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Connection Science, Volume 17
Volume 17, Number 1-2, March-June 2005
- Kathryn J. Jeffery

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Computational and biological perspectives on the problem of navigation. 1-4 - Ken Cheng

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Reflections on geometry and navigation. 5-21 - Naoya Ohnishi, Atsushi Imiya:

Featureless robot navigation using optical flow. 23-46 - Andrew Vardy, Ralf Möller

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Biologically plausible visual homing methods based on optical flow techniques. 47-89 - Hans G. Wallraff:

Beyond familiar landmarks and integrated routes: goal-oriented navigation by birds. 91-106 - Paul A. Dudchenko, Catriona Bruce:

Navigation without landmarks: Can rats use a sense of direction to return to a home site? 107-125 - Anatoli Gorchetchnikov, Michael E. Hasselmo

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A biophysical implementation of a bidirectional graph search algorithm to solve multiple goal navigation tasks. 145-164 - Gerard M. Martin, John H. Evans, Carolyn W. Harley, Darlene M. Skinner:

Lost in time: rats are unable to return to a start location that varies. 127-144 - Ricardo Chavarriaga

, Thomas Strösslin, Denis Sheynikhovich
, Wulfram Gerstner
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Competition between cue response and place response: a model of rat navigation behaviour. 167-183
Volume 17, Number 3-4, September-December 2005
- Angelo Cangelosi

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The emergence of language: neural and adaptive agent models. 185-190 - Brian MacWhinney:

The emergence of linguistic form in time. 191-211 - Luc Steels

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The emergence and evolution of linguistic structure: from lexical to grammatical communication systems. 213-230 - Stefano Nolfi:

Emergence of communication in embodied agents: co-adapting communicative and non-communicative behaviours. 231-248 - Frédéric Kaplan

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Simple models of distributed co-ordination. 249-270 - Mark Bartlett, Dimitar Kazakov:

The origins of syntax: from navigation to language. 271-288 - Peter Ford Dominey

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Emergence of grammatical constructions: evidence from simulation and grounded agent experiments. 289-306 - Marco Mirolli

, Domenico Parisi:
How can we explain the emergence of a language that benefits the hearer but not the speaker? 307-324 - Pierre-Yves Oudeyer:

The self-organization of combinatoriality and phonotactics in vocalization systems. 325-341 - Simone Kühn, Holk Cruse:

Static mental representations in recurrent neural networks for the control of dynamic behavioural sequences. 343-360 - Frank van der Velde:

Modelling language development and evolution with the benefit of hindsight. 361-379 - Chen Yu

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The emergence of links between lexical acquisition and object categorization: a computational study. 381-397

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