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25. Heilman K., Watson S. The Neglect Syndrome—A Unilateral Defect of the Orienting Response. In: Lateralization in the Nervous System, eds. S. Har-nad, R. Doty, L. Goldstein, J. Jaynes and G. Krauthamer, New York, Academic Press, 1977.
26. Volpe Â. Ò., LeDoux J. E., Gazzaniga M. S. Information Processing of Visual Stimuli in an «Extinguished field», Natute, 282, 122—124 (1979).
27. Deutsch G., Tweedy J., Lorinstein B. Some Temporal and Spatial Factors Affecting Visual Neglect, Paper presented at the Eighth Annual Meeting of the International Neuropsychological Society, San Francisco, 1980.
Ãë. 10. Çà ïðåäåëàìè ôàêòîâ: ñïîðíûå âîïðîñû òåîðèè
1. Sperry R. W. Brain Bisection and Consciousness. In: Brain and Conscious Experience, ed. J. Eccles, New York, Springer-Verlag, 1966.
2. Eccles J. The Brain and Unity of Conscious Experience: The 19th Arthur Stanley Eddington Memorial Lecture, Cambridge, England, Cambridge University Press, 1965.
6. LeDoux J. E., Wilson D. H., Gazzaniga M. S. A Divided Mind: Observations on the Conscious Properties of the Separated Hemispheres, Annals of Neurology, 2, 417—4211 (1977).
4. Ibid.
5. Sri Aurobindo, quoted in Bogen J. E. The Other Side of the Brain, VII: Some Educational Aspects of Hemispheric Specialization, UCLA Educator, 17, 24—32 (1975).
ˆ. Ornstein R. The Psychology of Consciousness, New York, Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1977.
7. Ornstein R. The Split and Whole Brain, Human Nature, 1, 76—83 (1978).
8. Gardner H. What We Know (and Don't Know) About the Two Halves of the Brain, Harvard Magazine, 80, 24—27 (1978).
9. Paredes J. A., Hepburn M. J. The Split Brain and the Culture-and-Cognition Paradox, Current Anthropology, 17, (121—127 (1976).
10. Bogen J. E., DeZare R., TenHouten W. D., Marsh J. F. The Other Side of
252
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the Brain, IV: The A/P Ratio, Bulletin of the Los Angeles Neurological So» cieties, 37, 49^61 (1972). 11 look J. A., Dwyer J. H. Cultural Differences in Hemisphericity: A Critique, Bulletin of the Los Angeles Neurological Societies, 41, 87—90 (1976).
12. Ornstein R. The Split and Whole Brain.
13. Bakan P. Hypnotizability; Laterality of Eye Movement and Functional Brain Asymmetry, Perceptual and Motor Skills, 28, 927—932 (1969).
14. Bogen J. E. The Other Side of the Brain, VII: Some Educational Aspects of Hemispheric Specialization, UCLA Educator, 17, 24—32 (1975).
15. Prince G. Putting the Other Half of the Brain to Work, Training: The Magazine of Human Resources Development, 15, 57—61 (1978).
16. Ibid.
17. Sagan ÑThe Dragons of Eden, New York, Random House, 1977.
18. Ibid.
19. Ibid.
20. Ibid.
21. Jaynes J., cited in Keen S. Reflections on the Dawn of Consciousness, Psychology Today, 11, 58 (1977).
22. Ibid.
23. Loewi O. Perspectivts in Biology and Medicine, 4, Chicago, University of Chicago Press, 1960.
24. Koestler A. The Act of Creation, New York, Dell, 1964.
25. Ibid.
26. Galin D. Implications for Psychiatry of Left and Right Cerebral Specialization, Archives of General Psychiatry, 31, 572—583 (,'1074).
27. Ibid.
28. Ibid.
29. LeDoux J. E., Wilson D. #., Gazzaniga M. S. A Divided Mind: Observations on the Conscious Properties of the Separated Hemispheres.
30. Gazzaniga M. S., LeDoux J. E. The Integrated Mind, New York, Plenum Press, 1978.
31. Ibid.
32. Kimura D., Archibald Y. Motor Functions of the Left Hemisphere, Brain 97 337—350 (1974).
33. Ibid.
34. Studdert-Kennedy M., Shankweiler D. Hemispheric Specialization for Speech Perception, J. of the Acoustical Society of America, 48, 579—594 (1970).
35. Liberman A. M., Cooper F. S., Shankweiler D., Studdert-Kennedy M. Perceptions of the Speech Code, Psychological Review, 74, 431—461 (1967).

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