Gall, F. J. and J. G. Spurzheim. Anatomie et physionomie du système nerveux en général et du cerveau en particulier. Premier volume. Paris, F. Schoell, 1810; F. J. Gall and J. G. Spurzheim, vol. 2, 1812; F. J. Gall, vol. 3, 1818; F. J. Gall, vol. 4, 1819.
Gross, Charles G. Early History of Neuroscience. In Encyclopedia of Neuroscience, edited by George Adelman. Cambridge, MA: Birkhàuser Boston, 1987. Aristotle on the Brain // The Neuroscientist 1 (1995). P. 245-250.
Hebb, Donald O. The Organization of Behavior: A Neuropsychological Theory. New York: Wiley, 1949.
James, William. The Principles of Psychology. New York: Henry Holt, 1890. Available online at, among other places, http:// archive .org /details /the principlesofpOljameuoft.
Kosslyn, Stephen M. Seeing and Imagining in the Cerebral Hemispheres: A Computational Approach // Psychological Review 94 (1985). P. 148-175. You Can Play 20 Questions with Nature and Win: Categorical Versus Coordinate Spatial Relations as a Case Study // Neuropsychologia 44 (2006). P. 1519-1523.
Laeng, Bruno. (1994). Lateralization of Categorical and Coordinate Spatial Functions: A Study of Unilateral Stroke Patients // Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience 6 (1994). P. 189-203.
Molnar, Zoltan. Thomas Willis (1621-1675), the Founder of Clinical Neuroscience // Nature Reviews Neuroscience 5 (2004). P. 329-335.
Morse, Minna. The Much-Maligned Theory of Phrenology Gets a Tip of the Hat from Modern Neuroscience // Smithsonian, October 1997. www.smithsonianmag.com/history-archaeology/object oct97.html.
O’Connor, James P. B. Thomas Willis and the Background to Cerebri Anatome // Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine 96 (2003). P. 139-153.
Pevsner, Jonathan. Leonardo da Vinci’s Contributions to Neuroscience // Trends in Neuroscience 25 (2002). P. 217-220.
Pohl, Walter. Dissociation of Spatial Discrimination Deficits Following Frontal and Parietal Lesions in Monkeys // Journal of Comparative and Physiological Psychology 82 (1973). P. 227-239.
Rahimi, Scott Y., Dennis E. McDonnell, Amir Ahmadian and John R. Vender. Medieval Neurosurgery: Contributions from the Middle East, Spain and Persia // Neurosurgical Focus 23 (2007). P. 1-4.
Rueckl, Jay G., Kyle R. Cave and Stephen M. Kosslyn. Why Are What and Where Processed by Separate Cortical Visual Systems? A Computational Investigation // Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience 1 (1989). P. 171-186.
Treisman, Anne, and Garry Gelade. A Feature-Integration Theory of Attention // Cognitive Psychology 12 (1980). P. 97-136. These works help inform the historical perspective of this book: Allen, Richard. David Hartley // The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, edited by Edward N. Zalta. 2009, http:// plato.stanford.edu /archives / sum2009 /entries /hartley /. Arnott, Robert, Stanley Finger and Christopher Upham Murray Smith, eds. Trepanation: History, Discovery, Theory. Lisse, Netherlands: Swets & Zeitlinger, 2005. Broca skull fragment photo: http:// scienceblogs .com /neurophilosophy /2008 /01 /an illustrated history of trep.php.
Hooke, Robert. Micrographia: Some Physiological Descriptions of Minute Bodies Made by Magnifying Glasses with Observations and Inquiries Thereupon. Project Gutenberg eBook #15491, released 2005. Originally published in 1665. Photographs of the Smith Papyrus: www.neurosurgery .org /cybermuseum /pre20th /epapyrus.html.
Rahimi, Scott Y., Dennis E. McDonnell, Amir Ahmadian and John R. Vender. Medieval Neurosurgery: Contributions from the Middle East, Spain, and Persia // Neurosurgical Focus 23 (2007). P. 1-4.
Wade, Nicholas, Marco Piccolino and Adrian Simmons. Alessandro Volta: 1745-1827 // In Portraits of European Neuroscientists, http:// neuroportraits, eu /. 2011.
Wilkins, Robert H. Neurosurgical Classic-XVII: Edwin Smith Surgical Papyrus // Journal of Neurosurgery 114 (1964). P. 240-244.
Borst, Grégoire, William L. Thompson, and Stephen M. Kosslyn. Understanding the Dorsal and Ventral Systems of the Human Cerebral Cortex: Beyond Dichotomies // American Psychologist 66, no. 7 (2011). P. 624-632.
Collice, Massimo, Rosa Collice, and Alessandro Riva. Who Discovered the Sylvian Fissure? // Neurosurgery 63 (2008). P. 623-628.
Goodale, Melvyn A., and A. David Milner. Separate Visual Pathways for Perception and Action // Trends in Neurosciences 15 (1992). P. 20-25.
Lehky, Sidney R„ Xinmiao Peng, Carrie J. McAdams and Anne B. Sereno. Spatial Modulation of Primate Inferotemporal Responses by Eye Position. PLoS ONE 3(10): e3492. doi:10.1371 /journal. pone.0003492.
MacLean, Paul D. The Triune Brain in Evolution: Role in Paleocer-ebral Functions. New York: Plenum Press, 1990.
Sereno, Anne B., and Silvia C. Amador. Attention and Memory-Related Responses of Neurons in the Lateral Intraparietal Area During Spatial and Shape-Delayed Match-to-Sample Tasks // Journal of Neurophysiology, 95 (2006). P. 1078-1098.
Sylvius, Franciscus. Disputationem Medicarum, 1663.