•  69
    Nature and nurture in the development of social smiling
    Philosophical Psychology 21 (3). 2008.
    Research on the origins of human social smiling is presented as a case study of how a species-specific, species-typical behavior may emerge from thousands of momentary events in which a continuously changing biological organism acts to make, respond to, and learn from its experience.
  •  83
    The goal of this paper is both modest and ambitious. The modest goal is to show that intercountry adoption should be considered by ethicists and healthcare providers. The more ambitious goal is to introduce the many ethical issues that intercountry adoption raises. Intercountry adoption is an alternative to medical, assisted reproduction option such as in vitro fertilization (IVF), intracytoplasmic sperm injection, third party egg and sperm donation and surrogacy. Health care providers working w…Read more
  •  87
    Whose DAM account? Attentional learning explains Booth and Waxman
    with Linda B. Smith, Hanako Yoshida, and Eliana Colunga
    Cognition 87 (3): 209-213. 2003.
  •  63
    When One Size Does Not Fit All: A Commentary
    Narrative Inquiry in Bioethics 4 (2): 125-128. 2014.
    This commentary explores a few of the common threads in a symposium of obesity narratives in light of the American Medical Association’s classification of obesity as a disease. While the narratives illustrate the breadth of experiences, they each highlight the absence of a clear approach for the treatment of obesity, as well as the lack of conversation and compassion in the most basic of interactions with medical professionals. This could be cause for despair, yet we learn through these shared e…Read more
  • Medieval Yorkshire Towns: People, Buildings and Spaces (review)
    The Medieval Review 10. 2002.