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  1. THEOLOGY AND EVOLUTIONARY PSYCHOLOGY.: An article from: Skeptic (Altadena, CA) by Kari Konkola, Glenn Sunshine, 1999-03-22
  2. Not at the edge of contemplation.(common sense): An article from: Journal of Evolutionary Psychology by Howard W. Bischoff, 2006-10-01
  3. Outlines & Highlights for Evolutionary Psychology: The New Science of the Mind by Buss, ISBN: 0205370713 (Cram101 Textbook Outlines) by Cram101 Textbook Reviews, 2006-06-02
  4. The Functional Mind: Readings in Evolutionary Psychology by Douglas T. Kenrick, Carol L. Luce, 2003-10-17
  5. An Evolutionary Psychology of Leader-Follower Relations by Patrick McNamara, David Trumbull, 2008-10
  6. Evolutionary Psychology and Information Systems Research: A New Approach to Studying the Effects of Modern Technologies on Human Behavior (Integrated Series in Information Systems)
  7. Evolutionary Psychology and Economic Theory, Volume 7 (Advances in Austrian Economics)
  8. Darwin's Bass: The Evolutionary Psychology of Fishing Man by Quinnett, 1998-09
  9. The Puzzle: Exploring the Evolutionary Puzzle of Male Homosexuality by Louis A. Berman, 2003-06-15
  10. Free Will, Consciousness and Self: Anthropological Perspectives on Psychology by Preben Bertelsen, 2006-11
  11. Peer Prejudice And Discrimination: Evolutionary, Cultural, And Developmental Dynamics (Developmental Psychology Series) by Harold Fishbein, 1996-04-11
  12. Research on Altruism and Love: An Annotated Bibliography of Major Studies in Psychology, Sociology, Evolutionary Biology, and Theology
  13. The Debated Mind: Evolutionary Psychology versus Ethnography
  14. Neo-liberal Genetics: The Myths and Moral Tales of Evolutionary Psychology by Susan McKinnon, 2006-02-01

101. Epweb - PSY 243 Syllabus
In contrast, evolutionary psychology (EP) investigates inherited, or ultimate, causes and the Introduction; foundations of evolutionary psychology
http://duke.usask.ca/~dak935/epweb/syllabus.htm
PSY 243.3: Evolutionary Psychology Course Instructor: Daniel Krupp
Phone: 966-2527
email: dak935@duke.usask.ca Office: Arts 25 or Arts 175.1
Hours: By appointment Course Assistant: Joe Camilleri
Phone: 966-6719
email: joseph.camilleri@usask.ca
Office: Arts 69A
Hours: By appointment
Course Website: http://duke.usask.ca/~dak935/epweb.htm "Much light will be thrown on the origin of man and his history." (Charles Darwin, 1859, from The Origin of Species A great deal of psychological research and theory throughout the 20th century has been concerned with the immediate, or proximate, causes of behaviour, such as learning culture , and hormones . In contrast, Evolutionary Psychology (EP) investigates inherited, or ultimate, causes and the evolved architecture of the mind. Whereas traditional psychology has addressed the question "How?", EP attempts to answer the question "Why?". EP seeks to understand the mind through the lens of our evolutionary past, and attempts to explain psychological processes by the principles of adaptation and selection The framework of evolution applies to all facets of the mind and body . Hence, we will cover in this course a wide variety of topics, including:

102. Book: Alas, Poor Darwin: Arguments Against Evolutionary Psychology -- Higgs 322
Paul Higgs reviews the book edited by Hilary Rose and Steven P. R. Rose.
http://bmj.com/cgi/content/full/322/7288/740

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Alas, Poor Darwin: Arguments Against Evolutionary Psychology Eds Hilary Rose, Steven Rose ISBN 0224 06 0309 Rating:
In 1977 Edward O Wilson, the renowned entomologist, published Sociobiology: The New Synthesis , which insisted on the biological foundations of social relations. In 1998 he published Consilience: The Unity of Knowledge , which attempted to bring together all the branches of knowledge under the umbrella of the natural sciences. He concluded the book by declaring that the workings of all social institutions are ultimately reducible to the laws of physics.

103. Evolution Of The Human Family
This is why careful consideration of evolutionary psychology is so imperative to fulfilling our human needs, and perpetuating our species.
http://htdconnect.com/~merriman/pairbond.htm
THE EVOLUTION OF THE HUMAN FAMILY or WHAT LOVE IS FOR PART I William G. Merriman An essay excerpted from the upcoming book: NATURALISTIC ETHICS A Moral Belief System for the Age of Science PART 1: CONFUSING SECONDARY STATUS DRIVE SEX WITH PRIMARY REPRODUCTIVE MATING THE IMPORTANCE OF EVOLUTIONARY PSYCHOLOGY Discerning human nature is imperative to living well as a human being. Human nature evolved as a set of innate predispositions that guide us toward our best interests as social animals. Like all instincts, our innate predispositions have been naturally selected through millions of years of trial and error 'field testing', developing inherent drives that actually work in practice, insuring the perpetuation of our species. Natural selection is a simple principle with profound consequences, it is the ordering factor that integrates organism with environment. In accordance with the physical necessities of natural law, the selective process sorts out coincidental genetic variations in breeding populations as a direct function of how well those traits serve the organism's needs. Genetic traits that facilitate survival of an organism are promoted by allowing that organism to better fulfill its needs, and live to an age when it can successfully reproduce, perpetuating adaptive traits; conversely, traits detrimental to the survival of an organism are weeded out by the effect of an early demise which thus thwarts reproduction and perpetuation of their kind. Therefore, innate traits derive from the completely objective interaction between organism and habitat. Natural order derives from the intrinsic properties of mass/energy configurations in ecological systems, it has no intention. Organisms are shaped in accordance with reality itself, the necessary functional relation between organism and environment being the inevitable outcome of evolutionary processes.

104. Elsevier
Muriel Egerton reviews 'Alas, poor Darwin Arguments against evolutionary psychology' edited by Hilary Rose and Steven Rose.
http://www.thelancet.com/journal/vol357/iss9252/full/llan.357.9252.dissecting_ro
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105. Science & Technology At Scientific American.com: Psyching Out Evolutionary Psych
Psyching Out evolutionary psychology Interview with David J. Buller JRM Why do you say the evolutionary psychology paradigm is problematic?
http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?articleID=00022EBD-51CA-12C4-91CA83414B7F0000

106. Neil Levy Reviews Evolutionary Origins Of Morality Edited By Leonard D. Katz
Natural selection inevitably favors organisms which behave in selfserving manners, for it will be these organisms who leave the most descendants, and so how can evolutionary psychology ever explain morality?
http://human-nature.com/nibbs/02/levy.html
Home - Human Nature Review The Human Nature Daily Review Online Dictionary Of Mental Health What is New? Search Feedback Guestbook Free Electronic Books Darwin and Darwinism Science as Culture Free Associations Human Relations, Authority and Justice Kleinian Studies Against All Reason Burying Freud The Seduction Theory Amazon.com Amazon.co.uk The Origin of Species The Expression of the Emotions The Voyage of the Beagle The Descent of Man T.H.Huxley Autobiography Discourse on the Method The Varieties of Religious Experience Proposed Roads to Freedom The Warfare of Science with Theology Psychoanalytic Aesthetics Unfree Associations Mind, Brain and Adaptation Darwin's Metaphor Mental Space The Culture of British Psychoanalysis Whatever Happened to Human Nature? Group Relations Lost for Words The Story of a Mental Hospital Victims of Memory Consilience: The Unity of Knowledge The Evolution of Human Sex Differences How the Mind Works Fashionable Nonsense The Biotech Century Process Press Robert M. Young - Home Page Robert M. Young - Index of Papers Evolutionary Psychology Mental Health Research Radical Science Human Nature Books Human Nature Information Object Relations European Psychotherapy Psychoanalytic Studies Science as Culture Human Nature Review ISSN 1476-1084 Table of Contents What's New Search Feedback ... Search for papers by Levy, N.

107. Psych 369
evolutionary psychology The Science of Human Behavior and Evolution (Rossano, 2003) Tuesday, November 15 evolutionary psychology and Religion
http://faculty.knox.edu/fmcandre/psych369.html

Fall, 2005 TEXTS: Evolutionary Psychology: The Science of Human Behavior and Evolution (Rossano, 2003) Mother Nature (Hrdy, 1999) Multiple Outside Readings (OR) are on Reserve in the SMC Library CONTACT INFORMATION: Frank McAndrew , E-131 SMC, Ext. 7525 e-mail: fmcandre@knox.edu. Psychology Department Web Page Evolution and Human Behavior: An Introduction to the Course
research interests in evolutionary psychology
and to see links to other evolutionary psychology web sites. Also follow the links to get more background on human evolution and to see a Timeline of Human Evolution Grading
In this course, you will take a mid-term exam, a final exam, and write one term paper. You will also take a series of short quizzes based upon the outside readings you will be doing in the course. Each test will be an essay test, and each test will be worth 25% of your final grade. The paper will also be worth 25% of your grade, with the first draft of the paper counting for 5% and the final draft counting for 20%. Collectively, the quizzes will also be worth 25% of your final grade. The final exam will be given during final examination week, but it is NOT a comprehensive final exam. No makeup tests will be given without prior permission and a very good excuse.
GRADING SCALE:
93% - 100% = A
90% - 92% = A-
88% - 89% = B+
83% - 87% = B
80% - 82% = B-
78% - 79% = C+
73% - 77% = C 70% - 72% = C- 68% - 69% = D+ 63% - 67% = D 60% - 62% = D- THE TERM PAPER: You will write a paper in which you demonstrate your ability to view the world through the lens provided by evolutionary psychology. The paper will take one of the following three forms:

108. 'Human Nature And The Limits Of Science' By John Dupre Reviewed By Leif Edward O
Dupr©'s Human Nature and The Limits of Science is not a successful attempt at providing a criticism of evolutionary psychology. Quite literally because it is not about evolutionary psychology, rather, as an extreme statement, it is about the author's prejudice of what evolutionary psychology is about, writes Leif Edward Ottesen Kennair in this detailed analysis.
http://human-nature.com/nibbs/02/leok.html
Home - Human Nature Review The Human Nature Daily Review Online Dictionary Of Mental Health What is New? Search Feedback Guestbook Free Electronic Books Darwin and Darwinism Science as Culture Free Associations Human Relations, Authority and Justice Kleinian Studies Against All Reason Burying Freud The Seduction Theory Amazon.com Amazon.co.uk The Origin of Species The Expression of the Emotions The Voyage of the Beagle The Descent of Man T.H.Huxley Autobiography Discourse on the Method The Varieties of Religious Experience Proposed Roads to Freedom The Warfare of Science with Theology Psychoanalytic Aesthetics Unfree Associations Mind, Brain and Adaptation Darwin's Metaphor Mental Space The Culture of British Psychoanalysis Whatever Happened to Human Nature? Group Relations Lost for Words The Story of a Mental Hospital Victims of Memory Consilience: The Unity of Knowledge The Evolution of Human Sex Differences How the Mind Works Fashionable Nonsense The Biotech Century Process Press Robert M. Young - Home Page Robert M. Young - Index of Papers Evolutionary Psychology Mental Health Research Radical Science Human Nature Books Human Nature Information Object Relations European Psychotherapy Psychoanalytic Studies Science as Culture Human Nature Review ISSN 1476-1084 Table of Contents What's New Search Feedback ... Search for papers by Dupré, J.

109. Bruce Eisner's Vision Thing: Scientific American.com: Psyching Out Evolutionary
Scientific American.com Psyching Out evolutionary psychology Interview with David J. Buller This philosopher of science rejects claims of a universal
http://www.bruceeisner.com/new_culture/2005/07/scientific_amer.html
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July 05, 2005

110. New Statesman - Book Reviews - Darwin Wars
Brian Appleyard reviews 'Alas, Poor Darwin Arguments against evolutionary psychology' edited by Hilary Rose and Steven Rose.
http://www.newstatesman.co.uk/200008140036.htm
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Book Reviews - Darwin wars

Book Reviews
Bryan Appleyard
Monday 14th August 2000
Alas, Poor Darwin: arguments against evolutionary psychology
Edited by Hilary Rose and Steven Rose Jonathan Cape, 292pp, £17.99
ISBN 0609605135
The succession of more or less destructive intellectual superstitions following the 19th-century crisis of faith is clear. First Marx, then Freud and now Darwin has been nominated as the patriarch of an all-encompassing system explaining human life and history. The latest, Darwinian phase is most characteristically expressed by the discipline of evolutionary psychology (EP), which insists that, because we are animals, our behaviour can be understood only as the result of evolution by natural selection.
So, for example, we like pictures of countryside featuring grassland, water and trees because our ancestors spent so much time on the African savannah; and our sexual mores - male promiscuity, female coyness - are entirely determined by the evolved differences between male and female investments in the reproductive act. Plainly, there is a chance that such explanations are at least partly true; but, equally plainly, there is a good chance that they are not. There is no conclusive evidence either way. But the Darwinian faithful insist that they must be true. Why?

111. SPSP :: Evolutionary Psychology Pre-Conference
It is our pleasure to announce the 3rd SPSP evolutionary psychology PreConference to be held on Thursday, January 20th, 2005 at the Sheraton New Orleans.
http://www2.hawaii.edu/~lieberma/spsp/
Dear Colleagues,
It is our pleasure to announce the 4th SPSP Evolutionary Psychology Pre-Conference to be held on Thursday, January 26th, 2006 at the Wyndham Palm Springs in the Pasedena Ballroom. We have another terrific line-up of speakers and hope you will be able to join us.
2006 Pre-Conference Speakers:
Clark Barrett, University of California, Los Angeles
Roy Baumeister, Florida State University
Elaine Hatfield, University of Hawaii
Nicole Hess, Humboldt University, Berlin
Norm Li, University of Texas, Austin
Randy Nesse, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Jill Sundie, University of Houston
Don Symons, University of California, Santa Barbara John Tooby, University of California, Santa Barbara Space is limited so please register early. If you are interested in presenting a poster, please complete the poster submission form . If you have any questions regarding the pre-conference, please don’t hesitate to contact one of us.

112. Paul Ehrlich Challenges Evolutionary Psychology And The 'selfish Gene' In His Ne
Ehrlich's book 'Human Natures' builds on evolutionary psychology and sociobiology.
http://www.stanford.edu/dept/news/pr/00/humans920.html
Mark Shwartz, News Service (650) 723-9296;
e-mail: mshwartz@stanford.edu
Paul Ehrlich challenges evolutionary psychology and the 'selfish gene' in his new book, Human Natures
Do "selfish genes" program men to be more promiscuous than women? Beneath the veneer of civility, are people innately aggressive? Some researchers and a growing segment of the general population - would answer "yes" to those and a host of other questions, suggesting that we are tightly programmed by our genes. But according to Stanford evolutionist Paul R. Ehrlich, there is little scientific basis for such widely accepted notions. Ehrlich challenges the so-called "selfish gene" and other tenets of evolutionary psychology in his wide-ranging new book , Human Natures: Genes, Cultures and the Human Prospect (Shearwater Books/Island Press, Washington, D.C.).

113. SPSP :: Evolutionary Psychology Pre-Conference
We propose that one feature of this evolved psychology is a cognitive system that computes “cascading benefits,” the extent to which delivering benefits to
http://www2.hawaii.edu/~lieberma/spsp/html/speakers.htm
Clark Barrett website , University of California Los Angeles
Why Modularity is Indispensable to Psychology: A Modified Fodorian Approach
Roy Baumeister website , Florida State University
Might Culture Have Influenced Evolution?
Although most specific cultural differences are regarded as of too recent origin to have affected human genes, culture per se has a much longer history and may predate the human species. The first part of this talk will provide a brief overview of the argument that human nature can be effectively understood as having been selected to create and sustain culture. In a sense, culture can be understood as the main biological strategy of humankind. Culture builds on sociality but takes it in radically new directions, including exchange relationships. Exchange relationships, of the sort that make possible a market economy, are underappreciated by social psychologists but represent a key to human success. The second part of this talk will explore the evolutionary requirements for making a species capable of flexible exchange relationships.
Elaine Hatfield website , University of Hawaii
Love in the Afternoon
In the 1970s, Russell Clark and I conducted a study designed to explore “Gender Differences in Receptivity to Sexual Offers.” As predicted, we found that while men were eager to engage in casual sex, women were not. A firestorm of criticism greeted our first attempts to publish these “controversial” findings. Since then, attention in a wide variety of manifestations has been lavished on the study. It has inspired rock songs, novels, many TV replications, and lots of new research; and the controversy that this small study set off continues right to this day. I will conclude by offering some ideas about the direction of future research in this provocative and rich area.

114. Neil Levy Reviews Evolutionary Psychology: The Ultimate Origins Of Human Behavio
evolutionary psychology (EP) is barely a decade old, yet already there are several textbooks available designed to give students an overview of the discipline. This is a worthy addition to the range according to Neil Levy.
http://human-nature.com/nibbs/02/palmer.html
Home - Human Nature Review The Human Nature Daily Review Online Dictionary Of Mental Health What is New? Search Feedback Guestbook Free Electronic Books Darwin and Darwinism Science as Culture Free Associations Human Relations, Authority and Justice Kleinian Studies Against All Reason Burying Freud The Seduction Theory Amazon.com Amazon.co.uk The Origin of Species The Expression of the Emotions The Voyage of the Beagle The Descent of Man T.H.Huxley Autobiography Discourse on the Method The Varieties of Religious Experience Proposed Roads to Freedom The Warfare of Science with Theology Psychoanalytic Aesthetics Unfree Associations Mind, Brain and Adaptation Darwin's Metaphor Mental Space The Culture of British Psychoanalysis Whatever Happened to Human Nature? Group Relations Lost for Words The Story of a Mental Hospital Victims of Memory Consilience: The Unity of Knowledge The Evolution of Human Sex Differences How the Mind Works Fashionable Nonsense The Biotech Century Process Press Robert M. Young - Home Page Robert M. Young - Index of Papers Evolutionary Psychology Mental Health Research Radical Science Human Nature Books Human Nature Information Object Relations European Psychotherapy Psychoanalytic Studies Science as Culture Human Nature Review ISSN 1476-1084 Table of Contents What's New Search Feedback ... Search for papers by Levy, N.

115. University Of New England - NEI - New England Institute
evolutionary psychology understands the human mind and behavior in the context of its biological origins. A sustained dialogue between these disciplines and
http://www.une.edu/nei/
University of New England
Return to Home
NEI
The New England Institute is an initiative by the College of Arts and Sciences of the University of New England to foster research and education into the interdisciplinary nexus of cognitive science and evolutionary psychology. Cognitive science investigates the deep structure of mental processes. Evolutionary psychology understands the human mind and behavior in the context of its biological origins. A sustained dialogue between these disciplines and other fields including the humanities is long overdue and timely. International in scope, NEI provides a unique platform for interdisciplinary dialogue and constructive debate. It offers a varied and topical program of events for academics, researchers, practitioners, and the general public, including: Seminars Public Lectures Workshops Courses Back to Top
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116. Alas Poor Evolutionary Psychology: Unfairly Accused, Unjustly Condemned By Rober
Book review of Alas Poor Darwin , by Robert Kurzban. Assesses five charges against evolutionary psychology genetic determinism, panadaptationism, unfalsifiable hypotheses, proximate explanations, and ideological bias.
http://human-nature.com/nibbs/02/apd.html
Home - Human Nature Review The Human Nature Daily Review Online Dictionary Of Mental Health What is New? Search Feedback Guestbook Free Electronic Books Darwin and Darwinism Science as Culture Free Associations Human Relations, Authority and Justice Kleinian Studies Against All Reason Burying Freud The Seduction Theory Amazon.com Amazon.co.uk The Origin of Species The Expression of the Emotions The Voyage of the Beagle The Descent of Man T.H.Huxley Autobiography Discourse on the Method The Varieties of Religious Experience Proposed Roads to Freedom The Warfare of Science with Theology Psychoanalytic Aesthetics Unfree Associations Mind, Brain and Adaptation Darwin's Metaphor Mental Space The Culture of British Psychoanalysis Whatever Happened to Human Nature? Group Relations Lost for Words The Story of a Mental Hospital Victims of Memory Consilience: The Unity of Knowledge The Evolution of Human Sex Differences How the Mind Works Fashionable Nonsense The Biotech Century Process Press Robert M. Young - Home Page Robert M. Young - Index of Papers Evolutionary Psychology Mental Health Research Radical Science Human Nature Books Human Nature Information Object Relations European Psychotherapy Psychoanalytic Studies Science as Culture Human Nature Review ISSN 1476-1084 Table of Contents What's New Search Feedback ... Search for papers by Kurzban, R.

117. Criticisms Of Evolutionary Psychology Aren’t Necessarily Specific To Evolutiona
Coyne then turns his attention to evolutionary psychology The problem is that evolutionary psychology suffers from the scientific equivalent of
http://www.idthink.net/back/coyne/
The Universal Acid Becomes Too Universal By Mike Gene ( I think it is quite clear the blind watchmaker mechanism (random mutation and natural selection, or as James Shapiro describes it, “accidental changes captured by selection”) exists and has been involved in evolution. It has also played a crucial role in many evolutionary events. But does the blind watchmaker mechanism really describe the essence of evolution? Those who think so can be described as “UltraDarwinists.” The UltraDarwinist may recognize other aspects of evolution (such as Neutral Theory), but to them, evolution is essentially synonymous with the blind watchmaker. As such, UltraDarwinists are predisposed to coming up with adaptation stories. While many such stories may be plausible, and even accurate, the problem is that one can tell such a story that has a ring of truth, yet it does not intersect with truth. Adaptation stories are incredibly easy to invent after the fact, making it very easy to misuse them in an ad hoc sense.

118. Evolutionary Psychology's Anti-Semite Judith Shulevitz
What scares people about the trial going on in London over whether Jewish historian Deborah Lipstadt libeled Holocaust denier David Irving by calling him a
http://slate.msn.com/id/1004446/
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culturebox Arts, entertainment, and more.
Evolutionary Psychology's Anti-Semite

Judith Shulevitz
Posted Monday, Jan. 24, 2000, at 7:35 AM PT
What scares people about the trial going on in London over whether Jewish historian Deborah Lipstadt libeled Holocaust denier David Irving by calling him a liar is that British law requires Lipstadt to show that her statement was true. If she can't prove beyond a doubt that the Holocaust took place, Irving might win. That would be a devastating blow to historical accuracy if it happens, but Culturebox thinks it won't. There's a lot of truth on Lipstadt's side, and very little on Irving's. Plus Lipstadt has one of the best lawyers in London and is planning to call several heavyweight scholars to testify. Irving, on the other hand, is acting as his own lawyer and so far has named very few witnesses and experts, none of whom anyone has ever heard of. If Irving doesn't appear to be taking the necessary steps to win, why else might he have brought the lawsuit? For publicity, is the obvious answerto air his own views, as well as those of his witnesses. And that's what scares Culturebox. Irving's claim that there were no gas chambers at Auschwitz is bad enough, but since it bears directly on the question of his truthfulness, it will be refuted on the spot. Irving's experts, on the other hand, are being called to testify on issues tangential to the case, and their twisted theories could well go unanswered. One expert, John Fox, the former editor of a British Holocaust journal, will probably argue that Lipstadt and the Jews are trying to shut down free discussion of the Holocaust. Irving's other expert is an American professor named Kevin MacDonald, whose ideas about Jews have almost no relevance to the case but represent the broadest, ugliest, and most vicious anti-Semitism passing for scholarship in this country today.

119. Psychology Cool-Links (Page 1): The UW-RF Mega Site
Jump to links on Animal/Behavioral/Comparative/evolutionary psychology This colorful site addresses the field of evolutionary psychology across many
http://www.uwrf.edu/psych/Coollinksmain.html
The following are psychology-related links reviewed and recommended by University of Wisconsin - River Falls Psychology faculty member, Dr. Brad Caskey. When exploring these links, remember that you can return to this page by hitting the back key. Also, if you have any suggestions for additional sites or if a link is not functioning correctly, please drop Dr. Caskey an e-mail message at Bradley.J.Caskey@uwrf.edu.
To view the sites simply use to scroll bar arrow to move up and down. To reach a site on a specific topic please click on the appropriate "jump link" listed below! Jump to links on Animal/Behavioral/Comparative/Evolutionary Psychology
Jump to links on
Jump to links on Cognitive Psychology (e.g., memory, perception)
Jump to links on
Jump to links on
Jump to links on
LINKS TO THE FOLLOWING TOPICS ARE LOCATED ON PAGE 2 OF PSYCHOLOGY COOL-LINKS. Click Jump to Page 2 of Psychology Cool-Links to visit this page! Links on Animal/Behavioral/Comparative/Evolutionary Psychology
Animal Behavioral Society - Educational Resources

Animal loves rejoice, a great new site has joined the psychology cool-links network.
"WOW!" is one word to describe this colorful, engaging, and informative site dedicated to the issue of animal training and conditioning theories of psychology. While brief, the site does a nice job of explaining sometimes difficult concepts of positive reinforcement, negative reinforcement, positive punishment, and negative punishment.

120. Shackelford PSY 4810 Syllabus
evolutionary psychology provides a new and often insightful perspective to all We will address how evolutionary psychology sheds light on the phenomena
http://www.psy.fau.edu/classes/Fall2002/ShackelfordPSY4810.htm

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