Open Peer Commentary
Becoming an expert: Ontogeny of expertise as an example of neural reuse
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- 30 June 2016, e123
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A registration problem for functional fingerprinting
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 30 June 2016, e124
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The reification objection to bottom-up cognitive ontology revision
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- 30 June 2016, e125
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Reason for optimism: How a shifting focus on neural population codes is moving cognitive neuroscience beyond phrenology
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- 30 June 2016, e126
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Multisensory integration substantiates distributed and overlapping neural networks
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 30 June 2016, e127
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Scientific intuitions about the mind are wrong, misled by consciousness
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- 30 June 2016, e128
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Beyond disjoint brain networks: Overlapping networks for cognition and emotion
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- 30 June 2016, e129
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Toward mechanistic models of action-oriented and detached cognition
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- 30 June 2016, e130
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Computational specificity in the human brain
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- 30 June 2016, e131
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The implications of neural reuse for the future of both cognitive neuroscience and folk psychology
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- 30 June 2016, e132
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Modularity in network neuroscience and neural reuse
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- 30 June 2016, e133
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Neural reuse leads to associative connections between concrete (physical) and abstract (social) concepts and motives
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- 30 June 2016, e134
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Author's Response
Reply to reviewers: Reuse, embodied interactivity, and the emerging paradigm shift in the human neurosciences
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- 30 June 2016, e135
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Corrigendum
The cooperative breeding perspective helps in pinning down when uniquely human evolutionary processes are necessary—CORRIGENDUM
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- 30 August 2016, e136
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Target Article
Are groups more or less than the sum of their members? The moderating role of individual identification
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- 04 May 2015, e137
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Open Peer Commentary
The hows and whys of “we” (and “I”) in groups
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- 26 October 2016, e138
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Identity matters to individuals: Group assessment cannot be reduced to collective performance
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- 26 October 2016, e139
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The unique role of the agent within the romantic group
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 26 October 2016, e140
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Group and individual as complementary conceptual categories
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 26 October 2016, e141
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But is it social? How to tell when groups are more than the sum of their members
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 26 October 2016, e142
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