•  22
    A physiological control theory of food intake in the rat: Mark 1
    with F. M. Toates
    Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 3 (6): 442-444. 1974.
    Signals to the brain from the flows of energy around the body, varied primarily by declining amounts of food energy in the stomach, can explain the pattern of meals in the laboratory rat, the differences between dark and light phases, and the development of obesity ion the rat wioth VMH lesions but normal sating.
  •  470
    How a mind works. I, II, III
    ResearchGate Personal Profile. 2013.
    Abstract (for the combined three Parts) This paper presents the simplest known theory of processes involved in a person’s unconscious and conscious achievements such as intending, perceiving, reacting and thinking. The basic principle is that an individual has mental states which possess quantitative causal powers and are susceptible to influences from other mental states. Mental performance discriminates the present level of a situational feature from its level in an individually acquired, mul…Read more
  •  356
    How did that individual make that perceptual decision?
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 41. 2018.
    Suboptimality of decision making needs no explanation. High level accounts of suboptimality in diverse tasks cannot add up to a mechanistic theory of perceptual decision making. Mental processes operate on the contents of information brought by the experimenter and the participant to the task, not on the amount of information in the stimuli without regard to physical and social context.
  •  10
    Some individuals have a neurogenetic vulnerability to developing strong facilitation of ingestive movements by learned configurations of biosocial stimuli. Condemning food as addictive is mere polemic, ignoring the contextualised sensory control of the mastication of each mouthful. To beat obesity, the least fattening of widely recognised eating patterns need to be measured and supported.
  •  432
    Phenomenology is art, not psychological or neural science
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 26 (4): 408-409. 2003.
    It is tough to relate visual perception or other achievements to physiological processing in the central nervous system. The diagrammatic, algebraic, and verbal pictures of how sights seem to Lehar do not advance understanding of how we manage to see what is in the world. There are well-known conceptual reasons why no such purely introspective approach can be productive.
  •  16
    Is thirst largely an acquired specific appetite?
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 2 (1): 103-104. 1979.
    [Author's summmary, 2020]. Motivation specifically to drink (ingest watery materials) is widely assumed (still) to be innate, i.e. independent of exposure to fluids in contexts and sensory, somatic and/or social effects of their consumption. This comment floats the idea that human infants learn to differentiate textures of low-energy fluids from semi-solid and solid foods after they begin to be weaned from milk as sole drink and food.
  •  20
    Recognition of objects by physical attributes
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 17 (4): 759-760. 1994.
    [Comment, pp 759-780] Lockhead (1992) [Target Article] is undoubtedly right to attack so-called intensity scaling or the estimation of subjective magnitudes as an invalid perversion of tasks requiring quantitative judgments of aspects of objects, stuffs, and situations. He goes too far, however, in claiming that feature scales do not exist... ... A perceived physical pattern (sensory feature or channel) and the cognitive process that integrates it with its context are characterized by determin…Read more
  •  27
    A long stride towards sense in psychology
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 1 (1): 54-55. 1978.
    Learnt incentive controls behaviour, not indiscriminate rewarded rreponding
  •  104
    Money as tool, money as resource: The biology of collecting items for their own sake
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 29 (2): 180-181. 2006.
    Money does not stimulate receptors in mimicry of natural agonists; so, by definition, money is not a drug. Attractions of money other than to purchase goods and services could arise from instincts similar to hoarding in other species. Instinctual activities without evolutionary function include earning a billion and writing for BBS. (Published Online April 5 2006).
  •  66
    Salty, bitter, sweet and sour survive unscathed
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 31 (1): 76-77. 2008.
    Types of sensory receptor can only be identified by multidimensional discrimination of a familiar version of a sensed object from variants that disconfound putative types. By that criterion, there is as yet no evidence against just the four classic types of gustatory receptor, for sodium salts, alkaloids, sugars, and proton donors
  •  19
    Can verbal theorising cope?
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 4 (4): 576-577. 1981.
    [Author's summary] Statement of empirical theory solely in words does not check if the theorising is effective in explaining observations, or even if it is self-consistent. It is important to complement words with a quantitative model that converts inputs to outputs through known mediating processes, although assumption and even the meanings of the model's terms remain open to challenge.
  •  30
    Mind-brain puzzle versus mind-physical world identity
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 1 (3): 348-349. 1978.
    To maintain my neutral monist or multi-aspect view of human reality (or indeed to defend the Cartesian dualism assumed by Puccetti & Dykes, it is wrong to relate the mind to the brain alone. A person's mind should be related to the physical environment, including the body, in addition to the brain. Furthermore, we are unlikely to understand the detailed functioning of an individual brain without knowing the history of its interactions with the external and internal environments during that perso…Read more
  •  11
    Appetite: Neural and Behavioural Bases (edited book)
    with Charles R. Legg
    Oxford University Press UK. 1994.
    This is the first book to deal with both the psychological and neurobiological mechanisms in appetites for drugs, food, sex, and gambling, and considers whether there are common factors between them. The authors approach this by looking at the bases of both normal and abnormal appetites in humans. The focus on human appetites will be of great interest to psychologists and clinicians alike.The EBBS Publications Series is designed to provide researchers and students with authoritative, topical rev…Read more
  •  35
    How observations on oneself can be scientific
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 27 (2): 262-263. 2004.
    The design and interpretation of self-experimentation need to be integrated with existing scientific knowledge. Otherwise observations on oneself cannot make a creative contribution to the advance of empirical understanding.