Bingham, T. 2004. Preface to a special issue on law and brain. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London B 359: 1659.
Blackmore, S. J., G. Brelstaff, K. Nelson, and T. Troscianko. 1995. “Is the richness of our visual world an illusion? Transsaccadic memory for complex scenes”. Perception 24: 1075–1081.
Blakemore, S. J., D. Wolpert, and C. Frith. 2000. “Why can’t you tickle yourself?” Neuroreport 3 (11): R11–6.
Blake, R., and N. K. Logothetis. 2006. “Visual competition”. Nature Reviews Neuroscience 3: 13–21.
Brandom, R. B. 1998. “Insights and blindspots of reliabilism”. Monist 81: 371–392.
Brooks, D. N., and A. D. Baddeley. 1976. “What can amnesic patients learn?” Neuropsychologia 14: 111–129.
Brooks, R. A. 1986. “A robust layered control system for a mobile robot”. IEEE Journal of Robotics and Automation April 14–23: RA–2.
Brown, G. 1911. “The intrinsic factors in the act of progression in the mammal”. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B 84: 308–319.
Broughton, R., R. Billings, R. Cartwright, D. Doucette, J. Edmeads, M. Edwardh, F. Ervin, B. Orchard, R. Hill, and G. Turrell. 1994. “Homicidal somnambulism: A case study”. Sleep 17 (3): 253–264.
Bunnell, B. N. 1966. “Amygdaloid lesions and social dominance in the hooded rat”. Psychonomic Science 6: 93–94.
Burger, J. M., N. Messian, S. Patel, A. del Prado, and C. Anderson. 2004. “What a coincidence! The effects of incidental similarity on compliance”. Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin 30: 35–43.
Burns, J. M., and R. H. Swerdlow. 2003. “Right orbitofrontal tumor with pedophilia symptom and constructional apraxia sign”. Archives of Neurology 60 (3): 437–440.
Calvert, G. A., E. T. Bullmore, M. J. Brammer, et al. 1997. “Activation of auditory cortex during silent lipreading”. Science 276: 593–596.
Calvin, W. H. 1996. How Brains Think: Evolving Intelligence, Then and Now. New York: Basic Books.
Carter, R. 1998. Mapping the Mind. Berkeley: University of California Press.
Caspi, A., J. McClay, and T. E. Moffitt, et al. 2002. “Role of genotype in the cycle of violence in maltreated children”. Science 297: 851.
Caspi, A., K. Sugden, T. E. Moffitt, et al. 2003. “Influence of life stress on depression: Moderation by a polymorphism in the 5-HTT gene”. Science 301: 386.
Caspi, A., T. E. Moffitt, M. Cannon, et al. 2005. “Moderation of the effect of adolescent-onset cannabis use on adult psychosis by a functional polymorphism in the COMT gene: Longitudinal evidence of a gene environment interaction”. Biological Psychiatry 57: 1117–1127.
Caspi, A., and T. E. Moffitt. 2006. “Gene — environment interactions in psychiatry: Joining forces with neuroscience”. Nature Reviews Neuroscience 7: 583–590.
Cattell, J. M. 1886. “The time taken up by cerebral operations”. Mind 11: 220–242.
Cattell, J. M. 1888. “The psychological laboratory at Leipsic”. Mind 13: 37–51.
Chance, B. 1962. Ophthalmology. New York: Hafner.
Chiu, P., B. King Casas, P. Cinciripini, F. Versace, D. M. Eagleman, J. Lisinski, L. Lindsey, and S. LaConte. 2009. “Real-time fMRI modulation of craving and control brain states in chronic smokers”. Abstract presented at the Society for Neuroscience, Chicago, IL.
Chorvat, T., and K. McCabe. 2004. “The brain and the law”. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London B 359: 1727–1736.
Cleeremans, A. 1993. Mechanisms of Implicit Learning. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
Clifford, C. W., and M. R. Ibbotson. 2002. “Fundamental mechanisms of visual motion detection: Models, cells and functions”. Progress in Neurobiology 68 (6): 409–437.
Cohen, J. D. 2005. “The vulcanization of the human brain: A neural perspective on interactions between cognition and emotion”. Journal of Economic Perspectives 19 (4): 3–24.
Cohen, N. J., H. Eichenbaum, B. S. Deacedo, and S. Corkin. 1985. “Different memory systems underlying acquisition of procedural and declarative knowledge”. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 444: 54–71.
Collett, T. S., and M. F. Land. 1975. “Visual control of flight behaviour in the hoverfly Syritta pipiens”. Journal of Comparative Physiology 99: 1–66.
Cosmides, L., and J. Tooby. 1992. Cognitive Adaptions for Social Exchange. New York: Oxford University Press.
Crick, F. H. C., and C. Koch. 1998. “Constraints on cortical and thalamic projections: The no-strong-loops hypothesis”. Nature 391 (6664): 245–250.
—. 2000. “The unconscious homunculus”. In The Neuronal Correlates of Consciousness, edited by T. Metzinger, 103–110. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
Cui, X., D. Yang, C. Jeter, P. R. Montague, and D. M. Eagleman. 2007. “Vividness of mental imagery: Individual variation can be measured objectively”. Vision Research 47: 474–478.
Cummings, J. 1995. “Behavioral and psychiatric symptoms associated with Huntington’s disease”. Advances in Neurology 65: 179–188.
Cytowic, R. E. 1998. The Man Who Tasted Shapes. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
Cytowic, R. E., and D. M. Eagleman. 2009. Wednesday Is Indigo Blue: Discovering the Brain of Synesthesia. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
Damasio, A. R. 1985. “The frontal lobes”. In Clinical Neuropsychology, edited by K. M. Heilman and E. Valenstein, 339–375. New York: Oxford University Press.
—. 1994. Descartes’ Error: Emotion, Reason and the Human Brain. New York: Putnam.
—. 1999. The Feeling of What Happens: Body and Emotion in the Making of Consciousness. New York: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt.
Damasio, A. R., B. J. Everitt, and D. Bishop. 1996. “The somatic marker hypothesis and the possible functions of the prefrontal cortex”. Philosophical Transactions: Biological Sciences 351 (1346): 1413–1420.
D’Angelo, F. J. 1986. “Subliminal seduction: An essay on the rhetoric of the unconscious”. Rhetoric Review 4 (2): 160–171.
de Gelder, B., K. B. Bocker, J. Tuomainen, M. Hensen, and J. Vroomen. 1999. “The combined perception of emotion from voice and face: Early interaction revealed by human electric brain responses”. Neuroscience Letters 260: 133–136.
Dennett, D. C. 1991. Consciousness Explained. Boston: Little, Brown and Company.
Dennett, D. C. 2003. Freedom Evolves. New York: Viking Books.
Denno, D. W. 2009. “Consciousness and culpability in American criminal law”. Waseda Proceedings of Comparative Law, vol. 12, 115–126.
Devinsky, O., and G. Lai. 2008. “Spirituality and religion in epilepsy”. Epilepsy Behaviour 12 (4): 636–643.
Diamond, J. 1999. Guns, Germs, and Steel. New York: Norton.
d’Orsi, G. and P. Tinuper. 2006. “I heard voices…”: From semiology, a historical review, and a new hypothesis on the presumed epilepsy of Joan of Arc”. Epilepsy and Behaviour 9 (1): 152–157.
Dully, H. and C. Fleming. 2007. My Lobotomy. New York: Crown.
Eadie, M. and P. Bladin. 2001. A Disease Once Sacred: A History of the Medical Understanding of Epilepsy. New York: Butterworth-Heinemann.
Eagleman, D. M. 2001. “Visual illusions and neurobiology”. Nature Reviews Neuroscience 2 (12): 920–926.
—. 2004. “The where and when of intention”. Science 303: 1144–1146.
—. 2005. “The death penalty for adolescents”. Univision television interview. Too Young To Die? May 24.
—. 2005. “Distortions of time during rapid eye movements”. Nature Neuroscience 8 (7): 850–851.
—. 2006. “Will the internet save us from epidemics?” Nature 441 (7093): 574.
—. 2007. “Unsolved mysteries of the brain”. Discover August.
—. 2008. “Human time perception and its illusions”. Current Opinion in Neurobiology 18 (2): 131–136.
—. 2008. “Neuroscience and the law”. Houston Lawyer 16 (6): 36–40.
—. 2008. “Prediction and postdiction: Two frameworks with the goal of delay compensation”. Brain and Behavioral Sciences 31 (2): 205–206.
—. 2009. “America on deadline”. New York Times. December 3.
—. 2009. “Brain time”. In What’s Next: Dispatches from the Future of Science, edited by M. Brockman. New York: Vintage Books. (Reprinted at Edge.org.)
—. 2009. “The objectification of overlearned sequences: A large-scale analysis of spatial sequence synesthesia”. Cortex 45 (10): 1266–1277.
—. 2009. “Silicon immortality: Downloading consciousness into computers”. In What Will Change Everything? Edited by J. Brockman. New York: Vintage Books. (Originally printed at Edge.org.)
—. 2009. Sum: Tales from the Afterlives. Edinburgh: Canongate Books.
—. 2009. “Temporality, empirical approaches”. In The Oxford Companion to Consciousness. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.
—. 2010. “Duration illusions and predictability”. In Attention and Time, edited by J. T. Coull and K. Nobre. New York: Oxford University Press.
—. 2010. “How does the timing of neural signals map onto the timing of perception?” In Problems of Space and Time in Perception and Action, edited by R. Nijhawan. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
—. 2010. “Synaesthesia”. British Medical Journal 340: b4616.
—. 2012. Live-Wired: The Shape Shifting Brain. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Eagleman, D. M., and S. Cheng. 2011. “Is synesthesia one condition or many? A large-scale analysis reveals subgroups”. Journal of Neurophysiology, forthcoming.
Eagleman, D. M., M. A. Correro, and J. Singh. 2010. “Why neuroscience matters for a rational drug policy”. Minnesota Journal of Law, Science and Technology. In press.
Eagleman, D. M., and J. Downar. 2011. Cognitive Neuroscience: A Principles-Based Approach. New York: Oxford University Press, forthcoming.
Eagleman, D. M., and M. A. Goodale. 2009. “Why color synesthesia involves more than color”. Trends in Cognitive Sciences 13 (7): 288–292.
Eagleman, D. M. and A. O. Holcombe. 2002. “Causality and the perception of time”. Trends in Cognitive Sciences. 6 (8): 323–325.
Eagleman, D. M., J. E. Jacobson, and T. J. Sejnowski. 2004. “Perceived luminance depends on temporal context”. Nature 428 (6985): 854–856.