44 Alibali, M.W., D.C. Heath, and H.J. Myers, “Effects of Visibility Between Speaker and Listener on Gesture Production: Some Gestures Are Meant to Be Seen,” Journal of Memory and Language 44 (2001): 169-188.
45 Molnar-Szakacs, I., S.M. Wilson, and M. Iacoboni, “I See What You Are Saying: The Neural Correlates of Gesture Perception,: Program No. 128.7. 2005 Abstract Viewer, CD- ROM. Washington, DC: Society for Neuroscience meeting.
46 Rizzolatti, G., and M.A. Arbib, “Language Within Our Grasp,” Trends in Neurosience 21 (1998): 188-194; G. von Bonin and P. Bailey, The Neocortex of Macaca Mulatta (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1947).
47 Iverson, J.M., and E. Thelen, “Hand, Mouth and Brain. The Dynamic Emergence of Speech and Gesture,” Journal of Consciousness Studies 6 (1999): 19-40; Goldin-Meadow, “The Role of Gesture in Communication and Thinking,” 419-429.
48 Greenfield, P.M., “Language, Tools and Brain: The Ontogeny and Phytogeny of Hierarchically Organized Sequential Behavior,” Behavioral and Brain Sciences 14 (1991): 531- 595; Molnar-Szakacs, I., J. Kaplan, PM. Greenfield, and M. Iacoboni, “Observing Complex Action Sequences: The Role of the Lrontoparietal Mirror Neuron System,” Neuroimage 33 (2006): 923-935; Greenfield, P, “Implications of Mirror Neurons for the Ontogeny and Phylogeny of Cultural Processes: The Examples of Tools and Language,” in M.A. Arbib, ed., Action to Language Via the Mirror Neuron System (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2006): 503-535.
49 Heiser, M., M. Iacoboni, L Maeda, et al. “The Essential Role of Broca’s Area in Imitation,” European Journal of Neuroscience 17(2003): 1123-1128.
50 Glenberg, A.M., and M.P Kaschak, “Grounding Language in Action,” Psychonomic Bulletin and Review 9 (2002): 558-565.
51 Ochs, E., P. Gonzales, and S. Jacoby, “ When I Come Down I’m in the Domain State’: Grammar and Graphic Representation in the Interpretive Activity of Physicists,” in E. Ochs, E.A. Schegloff, and S.A. Thompson, eds., Interaction and Grammar (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1996): 328-369.
52 Gallese, V, and G. Lakoff, “The Brain’s Concepts: The Role of the Sensory-Motor System in Conceptual Knowledge,” Cognitive Neuropsychology 22 (2005): 455-479.
53 Aziz-Zadeh, L., S.M. Wilson, G. Rizzolatti, and M. Iacoboni, “Congruent Embodied Representations for Visually Presented Actions and Linguistic Phrases Describing Actions,” Current Biology 16 (2006): 1818-1823.
54 Garrod, S., and M.J. Pickering, “Why Is Conversation So Easy?”, Trends in Cognitive Sciences 8 (2004): 8-11.
55 Brennan, S.E., and H.H. Clark, “Conceptual Pacts and Lexical Choice in Conversation,” Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition 22 (1996): 1482-1493; Schober, M.F., and H.H. Clark, “Understanding by Addressees and Over-Hearers,” Cognitive Psychology 21 (1989): 211-232.
56 Goodwin, C., “Restarts, Pauses, and the Achievement of a State of Mutual Gaze at Turn-beginning,” Sociological Inquiry 50 (1980):272-302; Kendon, A., “Some Functions of Gaze- direction in Social Interaction,” Acta Psychologica 26 (1967): 22-63; Goodwin, C., and J. Heritage, “Conversation Analysis,” Annual Review of Anthropology 19 (1990): 283-307.
57 Kegl, J., “The Nicaraguan Sign Language Project: An Overview,” Signpost 7 (1994): 24-31.
58 См., например: S. Pinker, The Language Instinct (New York: Morrow, 1994).
59 Tomasello, M., “The Item-based Nature of Children’s Early Syntactic Development,” Trends in Cognitive Sciences 4 (2000): 156-163.
60 Clark, H., Using Language (Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 1996); Garrod, S., and A. Anderson, “Saying What You Mean in Dialogue: A Study in Conceptual and Semantic Co-ordination,” Cognition 27 (1987): 181-218; Galantucci, B., “An Experimental Study of the Emergence of Human Communication Systems,” Cognitive Science 29 (2005): 737-767.
61 Aziz-Zadeh, L., M. Iacoboni, E. Zaidel, et ah, “Left Hemisphere Motor Facilitation in Response to Manual Action Sounds,” European Journal of Neuroscience 19 (2004): 2609-2612; Gazzola, V., L. Aziz-Zadeh, and C. Keysers, “Empathy and the Somatotopic Auditory Mirror System in Humans,” Current Biology 16 (2006): 1824-1829.
62 McGurk, H. and J. MacDonald, “Heating Lips and Seeing Voices,” Nature 264 (1976): 746-748.
63 Liberman, A.M., and I.G. Mattingly, “The Motor Theory of Speech Perception Revised,” Cognition 21 (1985): 1-36.
64 Fadiga, L., L. Craighero, G. Buccino, and G. Rizzolatti, “Speech Listening Specifically Modulates the Excitability of Tongue
Muscles: A TMS Study,” European Journal of Neuroscience 15 (2002): 399-402.
65 Wilson, S.M., A.P. Saygin, M.I. Sereno, and M. Iacoboni, “Listening to Speech Activates Motor Areas Involved in Speech Production,” Nature Neuroscience 7 (2004): 701-702.
66 Meister, I., S.M. Wilson, C. Deblieck, et ah, “The Essential Role of Pre-motor Cortex in Speech Perception,” Current Biology 17 (2007): 1692-1696.
Анатолий Болеславович Ситель , Анатолий Ситель , Игорь Анатольевич Борщенко , Мирзакарим Санакулович Норбеков , Павел Валериевич Евдокименко , Павел Валерьевич Евдокименко , Петр Александрович Попов
Здоровье / Медицина / Здоровье и красота / Дом и досуг / Образование и наука