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| Behavioral and Brain Sciences |
| Cambridge University Press |
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Volume 32
Issue 3-4 |
| Aug 01, 2009 |
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ISSN: 0140525x |
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Behavioral and Brain Sciences
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Volume 32 :
Issue 3-4
Table of Contents
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Does sexual selection explain human sex differences in aggression?

John Archer
Page 249
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Ultimate and proximate influences on human sex differences

Drew H. Bailey, Jonathan K. Oxford and David C. Geary
Page 266
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Does sexual selection explain why human aggression peaks in early childhood?

Christina Behme
Page 267
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Dominating versus eliminating the competition: Sex differences in human intrasexual aggression

Joyce F. Benenson
Page 268
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Sex differences in the developmental antecedents of aggression

Joseph M. Boden
Page 269
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Sex differences in aggression: Origins and implications for sexual integration of combat forces

Kingsley R. Browne
Page 270
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The multiple adaptive problems solved by human aggression

David M. Buss
Page 271
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What kind of selection?

Anne Campbell
Page 272
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Sex differences in aggression: What does evolutionary theory predict?

Elizabeth Cashdan
Page 273
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Differentiating defensive and predatory aggression: Neuropsychological systems and personality in sex differences

Philip J. Corr and Adam M. Perkins
Page 274
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Two more things for consideration: Sexual orientation and conduct disorder

Thomas Edmund Dickins and Mark James Timothy Sergeant
Page 275
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Sexual selection does not provide an adequate theory of sex differences in aggression

Alice H. Eagly and Wendy Wood
Page 276
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Sex, aggression, and life history strategy

Aurelio Jos\xE9 Figueredo, Paul Robert Gladden and Barbara Hagenah Brumbach
Page 278
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An I3 Theory analysis of human sex differences in aggression

Eli J. Finkel and Erica B. Slotter
Page 279
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A history of war: The role of inter-group conflict in sex differences in aggression

Dominic D. P. Johnson and Mark van Vugt
Page 280
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Suspicions of female infidelity predict men's partner-directed violence

Farnaz Kaighobadi and Todd K. Shackelford
Page 281
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A quantitative genetic approach to understanding aggressive behavior

Bart Kempenaers and Wolfgang Forstmeier
Page 282
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More holes in social roles

Douglas T. Kenrick and Vladas Griskevicius
Page 283
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Moderators of sex differences in sexual selection theory

Anthony D. Pellegrini
Page 285
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There's no contest: Human sex differences are sexually selected

Nicholas Pound, Martin Daly and Margo Wilson
Page 286
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Sex differences in dream aggression

Michael Schredl
Page 287
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Human sexual dimorphism, fitness display, and ovulatory cycle effects

Jon A. Sefcek and Donald F. Sacco
Page 288
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Standards of evidence for designed sex differences

Aaron Sell
Page 289
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Sex differences in human aggression: The interaction between early developmental and later activational testosterone

David Terburg, Jiska S. Peper, Barak Morgan and Jack van Honk
Page 290
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Sexual selection and social roles: Two models or one?

Pierre L. van den Berghe
Page 291
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Refining the sexual selection explanation within an ethological framework

John Archer
Page 292
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Numerical representation in the parietal lobes: Abstract or not abstract?

Roi Cohen Kadosh and Vincent Walsh
Page 313
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Slippery platform: The role of automatic and intentional processes in testing the effect of notation

Daniel Algom
Page 328
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Are non-abstract brain representations of number developmentally plausible?

Daniel Ansari
Page 329
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Numerical abstractness and elementary arithmetic

Jamie I. D. Campbell and Arron W. S. Metcalfe
Page 330
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Numerical abstraction: It ain't broke

Jessica F. Cantlon, Sara Cordes, Melissa E. Libertus and Elizabeth M. Brannon
Page 331
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Numerical representations are neither abstract nor automatic

Dale J. Cohen
Page 332
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The case for a notation-independent representation of number

Stanislas Dehaene
Page 333
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Concrete magnitudes: From numbers to time

Christine M. Falter, Valdas Noreika, Julian Kiverstein and Bruno M\xF6lder
Page 335
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Brain neural activity patterns yielding numbers are operators, not representations

Walter J. Freeman and Robert Kozma
Page 336
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Automatic numerical processing is based on an abstract representation

Dana Ganor-Stern
Page 337
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Expertise in symbol-referent mapping

Roland H. Grabner
Page 338
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Abstract after all? Abstraction through inhibition in children and adults

Olivier Houd\xE9
Page 339
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A developmental model of number representation

Karin Kucian and Liane Kaufmann
Page 340
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Symbols in numbers: From numerals to magnitude information

Oliver Lindemann, Shirley-Ann Rueschemeyer and Harold Bekkering
Page 341
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Inactivation and adaptation of number neurons

J. Patrick Mayo
Page 342
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Non-abstractness as mental simulation in the representation of number

Andriy Myachykov, Wouter P. A. Platenburg and Martin H. Fischer
Page 343
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Numbers and numerosities: Absence of abstract neural realization doesn't mean non-abstraction

Rafael E. N\xFA\xF1ez
Page 344
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The discussion of methodological limitations in number representation studies is incomplete

Guy A. Orban
Page 345
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Common mistakes about numerical representations

Mauro Pesenti and Michael Andres
Page 346
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Numerical representation, math skills, memory, and decision-making

Ellen Peters and Alan Castel
Page 347
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What is an (abstract) neural representation of quantity?

Manuela Piazza and Veronique Izard
Page 348
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Abstract or not? Insights from priming

Bert Reynvoet and Karolien Notebaert
Page 349
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Symbolic, numeric, and magnitude representations in the parietal cortex

Miriam Rosenberg-Lee, Jessica M. Tsang and Vinod Menon
Page 350
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Abstract representations of number: What interactions with number form do not prove and priming effects do

Seppe Santens, Wim Fias and Tom Verguts
Page 351
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Beyond format-specificity: Is analogue magnitude really the core abstract feature of the cultural number representation?

D\xE9nes Szcs, Fruzsina Solt\xE9sz and Usha Goswami
Page 352
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In search of non-abstract representation of numbers: Maybe on the right track, but still not there

Joseph Tzelgov and Michal Pinhas
Page 353
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Numerical representations: Abstract or supramodal? Some may be spatial

Giuseppe Vallar and Luisa Girelli
Page 354
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Do infants count like scientists?

Andreas Wiefel, Sabina Pauen and Michael Dueck
Page 355
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Non-abstract numerical representations in the IPS: Further support, challenges, and clarifications

Roi Cohen Kadosh and Vincent Walsh
Page 356
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BBS volume 32 issue 3-4 Cover and Front matter

Page f1
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BBS volume 32 issue 3-4 Cover and Back matter

Page b1
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