1. Wernicke’s impoverished agenda for neuropsychology, “to find the route, the telegraph line, by which the telgram is conveyed,” (Wernicke’s work on Aphasia: A source book and Review, translated and edited by G. Eggert, The Hague, Mouton, 1977) still holds sway
2. M. Kinsbourne, “Hemispheric specialization and the growth of human understanding,” American Psychologist, 37, 411–420, 1982 for a perspective on apparently conflicting claims about brain function.
3. R. Bruce and M. Kinsbourne, “Orientational model of perceptual asymmetry,” Paper presented at the 15th annual convention of the Psychonomic Society, Boston, November, 1974
4. J. Hellige and P. J. Cox, “Effects of concurrent verbal memory on recognition of stimuli from the left and right visual fields,” J. Exp. Psych: Human Percept. and Perf., 2, 210–221, 1976
5. J. B. Hellige, “Visual laterality patterns for pure-versus mixed-list presentation,” J. Exp. Psych.: Human Percept. and Perf., 4, 121–131, 1978