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Multi-sensory processing facilitates perception but direct perception of global invariants remains unproven

Lawrence Warwick-Evans
Page 891
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Theory testing and the global array

Thomas A. Stoffregen and Benot G. Bardy
Page 892
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GAS doesnt turn the engine when states are sequential or context-dependent

Liane Gabora
Page 901
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Multiply concurrent replication

David L. Hull and Sigrid S. Glenn
Page 902
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Violations of sensorimotor theories of visual experience

Bruce Bridgeman
Page 904
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The world as an inside working memory

Naoyuki Osaka
Page 905
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Virtual action: ORegan No meet Bergson

Stephen E. Robbins
Page 906
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An epistemological account of visual consciousness

Peter D. Sparks and E. E. Krieckhaus
Page 907
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