См. также: P. F. MacNeilage, L. J. Rogers, and G. Vallortigara, “Origins of the Left and Right Brain,” Scientific American
301 (2009): 60–67.
239
S. – J. Blakemore, Inventing Ourselves: The Secret Life of the Teenage Brain
(New York: Public Affairs, 2018).
240
R. L. Gregory and J. G. Wallace, Recovery from Early Blindness: A Case Study
, Monograph No. 2 (Cambridge, UK: Experimental Psychology Society, 1963), 33.
241
Blakemore, Inventing Ourselves
.
242
S. E. Asch, “Effects of Group Pressure upon the Modification and Distortion of Judgments,” in Groups, Leadership and Men: Research in Human Relations
, ed. H. Guetzkow (Oxford, UK: Carnegie Press, 1951).
243
Blakemore, Inventing Ourselves
; L. H. Somerville, “Searching for Signatures of Brain Maturity: What Are We Searching For?” Neuron 92 (2016): 1164–1167; A. W. Toga, P. M. Thompson, and E. R. Sowell, “Mapping Brain Maturation,” Trends in Neuroscience 29 (2006): 148–159.
244
Toga, Thompson, and Sowell, “Mapping Brain Maturation.”
245
E. M. Finney, I. Fine, and K. R. Dobkins, “Visual Stimuli Activate Auditory Cortex in the Deaf,” Nature Neuroscience
4 (2001): 1171–1173.
246
M. Saenz et al., “Visual Motion Area MT+/V5 Responds to Auditory Motion in Human Sight-Recovery Subjects,” Journal of Neuroscience
28 (2008): 5141–5148; H. Burton et al., “Adaptive Changes in Early and Late Blind: A fMRI Study of Braille Reading,” Journal of Neurophysiology 87 (2002): 589–607; A. Pascual-Leone and R. Hamilton, “The Metamodal Organization of the Brain,” Progress in Brain Research 134 (2001): 427–445; L. B. Merabet et al., “Rapid and Reversible Recruitment of Early Visual Cortex for Touch,” PLOS One 3 (2008): e3046.
247
Pascual-Leone and Hamilton, “The Metamodal Organization of the Brain”; Merabet et al., “Rapid and Reversible Recruitment of Early Visual Cortex for Touch.”
248
Saenz et al., “Visual Motion Area MT+/V5 Responds to Auditory Motion.”
249
H. J. Neville et al., “Cerebral Organization for Language in Deaf and Hearing Subjects: Biological Constraints and Effects of Experience,” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
95 (1998): 922–929.
250
Saenz et al., “Visual Motion Area MT+/V5 Responds to Auditory Motion.”
251
Barry, Fixing My Gaze
.
252
Gregory and Wallace, Recovery from Early Blindness
.
253
Chorost, Rebuilt
, 171–172.
254
M. Ross, “A Retrospective Look at the Future of Aural Rehabilitation,” Journal of the Academy of Rehabilitative Audiology
30 (1997): 11–28.
255
Ross, “A Retrospective Look at the Future of Aural Rehabilitation.”
256
Barry, Fixing My Gaze
.
257
Chorost, Rebuilt,
171.
258
B. Biderman, Wired for Sound: A Journey into Hearing
, rev. ed. (Toronto: Journey into Hearing Press, 2016).
259
M. von Senden, Space and Sight: The Perception of Space and Shape in the Congenitally Blind Before and After Operation
(Glencoe, IL: Free Press, 1960), 160.
260
Barry, Fixing My Gaze
; Goldberg, Creativity; D. Bavelier et al., “Removing Brakes on Adult Brain Plasticity: From Molecular to Behavioral Interventions,” Journal of Neuroscience 30 (2010): 14964–14971; C. D. Gilbert and W. Li, “Adult Visual Cortical Plasticity,” Neuron 75 (2012): 250–264; E. Goldberg, The Wisdom Paradox: How Your Mind Can Grow Stronger as Your Brain Grows Older (New York: Gotham Books, 2005); A. Pascual-Leone et al., “The Plastic Human Brain Cortex,” Annual Review of Neuroscience 28 (2005): 377–401; E. R. Kandel, In Search of Memory: The Emergence of a New Science of Mind (New York: W. W. Norton and Co., 2006); M. M. Merzenich, T. M. Van Vleet, and M. Nahum, “Brain Plasticity-Based Therapeutics,” Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 8 (2014): doi, 10.3389/fnhum.2014.00385; Q. Gu, “Neuromodulatory Transmitter Systems in the Cortex and Their Role in Cortical Plasticity,” Neuroscience 111 (2002): 815–835.
261