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| Behavioral and Brain Sciences |
| Cambridge University Press |
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Volume 28
Issue 2 |
| Apr 01, 2005 |
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ISSN: 0140525x |
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Behavioral and Brain Sciences
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Volume 28 :
Issue 2
Table of Contents
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From monkey-like action recognition to human language: An evolutionary framework for neurolinguistics

Michael A. Arbib
Page 105
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Speech and gesture are mediated by independent systems

Anna M. Barrett, Anne L. Foundas and Kenneth M. Heilman
Page 125
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Beyond the mirror neuron the smoke neuron?

Derek Bickerton
Page 126
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The evolutionary link between mirror neurons and imitation: An evolutionary adaptive agents model

Elhanan Borenstein and Eytan Ruppin
Page 127
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Sharpening Occams razor: Is there need for a hand-signing stage prior to vocal communication?

Conrado Bosman, Vladimir Lpez and Francisco Aboitiz
Page 128
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Action planning supplements mirror systems in language evolution

Bruce Bridgeman
Page 129
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Sign languages are problematic for a gestural origins theory of language evolution

Karen Emmorey
Page 130
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Biological evolution of cognition and culture: Off Arbibs mirror-neuron system stage?

Horacio Fabrega, Jr.
Page 131
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Protomusic and protolanguage as alternatives to protosign

W. Tecumseh Fitch
Page 132
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Imitation systems, monkey vocalization, and the human language

Emmanuel Gilissen
Page 133
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Auditory object processing and primate biological evolution

Barry Horwitz, Fatima T. Husain and Frank H. Guenther
Page 134
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Listen to my actions!

Jonas T. Kaplan and Marco Iacoboni
Page 135
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Pragmatics, prosody, and evolution: Language is more than a symbolic system

Boris Kotchoubey
Page 136
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Evolutionary sleight of hand: Then, they saw it; now we dont

Peter F. MacNeilage and Barbara L. Davis
Page 137
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Gesture-first, but no gestures?

David McNeill, Bennett Bertenthal, Jonathan Cole and Shaun Gallagher
Page 138
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Meaning and motor actions: Artificial life and behavioral evidence

Domenico Parisi, Anna M. Borghi, Andrea Di Ferdinando and Giorgio Tsiotas
Page 139
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An avian parallel to primate mirror neurons and language evolution?

Irene M. Pepperberg
Page 141
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Contagious yawning and laughing: Everyday imitation- and mirror-like behavior

Robert R. Provine
Page 142
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Vocal gestures and auditory objects

Josef P. Rauschecker
Page 143
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Continuities in vocal communication argue against a gestural origin of language

Robert M. Seyfarth
Page 144
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Making a case for mirror-neuron system involvement in language development: What about autism and blindness?

Hugo Thoret and Shirley Fecteau
Page 145
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Language is fundamentally a social affair

Justin H. G. Williams
Page 146
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The explanatory advantages of the holistic protolanguage model: The case of linguistic irregularity

Alison Wray
Page 147
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Language evolution: Body of evidence?

Chen Yu and Dana H. Ballard
Page 148
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The mirror system hypothesis stands but the framework is much enriched

Michael A. Arbib
Page 149
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Bridging emotion theory and neurobiology through dynamic systems modeling

Marc D. Lewis
Page 169
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Why not emotions as motivated behaviors?

George Ainslie and John Monterosso
Page 194
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The concept of circular causality should be discarded

Bram Bakker
Page 195
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Psychological-level systems theory: The missing link in bridging emotion theory and neurobiology through dynamic systems modeling

Philip Barnard and Tim Dalgleish
Page 196
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Adding ingredients to the self-organizing dynamic system stew: Motivation, communication, and higher-level emotions and dont forget the genes!

Ross Buck
Page 197
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Emotion theory is about more than affect and cognition: Taking triggers and actions into account

Charles S. Carver
Page 198
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An intermediate level between the psychological and the neurobiological levels of descriptions of appraisal-emotion dynamics

Antonio Chella
Page 199
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Enacting emotional interpretations with feeling

Giovanna Colombetti and Evan Thompson
Page 200
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The contribution of cross-cultural study to dynamic systems modeling of emotions

Greg Downey
Page 201
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Generating predictions from a dynamical systems emotion theory

Ralph D. Ellis
Page 202
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Applications to the social and clinical sciences

Horacio Fabrega, Jr.
Page 203
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Emotion is from preparatory brain chaos; irrational action is from premature closure

Walter J. Freeman
Page 204
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Dynamic appraisals: A paper with promises

Nico H. Frijda
Page 205
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Exploring psychological complexity through dynamic systems theory: A complement to reductionism

Robert M. Galatzer-Levy
Page 206
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START: A bridge between emotion theory and neurobiology through dynamic system modeling

Stephen Grossberg
Page 207
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Brain, emotions, and emotion-cognition relations

Carroll E. Izard, Christopher J. Trentacosta and Kristen A. King
Page 208
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Wheres the example?

David J. Kaup and Thomas L. Clarke
Page 210
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Emotional-cognitive integration, the self, and cortical midline structures

Georg Northoff
Page 211
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Emotional dynamics of the organism and its parts

Jaak Panksepp
Page 212
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Not a bridge but an organismic (general and causal) neuropsychology should make a difference in emotion theory

Juan Pascual-Leone
Page 213
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The role of frontocingulate pathways in the emotion-cognition interface: Emerging clues from depression

Diego A. Pizzagalli
Page 214
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Characteristics of anger: Notes for a systems theory of emotion

Michael Potegal
Page 215
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Amalgams and the power of analytical chemistry: Affective science needs to decompose the appraisal-emotion interaction

David Sander and Klaus R. Scherer
Page 216
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Developmental affective neuroscience describes mechanisms at the core of dynamic systems theory

Allan N. Schore
Page 217
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The importance of inhibition in dynamical systems models of emotion and neurobiology

Julian F. Thayer and Richard D. Lane
Page 218
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Mechanisms of the occasional self

Don M. Tucker
Page 219
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Dynamic brain systems in quest for emotional homeostasis

Jack van Honk and J. L. G. Schutter
Page 220
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A dynamic duo: Emotion and development

Arlene S. Walker-Andrews and Jeannette Haviland-Jones
Page 221
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Dynamics of cognition-emotion interface: Coherence breeds familiarity and liking, and does it fast

Piotr Winkielman and Andrzej Nowak
Page 222
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An emerging dialogue among social scientists and neuroscientists on the causal bases of emotion

Marc D. Lewis
Page 223
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Sociosexuality from Argentina to Zimbabwe: A 48-nation study of sex, culture, and strategies of human mating

David P. Schmitt
Page 247
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A mature evolutionary psychology demands careful conclusions about sex differences

Jens B. Asendorpf and Lars Penke
Page 275
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Sex Differences: Empiricism, hypothesis testing, and other virtues

David P. Barash
Page 276
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Sociosexual strategies in tribes and nations

Stephen Beckerman
Page 277
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Whos zooming who?

Nigel W. Bond
Page 278
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On sociosexual cognitive architecture

Thomas E. Dickins
Page 280
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Universal sex differences across patriarchal cultures evolved psychological dispositions

Alice H. Eagly and Wendy Wood
Page 281
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The second to fourth digit ratio, sociosexuality, and offspring sex ratio

Bernhard Fink, John T. Manning and Nick Neave
Page 283
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Ethnography, cultural context, and assessments of reproductive success matter when discussing human mating strategies

Agustin Fuentes
Page 284
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Sperm competition theory offers additional insight into cultural variation in sexual behavior

Aaron T. Goetz and Todd K. Shackelford
Page 285
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Medical advances reduce risk of behaviours related to high sociosexuality

Valerie J. Grant
Page 286
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The trees are not the forest, and monogamy is certainly not a kind of wood

Shashi Kiran
Page 287
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Sociosexuality and sex ratio: Sex differences and local markets

John Lazarus
Page 288
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Adding the missing link back into mate choice research

Rui Mata, Andreas Wilke and Peter M. Todd
Page 289
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Promiscuity in an evolved pair-bonding system: Mating within and outside the Pleistocene box

Lynn Carol Miller, William C. Pedersen and Anila Putcha-Bhagavatula
Page 290
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Less restricted mating, low contact with kin, and the role of culture

Lesley Newson and Tom Postmes
Page 291
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Universal human traits: The holy grail of evolutionary psychology

Christopher Ryan and Cacilda Jeth
Page 292
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Worldwide, economic development and gender equality correlate with liberal sexual attitudes and behavior: What does this tell us about evolutionary psychology?

Dory A. Schachner, Joanna E. Scheib, Omri Gillath and Phillip R. Shaver
Page 293
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Fitting data to theory: The contribution of a comparative perspective

Steve Stewart-Williams
Page 294
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Sex, sex differences, and the new polygyny

John Marshall Townsend
Page 295
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Shortcomings of the Sociosexual Orientation Inventory: Can psychometrics inform evolutionary psychology?

Martin Voracek
Page 296
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Measuring sociosexuality across people and nations: Revisiting the strengths and weaknesses of cross-cultural sex research

David P. Schmitt
Page 297
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