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  • Editor(s):
  • Paul Bloom, Yale University, USA
    Barbara L. Finlay, Cornell University, USA

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Table of Contents - Volume 29 - Issue 01  

  Please select Articles below or use Select All, then click the appropriate button above. Select/Deselect All:
 

Main Article

 
Free access

Précis of Principles of Brain Evolution

Georg F. Striedter

Behavioral and Brain Sciences, Volume 29, Issue 01, February 2006, pp 1-12
doi:10.1017/S0140525X06009010 (About doi), Published Online by Cambridge University Press 15 Mar 2006
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Brain evolution: Part I

Elizabeth Adkins-Regan

Behavioral and Brain Sciences, Volume 29, Issue 01, February 2006, pp 12-13
doi:10.1017/S0140525X06229017 (About doi), Published Online by Cambridge University Press 15 Mar 2006
 

Neuroscientists need to be evolutionarily challenged

Robert A. Barton

Behavioral and Brain Sciences, Volume 29, Issue 01, February 2006, pp 13-14
doi:10.1017/S0140525X06239013 (About doi), Published Online by Cambridge University Press 15 Mar 2006
 

Practical use of evolutionary neuroscience principles

Barbara Clancy

Behavioral and Brain Sciences, Volume 29, Issue 01, February 2006, pp 14-15
doi:10.1017/S0140525X0624901X (About doi), Published Online by Cambridge University Press 15 Mar 2006
 

Putting humans in their proper place

R. I. M. Dunbar

Behavioral and Brain Sciences, Volume 29, Issue 01, February 2006, pp 15-16
doi:10.1017/S0140525X06259016 (About doi), Published Online by Cambridge University Press 15 Mar 2006
 

Scaling patterns of interhemispheric connectivity in eutherian mammals

Emmanuel Gilissen

Behavioral and Brain Sciences, Volume 29, Issue 01, February 2006, pp 16-17
doi:10.1017/S0140525X06269012 (About doi), Published Online by Cambridge University Press 15 Mar 2006
 

The evolution of computation in brain circuitry

Richard Granger

Behavioral and Brain Sciences, Volume 29, Issue 01, February 2006, pp 17-18
doi:10.1017/S0140525X06279019 (About doi), Published Online by Cambridge University Press 15 Mar 2006
 

Principles of brain connectivity organization

Claus C. Hilgetag

Behavioral and Brain Sciences, Volume 29, Issue 01, February 2006, pp 18-19
doi:10.1017/S0140525X06289015 (About doi), Published Online by Cambridge University Press 15 Mar 2006
 

Mental attention, not language, may explain evolutionary growth of human intelligence and brain size

Juan Pascual-Leone

Behavioral and Brain Sciences, Volume 29, Issue 01, February 2006, pp 19-20
doi:10.1017/S0140525X06299011 (About doi), Published Online by Cambridge University Press 15 Mar 2006
 

Velocity and direction in neurobehavioral evolution: The centripetal prospective

Robert R. Provine

Behavioral and Brain Sciences, Volume 29, Issue 01, February 2006, pp 21-22
doi:10.1017/S0140525X06309016 (About doi), Published Online by Cambridge University Press 15 Mar 2006
 

The key role of prefrontal cortex structure and function

Antonino Raffone and Gary L. Brase

Behavioral and Brain Sciences, Volume 29, Issue 01, February 2006, pp 22-22
doi:10.1017/S0140525X06319012 (About doi), Published Online by Cambridge University Press 15 Mar 2006
 

Brain evolution by natural selection

Toru Shimizu

Behavioral and Brain Sciences, Volume 29, Issue 01, February 2006, pp 23-24
doi:10.1017/S0140525X06339015 (About doi), Published Online by Cambridge University Press 15 Mar 2006
 

An evolutionary niche for quantitative theoretical analyses?

Yasser Roudi and Alessandro Treves

Behavioral and Brain Sciences, Volume 29, Issue 01, February 2006, pp 23-23
doi:10.1017/S0140525X06329019 (About doi), Published Online by Cambridge University Press 15 Mar 2006
 

Brain design: The evolution of brains

James E. Swain

Behavioral and Brain Sciences, Volume 29, Issue 01, February 2006, pp 24-25
doi:10.1017/S0140525X06349011 (About doi), Published Online by Cambridge University Press 15 Mar 2006
 

Author Response

 
 

Evolutionary neuroscience: Limitations and prospects

Georg F. Striedter

Behavioral and Brain Sciences, Volume 29, Issue 01, February 2006, pp 25-31
doi:10.1017/S0140525X06359018 (About doi), Published Online by Cambridge University Press 15 Mar 2006
 

Main Article

 
 

Neural blackboard architectures of combinatorial structures in cognition

Frank van der Velde and Marc de Kamps

Behavioral and Brain Sciences, Volume 29, Issue 01, February 2006, pp 37-70
doi:10.1017/S0140525X06009022 (About doi), Published Online by Cambridge University Press 15 Mar 2006
 

Open Peer Commentary

 
 

Conscious cognition and blackboard architectures

Bernard J. Baars

Behavioral and Brain Sciences, Volume 29, Issue 01, February 2006, pp 70-71
doi:10.1017/S0140525X06229029 (About doi), Published Online by Cambridge University Press 15 Mar 2006
 

On the structural ambiguity in natural language that the neural architecture cannot deal with

Rens Bod, Hartmut Fitz and Willem Zuidema

Behavioral and Brain Sciences, Volume 29, Issue 01, February 2006, pp 71-72
doi:10.1017/S0140525X06239025 (About doi), Published Online by Cambridge University Press 15 Mar 2006
 

How neural is the neural blackboard architecture?

Yoonsuck Choe

Behavioral and Brain Sciences, Volume 29, Issue 01, February 2006, pp 72-73
doi:10.1017/S0140525X06249021 (About doi), Published Online by Cambridge University Press 15 Mar 2006
 

How anchors allow reusing categories in neural composition of sentences

William J. Clancey

Behavioral and Brain Sciences, Volume 29, Issue 01, February 2006, pp 73-74
doi:10.1017/S0140525X06259028 (About doi), Published Online by Cambridge University Press 15 Mar 2006
 

The problem with using associations to carry binding information

Leonidas A. A. Doumas, Keith J. Holyoak and John E. Hummel

Behavioral and Brain Sciences, Volume 29, Issue 01, February 2006, pp 74-75
doi:10.1017/S0140525X06269024 (About doi), Published Online by Cambridge University Press 15 Mar 2006
 

Has the brain evolved to answer “binding questions” or to generate likely hypotheses about complex and continuously changing environments?

Birgitta Dresp and Jean Charles Barthaud

Behavioral and Brain Sciences, Volume 29, Issue 01, February 2006, pp 75-76
doi:10.1017/S0140525X06279020 (About doi), Published Online by Cambridge University Press 15 Mar 2006
 

Engineering the brain

Daniel Durstewitz

Behavioral and Brain Sciences, Volume 29, Issue 01, February 2006, pp 76-77
doi:10.1017/S0140525X06289027 (About doi), Published Online by Cambridge University Press 15 Mar 2006
 

Will the neural blackboard architecture scale up to semantics?

Michael G. Dyer

Behavioral and Brain Sciences, Volume 29, Issue 01, February 2006, pp 77-78
doi:10.1017/S0140525X06299023 (About doi), Published Online by Cambridge University Press 15 Mar 2006
 

Vector symbolic architectures are a viable alternative for Jackendoff's challenges

Ross W. Gayler

Behavioral and Brain Sciences, Volume 29, Issue 01, February 2006, pp 78-79
doi:10.1017/S0140525X06309028 (About doi), Published Online by Cambridge University Press 15 Mar 2006
 

Distributed neural blackboards could be more attractive

André Grüning and Alessandro Treves

Behavioral and Brain Sciences, Volume 29, Issue 01, February 2006, pp 79-80
doi:10.1017/S0140525X06319024 (About doi), Published Online by Cambridge University Press 15 Mar 2006
 

Neural circuits, matrices, and conjunctive binding

Robert F. Hadley

Behavioral and Brain Sciences, Volume 29, Issue 01, February 2006, pp 80-80
doi:10.1017/S0140525X06329020 (About doi), Published Online by Cambridge University Press 15 Mar 2006
 

Constituent structure and the binding problem

Colin Phillips and Matthew Wagers

Behavioral and Brain Sciences, Volume 29, Issue 01, February 2006, pp 81-82
doi:10.1017/S0140525X06349023 (About doi), Published Online by Cambridge University Press 15 Mar 2006
 

Blackboards in the brain

Ralph-Axel Müller

Behavioral and Brain Sciences, Volume 29, Issue 01, February 2006, pp 81-81
doi:10.1017/S0140525X06339027 (About doi), Published Online by Cambridge University Press 15 Mar 2006
 

On the unproductiveness of language and linguistics

David M. W. Powers

Behavioral and Brain Sciences, Volume 29, Issue 01, February 2006, pp 82-84
doi:10.1017/S0140525X0635902X (About doi), Published Online by Cambridge University Press 15 Mar 2006
 

Comparing the neural blackboard and the temporal synchrony-based SHRUTI architectures

Lokendra Shastri

Behavioral and Brain Sciences, Volume 29, Issue 01, February 2006, pp 84-86
doi:10.1017/S0140525X06369026 (About doi), Published Online by Cambridge University Press 15 Mar 2006
 

Can neural models of cognition benefit from the advantages of connectionism?

Friedrich T. Sommer and Pentti Kanerva

Behavioral and Brain Sciences, Volume 29, Issue 01, February 2006, pp 86-87
doi:10.1017/S0140525X06379022 (About doi), Published Online by Cambridge University Press 15 Mar 2006
 

An alternative model of sentence parsing explains complexity phenomena more comprehensively without problems of localist encoding

Carol Whitney

Behavioral and Brain Sciences, Volume 29, Issue 01, February 2006, pp 87-88
doi:10.1017/S0140525X06389029 (About doi), Published Online by Cambridge University Press 15 Mar 2006
 

Authors' Response

 
 

From neural dynamics to true combinatorial structures

Frank van der Velde and Marc de Kamps

Behavioral and Brain Sciences, Volume 29, Issue 01, February 2006, pp 88-104
doi:10.1017/S0140525X06399025 (About doi), Published Online by Cambridge University Press 15 Mar 2006
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