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Steven Pinker -- How the Mind Works - Hampshire High Italian ...

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Notes to Pages 277-297 \ 577277 Obliviousness to left and right: Corballis & Beale, 1976; Corballis, 1988; Hinton &Parsons, 1981; Tarr & <strong>Pinker</strong>, 1989.279 <strong>How</strong> people recognize shapes: Tarr & <strong>Pinker</strong>, 1989, 1990; Tarr, 1995; Tarr &Bulthoff, 1995; Biederman, 1995; Bulthoff 8c Edelman, 1992; Sinha, 1995.284 Mental imagery: Kosslyn, 1980, 1983, 1994; Paivio, 1971; Finke, 1989; Block,1981; <strong>Pinker</strong>, 1984c, 1988; Tye, 1991; Logie, 1995; Denis, Engelkamp, & Richardson,1988; Hebb, 1968.284Yanomamo imagery: Chagnon, 1992.285 Creativity and imagery: Finke, 1990; Shepard, 1978; Shepard & Cooper, 1982;Kosslyn, 1983.285 Corrugator muscle: Buss, 1994, p. 128.286 Pictures versus propositions: Pylyshyn, 1973, 1984; Block, 1981; Kosslyn, 1980,1994; Tye, 1991; <strong>Pinker</strong>, 1984; Kosslyn, <strong>Pinker</strong>, Smith, & Shwartz, 1979. Imageryin computers: Funt, 1980; Glasgow & Papadias, 1992; Stenning & Oberlander,1995; Ioerger, 1994.287 Cortical maps: Van Essen & DeYoe, 1995.288 Cloying hunger by imagining a feast: Richard II, act 1, scene 3.288 Perky effect: Perky, 1910; Segal & Fusella, 1970; Craver-Lemley & Reeves, 1992;Farah, 1989.288 Imagery and coordination: Brooks, 1968; Logie, 1995.288 Imagery and illusions: Wallace, 1984. Imagery and alignment: Freyd & Finke,1984.288 Confusing images and reality: Johnson & Raye, 1981.289 Neglect of imaginary space: Bisiach & Luzzatti, 1978.289 Imagery lights up <strong>the</strong> visual cortex: Kosslyn et al., 1993; Kosslyn, 1994.289 Images with and without both halves of visual cortex: Farah, Soso, 8c Dasheiff,1992.289 Dreams and images: Symons, 1993. Reality monitoring: Johnson & Raye, 1981.290 Medium underlying imagery: <strong>Pinker</strong>, 1984c, 1988; Cave, <strong>Pinker</strong>, et al., 1994; Kosslyn,1980, 1994.291 Computing with imagery: Funt, 1980; Glasgow & Papadias, 1992; Stenning 8cOberlander, 1995; Ioerger, 1994.292 Mental animation: Ullman, 1984; Jolicoeur, Ullman, & MacKay, 1991.292 Answering questions using imagery: Kosslyn, 1980.293 Flipping duck-rabbits in imagery: Chambers & Reisberg, 1985; Finke, <strong>Pinker</strong>, &Farah, 1989; Peterson et al., 1992; Hyman & Neisser, 1991.294 Piecemeal fading images: Kosslyn, 1980.294 Imagery and vantage point: <strong>Pinker</strong>, 1980, 1984c, 1988.294 Multiple perspective in paintings: Kubovy, 1986; Pirenne, 1970. Cro-Magnon perspective:Boyd & Silk, 1996.294 Filing images: Pylyshyn, 1973,-Kosslyn, 1980.295 Visual memory in chess masters: Chase & Simon, 1973.295 Memory for a penny: Nickerson 8c Adams, 1979.295 Mental map distortions: <strong>Steven</strong>s 8c Coupe, 1978.296 Images aren't concepts: Pylyshyn, 1973; Fodor, 1975; Kosslyn, 1980; Tye, 1991.297 Imagery gone mad: Titchener, 1909, p. 22.

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