 |
| Behavioral and Brain Sciences |
| Cambridge University Press |
|
Volume 28
Issue 4 |
| Aug 01, 2005 |
|
ISSN: 0140525x |
 |
|
Behavioral and Brain Sciences
|  |
Volume 28 :
Issue 4
Table of Contents
|
-
coordinating perceptually grounded categories through language: a case study for colour

luc steels and tony belpaeme
Page 469
-
intimations of optimality: extensions of simulation testing of color-language hypotheses

david bimler
Page 489
-
language, ecological structure, and across-population sharing

alexa bdog, gbor p. hden, zoltn jakab and zsolt palatinus
Page 490
-
color categories in biological evolution: broadening the palette

wayne d. christensen and luca tommasi
Page 492
-
in the beginning: word or deed?

stephen j. cowley
Page 493
-
language impairment and colour categories

jules davidoff and claudio luzzatti
Page 494
-
realistic constraints on brain color perception and category learning

stephen grossberg
Page 495
-
modeling category coordination: comments and complications

james a. hampton
Page 496
-
language and the game of life

stevan harnad
Page 497
-
a synthesis of many levels of constraints as a modern view of development

derek harter and shulan lu
Page 498
-
it is not evolution, but a better game would need a better agent

christian huyck and ian mitchell
Page 499
-
dynamical categories and language

takashi ikegami
Page 500
-
sharing perceptually grounded categories in uniform and nonuniform populations

kimberly a. jameson
Page 501
-
seeing and talking: whorf wouldnt be satisfied

boris kotchoubey
Page 502
-
not all categories work the same way

sidney r. lehky
Page 503
-
is color perception really categorical?

mohan matthen
Page 504
-
how culture might constrain color categories

debi roberson and catherine ohanlon
Page 505
-
it takes a(n) (agent-based) village

teresa satterfield
Page 506
-
colour is a culturalist category

j. van brakel
Page 507
-
a categorial mutation

oscar vilarroya
Page 508
-
learning colour words is slow: a cross-situational learning account

paul vogt and andrew d. m. smith
Page 509
-
interindividual variation in human color categories: evidence against strong influence of language

thomas wachtler
Page 510
-
categorization in artificial agents: guidance on empirical research?

william s.-y. wang and tao gong
Page 511
-
variations in color naming within and across populations

michael a. webster and paul kay
Page 512
-
in the tiniest house of time: parametric constraints in evolutionary models of symbolization

chris westbury and geoff hollis
Page 513
-
the question of the assumed givenness of the singularity of the target

edmond wright
Page 514
-
the semiotic dynamics of colour

luc steels and tony belpaeme
Page 515
-
moral heuristics

cass r. sunstein
Page 531
-
cognitivism, controversy, and moral heuristics

matthew d. adler
Page 542
-
moral heuristics: rigid rules or flexible inputs in moral deliberation?

elizabeth anderson
Page 544
-
biting the utilitarian bullet

jonathan baron
Page 545
-
towards an intuitionist account of moral development

karen bartsch and jennifer cole wright
Page 546
-
neurobiology supports virtue theory on the role of heuristics in moral cognition

william d. casebeer
Page 547
-
about emotional intelligence and moral decisions

pablo fernandez-berrocal and natalio extremera
Page 548
-
moral heuristics and the means/end distinction

barbara h. fried
Page 549
-
moral judgments in narrative contexts

richard j. gerrig
Page 550
-
heuristics, moral imagination, and the future of technology

michael e. gorman
Page 551
-
invisible fences of the moral domain

jonathan haidt
Page 552
-
sunsteins heuristics provide insufficient descriptive and explanatory adequacy

marc d. hauser
Page 553
-
the next frontier: moral heuristics and the treatment of animals

harold a. herzog and gordon m. burghardt
Page 554
-
a selectionist approach integrates moral heuristics

robert a. hinde
Page 555
-
betrayal aversion is reasonable

jonathan j. koehler and andrew d. gershoff
Page 556
-
moral heuristics or moral competence? reflections on sunstein

john mikhail
Page 557
-
do normative standards advance our understanding of moral judgment?

david a. pizarro and eric luis uhlmann
Page 558
-
cognitive heuristics and deontological rules

ilana ritov
Page 559
-
intuitions, heuristics, and utilitarianism

peter singer
Page 560
-
wide reflective equilibrium as an answer to an objection to moral heuristics

edward stein
Page 561
-
gauging the heuristic value of heuristics

philip e. tetlock
Page 562
-
towards a taxonomy of modes of moral decision-making

elke u. weber and jessica s. ancker
Page 563
-
regulation of risks

paul weirich
Page 564
-
on moral intuitions and moral heuristics: a response

cass r. sunstein
Page 565
-
survival with an asymmetrical brain: advantages and disadvantages of cerebral lateralization

giorgio vallortigara and lesley j. rogers
Page 575
-
partial reversal and the functions of lateralisation

richard john andrew
Page 589
-
do asymmetrical differences in primate brains correspond to cerebral lateralization?

douglas c. broadfield
Page 590
-
cerebral lateralisation, social constraints, and coordinated anti-predator responses

culum brown
Page 591
-
developmental systems, evolutionarily stable strategies, and population laterality

michael b. casey
Page 592
-
genes as primary determinants of population level lateralisation

miguel l. concha
Page 593
-
the trade-off between symmetry and asymmetry

michael c. corballis
Page 594
-
the cerebral torque and directional asymmetry for hand use are correlates of the capacity for language in homo sapiens

timothy j. crow
Page 595
-
causal relations between asymmetries at the individual level?

rebecca g. deason, david r. andresen and chad j. marsolek
Page 596
-
behavioral symmetry and reverse asymmetry in the chick and rat

victor h. denenberg
Page 597
-
rethinking brain asymmetries in humans

bianca drger, caterina breitenstein and stefan knecht
Page 598
-
darwins legacy and the evolution of cerebral asymmetries

onur gntrkn
Page 599
-
the left-side bias for holding human infants: an everyday directional asymmetry in the natural environment

lauren julius harris and jason b. almerigi
Page 600
-
behavioral left-right asymmetry extends to arthropods

boudewijn adriaan heuts and tibor brunt
Page 601
-
the riddle of nature and nurture lateralization has an epigenetic trait

martina manns
Page 602
-
constraints from handedness on the evolution of brain lateralization

maryanne martin and gregory v. jones
Page 603
-
selection pressure on the decision-making process in conflict

toshiya matsushima
Page 604
-
natural selection of asymmetric traits operates at multiple levels

michael k. mcbeath and thomas g. sugar
Page 605
-
unity in the wild variety of nature, or just variety?

i. c. mcmanus
Page 606
-
putting things right: why before how

. miklsi
Page 608
-
population lateralization arises in simulated evolution of non-interacting neural networks

james a. reggia and alexander grushin
Page 609
-
optimization through lateralization: the evolution of handedness

robert l. sainburg and robert b. eckhardt
Page 611
-
when dominance and sex are both right

james a. schirillo and melissa fox
Page 612
-
cerebral asymmetry: from survival strategies to social behaviour

jechil sieratzki and bencie woll
Page 613
-
evolutionary tango: perceptual asymmetries as a trick of sexual selection

luca tommasi
Page 614
-
forming an asymmetrical brain: genes, environment, and evolutionarily stable strategies

giorgio vallortigara and lesley j. rogers
Page 615
|
|