Editorial-Board Tics

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June 2011 Volume 15, Number 6 pp.

241–288

Editor
Update
Stavroula Kousta
Executive Editor, Neuroscience Letters
Katja Brose 241 Frontal pole function: what is specifically Etienne Koechlin
Journal Manager human?
Rolf van der Sanden
Journal Administrator
242 Frontopolar cortex: constraints for theorizing Paul W. Burgess
Myarca Bonsink
Letters Response
Advisory Editorial Board 243 Appreciating the differences: response to Satoshi Tsujimoto and Aldo Genovesio
R. Adolphs, Caltech, CA, USA
R. Baillargeon, U. Illinois, IL, USA
Burgess
N. Chater, University of Warwick, UK
P. Dayan, University College London, UK Book Review
S. Dehaene, INSERM, France 244 From theory of mind to divine minds. Review Justin L. Barrett
D. Dennett, Tufts U., MA, USA of: The Belief Instinct: The Psychology of
J. Driver, University College, London, UK
Y. Dudai, Weizmann Institute, Israel
Souls, Destiny and the Meaning of Life
A.K. Engel, Hamburg University, Germany (by Jesse Bering)
M. Farah, U. Pennsylvania, PA, USA
S. Fiske, Princeton U., NJ, USA
A.D. Friederici, MPI, Leipzig, Germany Opinion
O. Hikosaka, NIH, MD, USA
R. Jackendoff, Tufts U., MA, USA 246 The Interactive Account of ventral Cathy J. Price and Joseph T. Devlin
P. Johnson-Laird, Princeton U., NJ, USA occipitotemporal contributions to reading
N. Kanwisher, MIT, MA, USA
C. Koch, Caltech, CA, USA 254 The unique role of the visual word form Stanislas Dehaene and
M. Kutas, UCSD, CA, USA area in reading Laurent Cohen
N.K. Logothetis, MPI, Tübingen, Germany
J.L. McClelland, Stanford U., CA, USA
E.K. Miller, MIT, MA, USA
E. Phelps, New York U., NY, USA Review
R. Poldrack, U. Texas Austin, TX, USA 263 The role of testosterone in social Christoph Eisenegger,
M.E. Raichle, Washington U., MO, USA
interaction Johannes Haushofer and Ernst Fehr
T.W. Robbins, U. Cambridge, UK
A. Wagner, Stanford U., CA, USA 272 Reciprocal relations between cognitive Birte U. Forstmann,
V. Walsh, University College, London, UK
neuroscience and formal cognitive Eric-Jan Wagenmakers, Tom Eichele,
Editorial Enquiries models: opposites attract? Scott Brown and John T. Serences
Trends in Cognitive Sciences
Cell Press 280 Stress and emotional memory: a matter of Marian Joëls, Guillen Fernandez and
600 Technology Square timing Benno Roozendaal
Cambridge, MA 02139, USA
Tel: +1 617 397 2817
Fax: +1 617 397 2810
E-mail: tics@elsevier.com

Cover: Traditionally, testosterone was linked to physical aggression. Recent evidence, however, suggests a more refined
view of the role of testosterone in social interactions. On pages 263–271, Christoph Eisenegger, Johannes Haushofer and
Ernst Fehr review recent exogenous testosterone administration studies, which suggest a causal role of testosterone in
social status seeking behaviors. Cover image: Influx Productions/Stone/Getty Images.

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