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| Behavioral and Brain Sciences |
| Cambridge University Press |
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Volume 28
Issue 3 |
| Jun 01, 2005 |
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ISSN: 0140525x |
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Behavioral and Brain Sciences
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Volume 28 :
Issue 3
Table of Contents
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a neurobehavioral model of affiliative bonding: implications for conceptualizing a human trait of affiliation

richard a. depue and jeannine v. morrone-strupinsky
Page 313
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affiliative drive: could this be disturbed in childhood autism?

ralf-peter behrendt
Page 350
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social bonds, motivational conflict, and altruism: implications for neurobiology

stephanie l. brown and r. michael brown
Page 351
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neuropeptides influence expression of and capacity to form social bonds

c. s. carter, k. l. bales and s. w. porges
Page 353
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the role of trait affiliation in human community

michael glassman and cynthia k. buettner
Page 354
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affiliative bonding as a dynamical process: a view from ethology

kosuke itoh and akihiro izumi
Page 355
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is all affiliation the same? facilitation or complementarity?

daniel s. levine
Page 356
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affiliative reward and the ontogenetic bonding system

warren b. miller
Page 357
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integrating genetic, behavioral, and psychometric research in conceptualizing human behavioral traits

marcus r. munaf
Page 358
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specificity of affiliation supported by neurotransmitter challenge tests and molecular genetics

petra netter, martin reuter and juergen hennig
Page 359
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mesolimbic-mesocortical loops may encode saliency, not just reward

patricio odonnell
Page 360
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loving opioids in the brain

jaak panksepp and joseph r. moskal
Page 361
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impaired hedonic capacity in major depressive disorder: impact on affiliative behaviors

diego a. pizzagalli and christen m. deveney
Page 362
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is the construct for human affiliation too narrow?

nancy nyquist potter
Page 363
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endogenous and exogenous opiates modulate the development of parentinfant attachment

james edward swain, linda c. mayes and james f. leckman
Page 364
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deficits in affiliative reward: an endophenotype for psychiatric disorders?

alfonso troisi and francesca r. damato
Page 365
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a nonhuman primate perspective on affiliation

tamara a. r. weinstein and john p. capitanio
Page 366
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serotonin and affiliative behavior

simon n. young and d. s. moskowitz
Page 367
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trust: a temporary human attachment facilitated by oxytocin

paul j. zak
Page 368
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its a long way up from comparative studies of animals to personality traits in humans

marvin zuckerman
Page 370
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modeling human behavioral traits and clarifying the construct of affiliation and its disorders

richard a. depue and jeannine v. morrone-strupinsky
Page 371
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a dynamic developmental theory of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (adhd) predominantly hyperactive/impulsive and combined subtypes

terje sagvolden, espen borg johansen, heidi aase and vivienne ann russell
Page 397
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attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (adhd): delay-of-reinforcement gradients and other behavioral mechanisms

a. charles catania
Page 419
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unitary or multiple pathways: the trap of radical behaviorism

tobias banaschewski, sunke himpel and aribert rothenberger
Page 425
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the role of context and inhibition in adhd

petra bjrne and christian balkenius
Page 426
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frontal and executive dysfunction is a central aspect of adhd

ximena carrasco, vladimir lpez and francisco aboitiz
Page 427
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delay of reinforcement gradients and attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (adhd): the challenges of moving from causal theories to causal models

david r. coghill
Page 428
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selectionism: complex outcomes from simple processes

john w. donahoe and jos e. burgos
Page 429
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a comprehensive and developmental theory of adhd is tantalizing, but premature

canan karatekin
Page 430
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gradus ad parnassum: ascending strength gradients or descending memory traces?

peter r. killeen
Page 432
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adhd, comorbidity, synaptic gates and re-entrant circuits

florence levy
Page 434
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what is the purpose of a new behaviorally based dynamic developmental theory of adhd? the perspective of the educational psychologist

paolo moderato and giovambattista presti
Page 435
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reinforcement gradient, response inhibition, genetic versus experiential effects, and multiple pathways to adhd

joel nigg
Page 437
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adhd theories still need to take more on board: serotonin and pre-executive variability

robert d. oades and hanna christiansen
Page 438
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red: adhd under the micro-scope of the rat model

katya rubia
Page 439
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is the hypodopaminergic hypothesis plausible as neural bases of adhd?

adolfo g. sadile and davide viggiano
Page 440
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the biopsychosocial context of adhd

seija sandberg
Page 441
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the dynamic developmental theory of adhd: reflections from a cognitive energetic model standpoint

joseph a. sergeant
Page 442
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a common core dysfunction in attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder: a scientific red herring?

edmund j. s. sonuga-barke and f. x. castellanos
Page 443
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hypodopaminergic function influences learning and memory as well as delay gradients

rosemary tannock
Page 444
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altered sensitivity to reward in children with adhd: dopamine timing is off

jeffery r. wickens and e. gail tripp
Page 445
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attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (adhd): one process or many?

a. charles catania
Page 446
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the dynamic developmental theory of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (adhd): present status and future perspectives

espen borg johansen, terje sagvolden, heidi aase and vivienne ann russell
Page 451
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