Open Peer Commentary
Colic and the early crying curve: A developmental account
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- 14 February 2005, pp. 476-477
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Authors' Response
The developmental mechanisms and the signal functions of early infant crying
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- 14 February 2005, pp. 477-490
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Research Article
Prelinguistic evolution in early hominins: Whence motherese?
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- 14 February 2005, pp. 491-503
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Open Peer Commentary
Prelinguistic evolution and motherese: A hypothesis on the neural substrates
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- 14 February 2005, pp. 503-504
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Mothering plus vocalization doesn't equal language
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- 14 February 2005, pp. 504-505
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Which came first: Infants learning language or motherese?
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- 14 February 2005, pp. 505-506
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How plausible is the motherese hypothesis?
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- 14 February 2005, pp. 506-507
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Bipedalism, canine tooth reduction, and obligatory tool use
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- 14 February 2005, pp. 507-508
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Hominin infant decentration hypothesis: Mirror neurons system adapted to subserve mother-centered participation
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- 14 February 2005, pp. 508-509
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Prosody does not equal language
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- 14 February 2005, p. 509
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Early hominins, utterance-activity, and niche construction
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- 14 February 2005, pp. 509-510
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Continuity, displaced reference, and deception
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- 14 February 2005, pp. 510-511
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Syntax: An evolutionary stepchild
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- 14 February 2005, pp. 511-512
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Motherese is but one part of a ritualized, multimodal, temporally organized, affiliative interaction
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- 14 February 2005, pp. 512-513
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Chimpanzees are not proto-hominins and early human mothers may not have foraged alone
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- 14 February 2005, p. 513
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Aspects of human language: Where motherese?
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- 14 February 2005, p. 514
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Beyond prosody and infant-directed speech: Affective, social construction of meaning in the origins of language
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- 14 February 2005, p. 515
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Trickle-up phonetics: A vocal role for the infant
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- 14 February 2005, p. 516
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In the beginning was the song: The complex multimodal timing of mother-infant musical interaction
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- 14 February 2005, pp. 516-517
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Baby talk and the emergence of first words
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- 14 February 2005, pp. 517-518
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