“Conversation: Chuck Close, Christopher Finch,” NewsHour
, PBS, July 2, 2010, http://www.pbs.org/newshour/art/conversation-chuck-close-christopher-finch.
91
S. Hocken, Emma and I: The Beautiful Labrador Who Saved My Life
(London: Ebury Press, 2011), 270.
92
R. L. Gregory and J. G. Wallace, Recovery from Early Blindness: A Case Study
, Monograph No. 2 (Cambridge, UK: Experimental Psychology Society, 1963); R. Kurson, Crashing Through: A True Story of Risk, Adventure, and the Man Who Dared to See (New York: Random House, 2007); O. Sacks, “To See and Not See,” in An Anthropologist on Mars: Seven Paradoxical Tales (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1995); A. Valvo, Sight Restoration After Long-Term Blindness: The Problems and Behavior Patterns of Visual Rehabilitation (New York: American Federation for the Blind, 1971); 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).
93
S. Geldart et al., “The Effect of Early Visual Deprivation on the Development of Face Processing,” Developmental Science
5 (2002): 490–501; R. A. Robbins et al., “Deficits in Sensitivity to Spacing After Early Visual Deprivation in Humans: A Comparison of Human Faces, Monkey Faces, and Houses,” Developmental Psychobiology 52 (2010): 775–781.
94
M. E. Arterberry and P. J. Kellman, Development of Perception in Infancy: The Cradle of Knowledge Revisited
(New York: Oxford University Press, 2016); C. C. Goren, M. Sarty, and P. Y. K. Wu, “Visual Following and Pattern Discrimination of Face-Like Stimuli by Newborn Infants,” Pediatrics 56 (1975): 544–549; A. Slater, “The Competent Infant: Innate Organization and Early Learning in Infant Visual Perception,” in Perceptual Development: Visual, Auditory, and Speech Perception in Infancy, ed. A. Slater (East Sussex, UK: Psychology Press Ltd., Publishers, 1998).
95
Arterberry and Kellman, Development of Perception in Infancy
; I. W. R. Bushnell, F. Sai, and J. T. Mullin, “Neonatal Recognition of the Mother’s Face,” British Journal of Developmental Psychology 7 (1989): 3–15.
96
N. Kanwisher and G. Yovel, “The Fusiform Face Area: A Cortical Region Specialized for the Perception of Faces,” Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B
1476 (2006): 2109–2128.
97
M. Bilalic et al., “Many Faces of Expertise: Fusiform Face Area in Chess Experts and Novices,” Journal of Neuroscience
31 (2011): 10206–10214.
98
Bilalic et al., “Many Faces of Expertise.”
99
C. Turati et al., “Newborns’ Face Recognition: Role of Inner and Outer Facial Features,” Child Development
77 (2006): 297–311.
100
R. Adolphs et al., “A Mechanism for Impaired Fear Recognition After Amygdala Damage,” Nature
433 (2005): 68–72.
101
Hocken, Emma and I
.
102
G. Kanisza, “Subjective Contours,” Scientific American
234 (1976): 48–52.
103
A. L. Bregman, “Asking the ‘What For’ Question in Auditory Perception,” in Perceptual Organization
, ed. M. Kubovy and J. R. Pomerantz (Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Earlbaum, 1981); K. Nakayama and S. Shimojo, “Toward a Neural Understanding of Visual Surface Representation,” The Brain, Cold Spring Harbor Symposium in Quantitative Biology 55 (1990): 911–924.
104
S. R. Barry, Fixing My Gaze: A Scientist’s Journey into Seeing in Three Dimensions
(New York: Basic Books, 2009).
105