Open Peer Commentary
Life History Theory and economic modernity
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 20 November 2019, e201
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There is little evidence that the Industrial Revolution was caused by a preference shift
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 20 November 2019, e202
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The affective origins of the Industrial Revolution
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- 20 November 2019, e203
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Interrelationships of factors of social development are more complex than Life History Theory predicts
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- 20 November 2019, e204
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England first, America second: The ecological predictors of life history and innovation
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- 20 November 2019, e205
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Using big data to map the relationship between time perspectives and economic outputs
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- 20 November 2019, e206
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Many causes, not one
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- 20 November 2019, e207
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Timing is everything: Evaluating behavioural causal theories of Britain's industrialisation
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- 20 November 2019, e208
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Energy, transport, and consumption in the Industrial Revolution
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 20 November 2019, e209
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A needed amendment that explains too much and resolves little
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 20 November 2019, e210
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Affluence boosted intelligence? How the interaction between cognition and environment may have produced an eighteenth-century Flynn effect during the Industrial Revolution
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- 20 November 2019, e211
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The wealth→life history→innovation account of the Industrial Revolution is largely inconsistent with empirical time series data
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- 20 November 2019, e212
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Slowing life history (K) can account for increasing micro-innovation rates and GDP growth, but not macro-innovation rates, which declined following the end of the Industrial Revolution
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- 20 November 2019, e213
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Author's Response
Psychological origins of the Industrial Revolution: More work is needed!
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- 20 November 2019, e214
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Target Article
Is coding a relevant metaphor for the brain?
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 16 July 2018, e215
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Open Peer Commentary
Prediction, embodiment, and representation
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- 28 November 2019, e216
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Beyond Neural Coding? Lessons from Perceptual Control Theory
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- 28 November 2019, e217
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Generative models as parsimonious descriptions of sensorimotor loops
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- 28 November 2019, e218
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Codes, functions, and causes: A critique of Brette's conceptual analysis of coding
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 28 November 2019, e219
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From the “coding metaphor” to a theory of representation
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- 28 November 2019, e220
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