Book Read Free

The Mind's Eye

Page 22

by Oliver Sacks


  BIBLIOGRAPHY

  Abbott, Edwin A. 1884. Flatland: A Romance of Many Dimensions. Reprint, New York: Dover, 1992.

  Aguirre, Geoffrey K., and Mark D’Esposito. 1997. Environmental knowledge is subserved by separable dorsal/ventral neural areas. Journal of Neuroscience 17 (7): 2512–18.

  Bach-y-Rita, Paul. 1972. Brain Mechanisms in Sensory Substitution. New York: Academic Press.

  Bach-y-Rita, Paul, and Stephen W. Kercel. 2003. Sensory substitution and the human-machine interface. Trends in Cognitive Sciences 7 (12): 541–46.

  Barry, Susan R. 2009. Fixing My Gaze: A Scientist’s Journey into Seeing in Three Dimensions. New York: Basic Books.

  Benson, D. Frank, R. Jeffrey Davis, and Bruce D. Snyder. 1988. Posterior cortical atrophy. Archives of Neurology 45 (7): 789–93.

  Benson, D. Frank, and Norman Geschwind. 1969. The alexias. In Handbook of Clinical Neurology, vol. 4, ed. P. J. Vinken and G. W. Bruyn, pp. 112–40. Amsterdam: Elsevier.

  Benton, Arthur L. 1964. Contributions to aphasia before Broca. Cortex 1:314–27.

  Berker, Ennis Ata, Ata Husnu Berker, and Aaron Smith. 1986. Translation of Broca’s 1865 report: localization of speech in the third left frontal convolution. Archives of Neurology 43: 1065–72.

  Bértolo, H. 2005. Visual imagery without visual perception? Psicológica 26: 173–88.

  Bértolo, H., T. Paiva, L. Pessoa, T. Mestre, R. Marques, and R. Santos. 2003. Visual dream content, graphical representation and EEG alpha activity in congenitally blind subjects. Brain Research/Cognitive Brain Research 15 (3): 277–84.

  Beversdorf, David Q., and Kenneth M. Heilman. 1998. Progressive ventral posterior cortical degeneration presenting as alexia for music and words. Neurology 50: 657–59.

  Bigley, G. Kim, and Frank R. Sharp. 1983. Reversible alexia without agraphia due to migraine. Archives of Neurology 40: 114–15.

  Bisiach, E., and C. Luzzatti. 1978. Unilateral neglect of representational space. Cortex 14 (1): 129–33.

  Bodamer, Joachim. 1947. Die Prosop-agnosie. Archiv für Psychiatrie und Nervenkrankheiten 179: 6–53.

  Borges, Jorge Luis. 1984. Memories of a trip to Japan. In Twenty-four Conversations with Borges, ed. Roberto Alifano. Housatonic, MA: Lascaux Publishers.

  Brady, Frank B. 2004. A Singular View: The Art of Seeing with One Eye. 6th ed. Vienna, VA: Michael O. Hughes.

  Brewster, David. 1856. The Stereoscope: Its History, Theory and Construction. London: John Murray.

  Campbell, Ruth. 1992. Face to face: interpreting a case of developmental prosopagnosia. In Mental Lives: Case Studies in Cognition, ed. Ruth Campbell, pp. 216–36. Oxford: Blackwell.

  Changizi, Mark. 2009. The Vision Revolution. Dallas: BenBella Books.

  Changizi, Mark A., Qiong Zhang, Hao Ye, and Shinsuke Shimojo. 2006. The structures of letters and symbols throughout human history are selected to match those found in objects in natural scenes. American Naturalist 167 (5): E117–39.

  Charcot, J. M. 1889. Clinical Lectures on Diseases of the Nervous System. Vol. III, contains Lecture XI, “On a case of word-blindness,” and Lecture XIII, “On a case of sudden and isolated suppression of the mental vision of signs and objects (forms and colours).” London: New Sydenham Society.

  Chebat, Daniel-Robert, Constant Rainville, Ron Kupers, and Maurice Ptito. 2007. Tactile-“visual” acuity of the tongue in early blind individuals. NeuroReport 18: 1901–04.

  Cisne, John. 2009. Stereoscopic comparison as the long-lost secret to microscopically detailed illumination like the Book of Kells. Perception 38 (7): 1087–1103.

  Cohen, Leonardo G., Pablo Celnik, Alvaro Pascual-Leone, Brian Corwell, Lala Faiz, James Dambrosia, Manabu Honda, Norihiro Sadato, Christian Gerloff, M. Dolores Catalá, and Mark Hallett. 1997. Functional relevance of cross-modal plasticity in blind humans. Nature 389: 180–83.

  Critchley, Macdonald. 1951. Types of visual perseveration: “paliopsia” and “illusory visual spread.” Brain 74: 267–98.

  ———. 1953. The Parietal Lobes. New York: Hafner.

  ———. 1962. Dr. Samuel Johnson’s aphasia. Medical History 6: 27–44.

  Damasio, Antonio R. 2005. A mechanism for impaired fear recognition after amygdala damage. Nature 433 (7021): 22–23.

  Damasio, Antonio R., and Hanna Damasio. 1983. The anatomic basis of pure alexia. Neurology 33: 1573–83.

  Damasio, Antonio, Hanna Damasio, and Gary W. Van Hoesen. 1982. Prosopagnosia: Anatomic basis and behavioral mechanisms. Neurology 32: 331.

  Darwin, Charles. 1887. The Autobiography of Charles Darwin, 1809–1882. Reprint, New York: W. W. Norton, 1993.

  Dehaene, Stanislas. 1999. The Number Sense. New York: Oxford University Press.

  ———. 2009. Reading in the Brain: The Science and Evolution of a Human Invention. New York: Viking.

  Déjerine, J. 1892. Contribution à l’étude anatomo-pathologique et clinique des différentes variétés de cécité verbale. Mémoires de la Société de Biology 4: 61–90.

  Della Sala, Sergio, and Andrew W. Young. 2003. Quaglino’s 1867 case of prosopagnosia. Cortex 39: 533–40.

  Devinsky, Orrin. 2009. Delusional misidentifications and duplications. Neurology 72: 80–87.

  Devinsky, Orrin, Lila Davachi, Cornelia Santchi, Brian T. Quinn, Bernhard P. Staresina, and Thomas Thesen. 2010. Hyperfamiliarity for faces. Neurology 74: 970–74.

  Devinsky, Orrin, Martha J. Farah, and William B. Barr. 2008. Visual agnosia. In Handbook of Clinical Neurology, ed. Georg Goldenberg and Bruce Miller, vol. 88: 417–27.

  Donald, Merlin. 1991. Origins of the Modern Mind: Three Stages in the Evolution of Culture and Cognition. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.

  Duchaine, Bradley, Laura Germine, and Ken Nakayama. 2007. Family resemblance: Ten family members with prosopagnosia and within-class object agnosia. Cognitive Neuropsychology 24 (4): 419–30.

  Duchaine, Bradley, and Ken Nakayama. 2005. Dissociations of face and object recognition in developmental prosopagnosia. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience 172: 249–61.

  Eling, Paul, ed. 1994. Reader in the History of Aphasia: From Franz Gall to Norman Geschwind. Philadelphia: John Benjamins.

  Ellinwood, Everett H., Jr. 1969. Perception of faces: disorders in organic and psychopathological states. Psychiatric Quarterly 43 (4): 622–46.

  Ellis, Hadyn D., and Melanie Florence. 1990. Bodamer’s (1947) paper on prosopagnosia. Cognitive Neuropsychology 7 (2): 81–105.

  Engel, Howard. 2005. Memory Book. Toronto: Penguin Canada.

  ———. 2007. The Man Who Forgot How to Read. Toronto: HarperCollins.

  Etcoff, Nancy, Paul Ekman, John J. Magee, and Mark G. Frank. 2000. Lie detection and language comprehension. Nature 405: 139.

  Farah, Martha. 2004. Visual Agnosia, 2nd ed. Cambridge: MIT Press/Bradford Books.

  Farah, Martha, Michael J. Soso, and Richard M. Dasheiff. 1992. Visual angle of the mind’s eye before and after unilateral occipital lobectomy. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance 18 (1): 241–46.

  ffytche, D. H., R. J. Howard, M. J. Brammer, A. David, P. Woodruff, and S. Williams. 1998. The anatomy of conscious vision: an fMRI study of visual hallucinations. Nature Neuroscience 1 (8): 738–42.

  ffytche, D. H., J. M. Lappin, and M. Philpot. 2004. Visual command hallucinations in a patient with pure alexia. Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery and Psychiatry 75: 80–86.

  Fleishman, John A., John D. Segall, and Frank P. Judge, Jr. 1983. Isolated transient alexia: A migrainous accompaniment. Archives of Neurology 40: 115–16.

  Fraser, J. T. 1987. Time, the Familiar Stranger. Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press. (See also Foreword to the 1989 Braille edition, Stuart, FL: Triformation Braille Service.)

  Freiwald, Winrich A., Doris Y. Tsao, and Margaret S. Livingstone. 2009. A face feature space in the macaque temporal lobe. Nature Neuroscience 12 (9): 1187–96.

  Galton, Francis. 1883. Inquiries into Human Faculty and Its Development. London: Macmilla
n.

  Garrido, Lucia, Nicholas Furl, Bogdan Draganski, Nikolaus Weiskopf, John Stevens, Geoffrey Chern-Yee Tan, Jon Driver, Ray J. Dolan, and Bradley Duchaine. 2009. Voxel-based morphometry reveals reduced grey matter volume in the temporal cortex of developmental prosopagnosics. Brain 132: 3443–55.

  Gauthier, Isabel, Pawel Skudlarski, John C. Gore, and Adam W. Anderson. 2000. Expertise for cars and birds recruits brain areas involved in face recognition. Nature Neuroscience 3 (2): 191–97.

  Gauthier, Isabel, Michael J. Tarr, and Daniel Bub, eds. 2010. Perceptual Expertise: Bridging Brain and Behavior. New York: Oxford University Press.

  Gibson, James J. 1950. The Perception of the Visual World. Boston: Houghton Mifflin.

  Goldberg, Elkhonon. 1989. Gradiential approach to neocortical functional organization. Journal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology 11 (4): 489–517.

  ———. 2009. The New Executive Brain: Frontal Lobes in a Complex World. New York: Oxford University Press.

  Gould, Stephen Jay. 1980. The Panda’s Thumb. New York: W. W. Norton.

  Grandin, Temple. 1996. Thinking in Pictures: And Other Reports from My Life with Autism. New York: Vintage.

  Gregory, R. L. 1980. Perceptions as hypotheses. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, London B 290: 181–97.

  Gross, C. G. 1999. Brain, Vision, Memory: Tales in the History of Neuroscience. Cambridge: MIT Press/Bradford Books.

  ———. 2010. Making sense of printed symbols. Science 327: 524–25.

  Gross, C. G., D. B. Bender, C. E. Rocha-Miranda. 1969. Visual receptive fields of neurons in inferotemporal cortex of the monkey. Science 166: 1303–6.

  Gross, C. G., C. E. Rocha-Miranda, and D. B. Bender. 1972. Visual properties of neurons in inferotemporal cortex of the macaque. Journal of Neurophysiology 35: 96–111.

  Hadamard, Jacques. 1954. The Psychology of Invention in the Mathematical Field. New York: Dover.

  Hale, Sheila. 2007. The Man Who Lost His Language: A Case of Aphasia. London and Philadelphia: Jessica Kingsley.

  Hamblyn, Richard. 2001. The Invention of Clouds: How an Amateur Meteorologist Forged the Language of the Skies. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux.

  Harrington, Anne. 1987. Medicine, Mind, and the Double Brain: A Study in Nineteenth-Century Thought. Princeton: Princeton University Press.

  Head, Henry. 1926. Aphasia and Kindred Disorders of Speech. 2 vols. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

  Head, Henry, and Gordon Holmes. 1911. Sensory disturbances from cerebral lesions. Brain 34: 102–254.

  Hefter, Rebecca L., Dara S. Manoach, and Jason J. S. Barton. 2005. Perception of facial expression and facial identity in subjects with social developmental disorders. Neurology 65: 1620–25.

  Holmes, Oliver Wendell. 1861. Sun painting and sun sculpture. Atlantic Monthly 8: 13–29.

  Hubel, David H., and Torsten N. Wiesel. 2005. Brain and Visual Perception: The Story of a 25-Year Collaboration. New York: Oxford University Press.

  Hull, John. 1991. Touching the Rock: An Experience of Blindness. New York: Pantheon.

  Humphreys, Glyn W., ed. 1999. Case Studies in the Neuropsychology of Vision. East Sussex: Psychology Press.

  Judd, Tedd, Howard Gardner, and Norman Geschwind. 1983. Alexia without agraphia in a composer. Brain 106: 435–57.

  Julesz, Bela. 1971. Foundations of Cyclopean Perception. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

  Kanwisher, Nancy, Josh McDermott, and Marvin M. Chun. 1997. The fusiform face area: a module in human extrastriate cortex specialized for face perception. Journal of Neuroscience 17 (11): 4302–11.

  Kapur, Narinder, ed. 1997. Injured Brains of Medical Minds: Views from Within. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

  Karinthy, Frigyes. 2008. Journey Round My Skull. New York: NYRB Classics.

  Kelly, David, Paul C. Quinn, Alan M. Slater, Kang Lee, Alan Gibson, Michael Smith, Liezhong Ge, and Olivier Pascalis. 2005. Three-month-olds, but not newborns, prefer own-race faces. Developmental Science 8 (6): F31–F36.

  Klessinger, Nicolai, Marcin Szczerbinski, and Rosemary Varley. 2007. Algebra in a man with severe aphasia. Neuropsychologia 45 (8): 1642–48.

  Kosslyn, Stephen Michael. 1973. Scanning visual images: Some structural implications. Perception & Psychophysics 14 (1): 90–94.

  ———. 1980. Image and Mind. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.

  Kosslyn, Stephen M., William L. Thompson, and Giorgio Ganis. 2006. The Case for Mental Imagery. New York: Oxford University Press.

  Lissauer, Heinrich. 1890. Ein Fall von Seelenblindheit nebst einem Beitrag zur Theorie derselben. Archiv für Psychiatrie 21: 222–70.

  Livingstone, Margaret S., and Bevil R. Conway. 2004. Was Rembrandt stereoblind? New England Journal of Medicine 351 (12): 1264–65.

  Luria, A. R. 1972. The Man With a Shattered World. New York: Basic Books.

  Lusseyran, Jacques. 1998. And There Was Light. New York: Parabola Books.

  Magee, Bryan, and Martin Milligan. 1995. On Blindness. New York: Oxford University Press.

  Mayer, Eugene, and Bruno Rossion. 2007. Prosopagnosia. In The Behavioral and Cognitive Neurology of Stroke, ed. O. Godefroy and J. Bogousslavsky, pp. 316–35. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

  McDonald, Ian. 2006. Musical alexia with recovery: A personal account. Brain 129 (10): 2554–61.

  McGinn, Colin. 2004. Mindsight: Image, Dream, Meaning. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.

  Merabet, L. B., R. Hamilton, G. Schlaug, J. D. Swisher, E. T. Kiriakopoulos, N. B. Pitskel, T. Kauffman, and A. Pascual-Leone. 2008. Rapid and reversible recruitment of early visual cortex for touch. PLoS One Aug. 27: 3 (8): e3046.

  Mesulam, M.-M. 1985. Principles of Behavioral Neurology. Philadelphia: F. A. Davis.

  Morgan, W. Pringle. 1896. A case of congenital word blindness. British Medical Journal 2 (1871): 1378.

  Moss, C. Scott. 1972. Recovery with Aphasia: The Aftermath of My Stroke. Urbana: University of Illinois Press.

  Nakayama, Ken. 2001. Modularity in perception, its relation to cognition and knowledge. In Blackwell Handbook of Perception, ed. E. Bruce Goldstein, pp. 737–59. Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell.

  Ostrovsky, Yuri, Aaron Andalman, and Pawan Sinha. 2006. Vision following extended congenital blindness. Psychological Science 17 (12): 1009–14.

  Pallis, C. A. 1955. Impaired identification of faces and places with agnosia for colours. Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery and Psychiatry 18: 218.

  Pammer, Kristen, Peter C. Hansen, Morten L. Kringelbach, Ian Holliday, Gareth Barnes, Arjan Hillebrand, Krish D. Singh, and Piers L. Cornelissen. 2004. Visual word recognition: the first half second. NeuroImage 22: 1819–25.

  Pascalis, O., L. S. Scott, D. J. Kelly, R. W. Shannon, E. Nicholson, M. Coleman, and C. A. Nelson. 2005. Plasticity of face processing in infancy. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 102 (14): 5297–5300.

  Pascual-Leone, A., L. B. Merabet, D. Maguire, A. Warde, K. Alterescu, and R. Stickgold. 2004. Visual hallucinations during prolonged blindfolding in sighted subjects. Journal of Neuroophthalmology 24 (2): 109–13.

  Petersen, S. E., P. T. Fox, M. I. Posner, M. Mintun, and M. E. Raichle. 1988. Positron emission tomographic studies of the cortical anatomy of single-word processing. Nature 331 (6137): 585–89.

  Poe, Edgar Allan. 1846. “The Sphinx.” In Complete Stories and Poems of Edgar Allan Poe. Reprint, New York: Doubleday, 1984.

  Pomeranz, Howard D., and Simmons Lessell. 2000. Palinopsia and polyopia in the absence of drugs or cerebral disease. Neurology 54: 855–59.

  Pons, Tim. 1996. Novel sensations in the congenitally blind. Nature 380: 479–80.

  Prescott, William. 1843. A History of the Conquest of Mexico: With a Preliminary View of the Ancient Mexican Civilization and the Life of Hernando Cortes. Reprint, London: Everyman’s Library, 1957.

  ———. 1847. A History of the Conquest of Peru. Reprint, London: Everyman’s Library, 1934.

  Ptito, Maurice, Solvej M.
Moesgaard, Albert Gjedde, and Ron Kupers. 2005. Cross-modal plasticity revealed by electrotactile stimulation of the tongue in the congenitally blind. Brain 128 (3): 606–14.

  Purves, Dale, and R. Beau Lotto. 2003. Why We See What We Do: An Empirical Theory of Vision. Sunderland, MA: Sinauer Associates.

  Quian Quiroga, Rodrigo, Alexander Kraskov, Christof Koch, and Itzhak Fried. 2009. Explicit encoding of multimodal percepts by single neurons in the human brain. Current Biology 19: 1308–13.

  Quian Quiroga, R., L. Reddy, G. Kreiman, C. Koch, and I. Fried. 2005. Invariant visual representation by single neurons in the human brain. Nature 435 (23): 1102–07.

  Ramachandran, V. S. 1995. Perceptual correlates of neural plasticity in the adult human brain. In Early Vision and Beyond, ed. Thomas V. Papathomas, pp. 227–47. Cambridge: MIT Press/ Bradford Books.

  ———. 2003. Foreword. In Filling-In: From Perceptual Completion to Cortical Reorganization, ed. Luiz Pessoa and Peter De Weerd, pp. xi–xxii. New York: Oxford University Press.

  Ramachandran, V. S., and R. L. Gregory. 1991. Perceptual filling in of artificially induced scotomas in human vision. Nature 350 (6320): 699–702.

  Renier, Laurent, and Anne G. De Volder. 2005. Cognitive and brain mechanisms in sensory substitution of vision: a contribution to the study of human perception. Journal of Integrative Neuroscience 4 (4): 489–503.

  Rocke, Alan J. 2010. Image and Reality: Kekulé, Kopp, and the Scientific Imagination. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

  Romano, Paul. 2003. A case of acute loss of binocular vision and stereoscopic depth perception. Binocular Vision & Strabismus Quarterly 18 (1): 51–55.

  Rosenfield, Israel. 1988. The Invention of Memory. New York: Basic Books.

  Russell, R., B. Duchaine, and K. Nakayama. 2009. Super-recognizers: People with extraordinary face recognition ability. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review 16: 252–57.

  Sacks, Oliver. 1984. A Leg to Stand On. New York: Summit Books.

  ———. 1985. The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat. New York: Summit Books.

 

‹ Prev