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| Behavioral and Brain Sciences |
| Cambridge University Press |
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Volume 26
Issue 5 |
| Oct 01, 2003 |
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ISSN: 0140525x |
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Behavioral and Brain Sciences
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Volume 26 :
Issue 5
Table of Contents
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The evolutionary origin of the mammalian isocortex: Towards an integrated developmental and functional approach

Francisco Aboitiz, Daniver Morales and Juan Montiel
Page 535
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From axis to triangle: The role of orbital cortex

Mihail Bota
Page 552
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The third alternative: Duplication of collopallium in isocortical evolution

Ann B. Butler
Page 553
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Avian and mammalian hippocampus: No degrees of freedom in evolution of function

Michael Colombo
Page 554
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Paleoecology and the overlap of homeotic genes for isocortex evolution

Danilo Arruda Furtado
Page 555
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Mesozoic mammals and early mammalian brain diversity

Emmanuel Gilissen and Thierry Smith
Page 556
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The dorsal thalamic connection in the origin of the isocortex

Salvador Guirado
Page 557
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Occams razor and the collothalamic projection

Onur Gntrkn
Page 558
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The evolution of neural dynamics permitting isocortical-limbic-motor communication

R. Hermer-Vazquez and L. Hermer-Vazquez
Page 559
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Reptilian cortex and mammalian neocortex early developmental homologies

Miguel Marn-Padilla
Page 560
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The origin of the amniote sensory and motor cortices

Fernando Martinez-Garcia
Page 561
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Histogenetic divisions, developmental mechanisms, and cortical evolution

Loreta Medina
Page 563
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Reshuffling or inventing prosomeres: Expensive radiation or expensive neural tissue?

Andrei C. Miu and Adrian I. Olteanu
Page 564
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The use and abuse of developmental data

R. Glenn Northcutt
Page 565
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Relevance of medial and dorsal cortex function to the dorsalization hypothesis

Alice Schade Powers
Page 566
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The data do not support the hypothesis

Anton Reiner
Page 567
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Conserved functional organization of the amniote telencephalic pallium

Cosme Salas, Cristina Broglio and Fernando Rodrguez
Page 568
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Toward the answer, but still far to go

Toru Shimizu
Page 569
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Cortical evolution: No expansion without organization

Hans Supr
Page 570
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More dorsal cortex, yes, but what flavor?

Alessandro Treves
Page 571
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An interdisciplinary approach to brain evolution: A long due debate

Francisco Aboitiz, Daniver Morales and Juan Montiel
Page 572
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The Newell Test for a theory of cognition

John R. Anderson and Christian Lebiere
Page 587
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Newells list

Joseph Agassi
Page 601
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Think globally, ask functionally

Erik M. Altmann
Page 602
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Nonclassical connectionism should enter the decathlon

Francisco Calvo Garzn
Page 603
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The Newell Test should commit to diagnosing dysfunctions

William J. Clancey
Page 604
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A complete theory of tests for a theory of mind must consider hierarchical complexity and stage

Michael Lamport Commons and Myra Sturgeon White
Page 606
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Criteria and evaluation of cognitive theories

Petros A. M. Gelepithis
Page 607
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Meeting Newells other challenge: Cognitive architectures as the basis for cognitive engineering

Wayne D. Gray, Michael J. Schoelles and Christopher W. Myers
Page 609
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Bring ART into the ACT

Stephen Grossberg
Page 610
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Developing a domain-general framework for cognition: What is the best approach?

James L. McClelland, David C. Plaut, Stephen J. Gotts and Tiago V. Maia
Page 611
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Evaluating connectionism: A developmental perspective

Claire F. OLoughlin and Annette Karmiloff-Smith
Page 614
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On the encompassing of the behaviour of man

Morten Overgaard and Soeren Willert
Page 615
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Connectionism, ACT-R, and the principle of self-organization

Pavel N. Prudkov
Page 616
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Dual-process theories and hybrid systems

Ilkka Pyysiinen
Page 617
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The hardest test for a theory of cognition: The input test

Asim Roy
Page 618
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Rethinking learning and development in the Newell Test

Sylvain Sirois
Page 619
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What about embodiment?

David Spurrett
Page 620
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Poppering the Newell Test

Niels A. Taatgen
Page 621
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Cognitive architectures have limited explanatory power

Prasad Tadepalli
Page 622
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Cognitive modelling of human temporal reasoning

Alice G. B. ter Meulen
Page 623
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Real-world behavior as a constraint on the cognitive architecture: Comparing ACT-R and DAC in the Newell Test

Paul F. M. J. Verschure
Page 624
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A multilevel approach to modeling human cognition

Hongbin Wang, Todd R. Johnson and Jiajie Zhang
Page 626
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Newells program, like Hilberts, is dead; lets move on

Yingrui Yang and Selmer Bringsjord
Page 627
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Optimism for the future of unified theories

John R. Anderson and Christian Lebiere
Page 628
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The problem of content in embodied memory

Martin Kurthen, Thomas Grunwald, Christoph Helmstaedter and Christian E. Elger
Page 641
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Meshing Glenbergs embodied memories with negative priming research on suppression

Ewald Neumann
Page 642
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Clamping and motivation

Edmond Wright
Page 643
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Embodied meaning and negative priming

Arthur M. Glenberg, David A. Robertson, Michael P. Kaschak and Alan J. Malter
Page 644
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Race, brain size, and IQ: The case for consilience

J. Philippe Rushton
Page 648
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