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| Behavioral and Brain Sciences |
| Cambridge University Press |
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Volume 28
Issue 1 |
| Feb 01, 2005 |
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ISSN: 0140525x |
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Behavioral and Brain Sciences
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Volume 28 :
Issue 1
Table of Contents
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The rules versus similarity distinction

Emmanuel M. Pothos
Page 1
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Similarity in logical reasoning and decision-making

Horacio Arl-Costa
Page 14
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Empirical dissociations between rule-based and similarity-based categorization

Gregory Ashby and Michael B. Casale
Page 15
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Rules work on one representation; similarity compares two representations

Todd M. Bailey
Page 16
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Rules, similarity, and the information-processing blind alley

Francisco Calvo Garzn
Page 17
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Epistemological requirements for a cognitive psychology of real people

John Campion
Page 18
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Real rules are conscious

Axel Cleeremans and Arnaud Destrebecqz
Page 19
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Two types of thought: Evidence from aphasia

Jules Davidoff
Page 20
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Commitment distinguishes between rules and similarity: A developmental perspective

Gil Diesendruck
Page 21
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The discontinuity between rules and similarity

Peter F. Dominey
Page 22
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Rules, similarity, and threshold logic

Wlodzislaw Duch
Page 23
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Rules and similarity as conscious contents with distinctive roles in theory

Donelson E. Dulany
Page 24
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Is this what the debate on rules was about?

Ulrike Hahn
Page 25
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Rules and similarity a false dichotomy

James A. Hampton
Page 26
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Illuminating reasoning and categorization

Evan Heit and Brett K. Hayes
Page 27
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Opposites detract: Why rules and similarity should not be viewed as opposite ends of a continuum

Gary Marcus
Page 28
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Digging beneath Rules and Similarity

Arthur B. Markman, Sergey Blok, Kyungil Kim, Levi Larkey, Lisa R. Narvaez, C. Hunt Stilwell and Eric Taylor
Page 29
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Rule versus similarity: Different in processing mode, not in representations

Rolf Reber
Page 31
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Rules and similarity processes in artificial grammar and natural second language learning: What is the default?

Peter Robinson
Page 32
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Avoiding foolish consistency

Steven Sloman
Page 33
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Rule and similarity as prototype concepts

Edward E. Smith
Page 34
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In search of radical similarity

Oscar Vilarroya
Page 35
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Integration of rules and similarity in a framework of information compression by multiple alignment, unification, and search

J. Gerard Wolff
Page 36
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Preferring Rules to Similarity: Coherence, goals, and commitment

Emmanuel M. Pothos
Page 37
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A refined model of sleep and the time course of memory formation

Matthew P. Walker
Page 51
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Redefining memory consolidation

Mercedes Atienza and Jose L. Cantero
Page 64
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Molecular mechanisms of synaptic consolidation during sleep: BDNF function and dendritic protein synthesis

Clive R. Bramham
Page 65
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Sleep is optimizing

Thomas L. Clarke
Page 66
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Where is the classic interference theory for sleep and memory?

Anton Coenen
Page 67
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Motor memory: Consolidationbased enhancement effect revisited

Julien Doyon, Julie Carrier, Alain Simard, Abdallah Hadj Tahar, Amlie Morin, Habib Benali and Leslie G. Ungerleider
Page 68
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Do words go to sleep? Exploring consolidation of spoken forms through direct and indirect measures

Nicolas Dumay and M. Gareth Gaskell
Page 69
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What is consolidated during sleep-dependent motor skill learning?

Luca A. Finelli and Terrence J. Sejnowski
Page 70
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Sleep and memory: Definitions, terminology, models, and predictions?

Jonathan K. Foster and Andrew C. Wilson
Page 71
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Old wine (most of it) in new bottles: Where are dreams and what is the memory?

Ramon Greenberg
Page 72
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Consolidating consolidation? Sleep stages, memory systems, and procedures

John A. Groeger and Derk-Jan Dijk
Page 73
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Resistance to interference and the emergence of delayed gains in newly acquired procedural memories: Synaptic and system consolidation?

Maria Korman, Tamar Flash and Avi Karni
Page 74
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Neurosignals Incorporating CNS electrophysiology into cognitive process

James F. Pagel
Page 75
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Beyond acetylcholine: Next steps for sleep and memory research

Jessica D. Payne, Willoughby B. Britton, Richard R. Bootzin and Lynn Nadel
Page 77
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Filling one gap by creating another: Memory stabilization is not all-or-nothing, either

Philippe Peigneux, Arnaud Destrebecqz, Christophe Hotermans and Axel Cleeremans
Page 78
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Procedural replay: The anatomy and physics of the sleep spindle

Helene Sophrin Porte
Page 79
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REM sleep, dreaming, and procedural memory

Michael Schredl
Page 80
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Memory consolidation during sleep: A form of brain restitution

Bhavin R. Sheth
Page 81
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The incredible, shrinking sleep-learning connection

Jerome M. Siegel
Page 82
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Consolidation enhancement: Which stages of sleep for which tasks?

Carlyle T. Smith
Page 83
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The challenge of identifying cellular mechanisms of memory formation during sleep

Ronald Szymusiak
Page 84
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Sleep and synaptic homeostasis

Giulio Tononi and Chiara Cirelli
Page 85
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Sleep is for rest, waking consciousness is for learning and memory of any kind

Robert P. Vertes
Page 86
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Past, present, and the future: Discussions surrounding a new model of sleep-dependent learning and memory processing

Matthew P. Walker
Page 87
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