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| Behavioral and Brain Sciences |
| Cambridge University Press |
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Volume 26
Issue 6 |
| Dec 01, 2003 |
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ISSN: 0140525x |
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Behavioral and Brain Sciences
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Volume 26 :
Issue 6
Table of Contents
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Prcis of Foundations of Language: Brain, Meaning, Grammar, Evolution,

Ray Jackendoff
Page 651
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Semantic paralysis

Fred Adams
Page 666
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On the role of frame-based knowledge in lexical representation

Jzsef Andor
Page 667
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brain, Meaning, Grammar, evolution

Michael A. Arbib
Page 668
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Language evolution without evolution

Derek Bickerton
Page 669
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Why behavior should matter to linguists

A. Charles Catania
Page 670
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Grammar box in the brain

Valria Cspe
Page 672
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Beyond beanbag semantics

Daniel C. Dennett
Page 673
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A conceptuocentric shift in the characterization of language

Peter Ford Dominey
Page 674
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Generative grammar with a human face?

Shimon Edelman
Page 675
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Complexity underestimated?

Pter rdi
Page 676
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Imaginary mistakes versus real problems in generative grammar

Robert Freidin
Page 677
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Where is the lexicon?

Judit Gervain
Page 678
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Language shares neural prerequisites with non-verbal capacities

Georg Goldenberg
Page 679
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Jackendoffs conceptualism

James Higginbotham
Page 680
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Four challenges for cognitive neuroscience and the cortico-hippocampal division of memory

Harry Howard
Page 681
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Psychologism and conceptual semantics

Luke Jerzykiewicz and Sam Scott
Page 682
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Delegation, subdivision, and modularity: How rich is Conceptual Structure?

Damin Justo, Julien Dutant, Benot Hardy-Valle, David Nicolas and Benjamin Q. Sylvand
Page 683
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Neuropsychological evidence for the distinction between grammatically relevant and irrelevant components of meaning

David Kemmerer
Page 684
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A mixed treatment of categoricity and regularity: Solutions that dont do justice to a well-exposed complexity

Ren Joseph Lavie
Page 685
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Parallel architecture as a variety of stratificationalism

David G. Lockwood
Page 686
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Cartesian and empirical linguistics: The growing gulf

Eoghan MacAogin
Page 687
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How Jackendoff helps us think

Carlos Molina
Page 688
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Grammar and brain

Helmut Schnelle
Page 689
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Rescuing generative linguistics: Too little, too late?

Michael J. Spivey and Monica Gonzalez-Marquez
Page 690
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From Frege to dynamic theories of meaning

Alice G. B. ter Meulen
Page 691
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The architecture is not exactly parallel: Some modules are more equal than others

Boris B. Velichkovsky, Andrej A. Kibrik and Boris M. Velichkovsky
Page 692
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Linear order and its place in grammar

Richard Wiese
Page 693
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How did we get from there to here in the evolution of language?

Willem Zuidema and Bart de Boer
Page 694
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Toward better mutual understanding

Ray Jackendoff
Page 695
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Working memory retention systems: A state of activated long-term memory

Daniel S. Ruchkin, Jordan Grafman, Katherine Cameron and Rita S. Berndt
Page 709
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Attention-based maintenance of speech forms in memory: The case of verbal transformations

Christian Abry, Marc Sato, Jean-Luc Schwartz, Hlne Loevenbruck and Marie-Agns Cathiard
Page 728
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New data: Old pitfalls

Alan Baddeley
Page 729
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Tidying up sensory stores with supraordinate representations

Francisco Barcel, Jos A. Periez and Antoni Gomila
Page 730
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Varieties of procedural accounts of working memory retention systems

Nelson Cowan
Page 731
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Some mechanisms of working memory may not be evident in the human EEG

Emrah Dzel
Page 732
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Prefrontal cortex and the generation of oscillatory visual persistence

Mark A. Elliott, Markus Conci and Hermann J. Mller
Page 733
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Thoughts from the long-term memory chair

Jonathan K. Foster
Page 734
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Missing the syntactic piece

Angela D. Friederici and Ina Bornkessel
Page 735
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From working memory to long-term memory and back: Linked but distinct

Stephen Grossberg
Page 737
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More memory?

Irene Grote
Page 738
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Another artificial division and the data dont support it

Martin Heil, Frank Rsler and Bettina Rolke
Page 739
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Temporal lobe speech perception systems are part of the verbal working memory circuit: Evidence from two recent fMRI studies

Gregory Hickok and Bradley Buchsbaum
Page 740
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What is the source of activation for working memory?

John Jonides and Edward Awh
Page 741
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Incorporating semantics and individual differences in models of working memory

Janice M. Keenan, Jukka Hyn and Johanna K. Kaakinen
Page 742
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Activation of long-term memory by alpha oscillations in a working-memory task?

Wolfgang Klimesch and Brbel Schack
Page 743
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Long-term memories, features, and novelty

James K. Kroger
Page 744
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Working memory as a mental workspace: Why activated long-term memory is not enough

Robert H. Logie and Sergio Della Sala
Page 745
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Does sustained ERP activity in posterior lexico-semantic processing areas during short-term memory tasks only reflect activated long-term memory?

Steve Majerus, Martial Van der Linden, Fabienne Collette and Eric Salmon
Page 746
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Cognitive neuropsychological evidence for common processes underlying generation and storage of language representations

Nadine Martin
Page 747
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Retention of order and the binding of verbal and spatial information in short-term memory: Constraints for proceduralist accounts

Murray T. Maybery, Fabrice B. R. Parmentier and Peter J. Clissa
Page 748
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Neglecting the posterior parietal cortex: The role of higher-order perceptual memories for working-memory retention

Axel Mecklinger and Bertram Opitz
Page 749
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Developmental evidence for working memory as activated long-term memory

Sergio Morra
Page 750
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How does the attentional pointer work in prefrontal cortex?

Naoyuki Osaka
Page 751
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The short-term dynamics within a network of connections is creative

William A. Phillips
Page 752
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Models versus descriptions: Real differences and language differences

Jeroen G. W. Raaijmakers and Richard M. Shiffrin
Page 753
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Working memory as a state of activated long-term memory: A plausible theory, but other data provide more compelling evidence

Frank Rsler and Martin Heil
Page 754
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The contribution of long-term memory and the role of frontal-lobe systems in on-line processing

Jennifer D. Ryan and Neal J. Cohen
Page 756
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The short-term/long-term memory distinction: Back to the past?

Giuseppe Vallar
Page 757
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Double dissociation in the effects of brain damage on working memory

Rolf Verleger
Page 758
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Neuronal synchronization accompanying memory processing

Sabine Weiss and Horst M. Mueller
Page 759
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Working memory: Unemployed but still doing day labor

Daniel S. Ruchkin, Jordan Grafman, Katherine Cameron and Rita S. Berndt
Page 760
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Huygens Principle: A case against optimality

Hans-Martin Gaertner
Page 779
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Huygens versus Fermat: No clear winner

Paul J. H. Schoemaker
Page 781
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Colors as explainers?

Andrew Botterell
Page 785
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Do opponent process theories help physicalism about color?

Justin Broackes
Page 786
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Forestalling a food fight over color

Daniel C. Dennett
Page 788
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Physicalism without unknowable colors

Peter W. Ross
Page 789
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The right kind of content for a physicalist about color

Paul Skokowski
Page 790
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Color realism revisited

Alex Byrne and David R. Hilbert
Page 791
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