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Contents of Vol. 8, No. 1 (March 2008)
Deanna Barch
Editorial: Keeping the “cognitive” in cognitive neuroscience, the “affective” in affective neuroscience, and the “behavioral” in behavioral neuroscience: The CABN mission for the next five years
pp. 1–2
Edward E. Smith
The case for implicit category learning
pp. 3–6
Chad J. Marsolek & E. Darcy Burgund
Dissociable neural subsystems underlie visual working memory for abstract categories and specific exemplars
pp. 17–24
Sakiko Yoshikawa & Wataru Sato
Dynamic facial expressions of emotion induce representational momentum
pp. 25–31
Youssef Ezzyat & Ingrid R. Olson
The medial temporal lobe and visual working memory: Comparisons across tasks, delays, and visual similarity
pp. 32–40
Manuel G. Calvo & Pedro Avero
Affective priming of emotional pictures in parafoveal vision: Left visual field advantage
pp. 41–53
Stephanie D. Preston & R. Brent Stansfield
I know how you feel: Task-irrelevant facial expressions are spontaneously processed at a semantic level
pp. 54–64
Bettina Forster & Enea F. Pavone
Electrophysiological correlates of crossmodal visual distractor congruency effects: Evidence for response conflict
pp. 65–73
Kerstin Jost, Ulrich Mayr, & Frank Rösler
Is task switching nothing but cue priming? Evidence from ERPs
pp. 74–84
Selene Cansino & Patricia Trejo-Morales
Neurophysiology of successful encoding and retrieval of source memory
pp. 85–98
Hannah S. Locke & Todd S. Braver
Motivational influences on cognitive control: Behavior, brain activation, and individual differences
pp. 99–112
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