1. Adrian Lord, The Physical Background of Perception (Waynflete Lectures 1946), London, 1947.

2. Adrian Lord, The Basis of Sensation: The Action of the Sense Organs, London, 1949.

3. Arnheim R., Gestalt and Art, Journ. of Aesthetics and Art Criticism, 2, 71-5 (1943). См. также: Hogg J. (ed.), Psychology of the Visual Arts, HarHondsworth, 1969.

4. Arnheim R., Art and Visual Perception, Berkeley, 1954.

5. Attneave F., Some informational aspects of visual perception, Psych. Rev., 61, 183-198 (1954).

6. Babbage C., On a method of expressing by signs the action of machinery, Phil. Trans. Roy. Soc, (1826).

7. Baker H. S., Furniture in the Ancient World, London, 1966.

8. Bartlett F. C., Remembering, Cambridge, 1932.

9. Beardslee D. C., Wertheimer M., Readings in Perception, Princeton, 1958.

10. Benham С. E., The artificial spectrum top, Nat. bond., 51, 200 (1894).

11. Berkeley G., A New Theory of Vision (1709).

12. Boring E. G., Sensation and Perception in the History of Experimental Psychology, New York, 1942.

13. Braithwaite R. B., Scientific Explanation, London, 1949.

14. Brindley G. S., Physiology of the Retina and the Visual Pathway, Monogr. of Physiol. Soc., 6, London, 1960.

15. Broadbent D. E., Perception and Communication, Oxford, 1958.

16. Brown J. L., Afterimages, in Graham C. H., Vision and Visual Perception, New York, 479-503, 1965.

17. Brown J. L., Flicker and visual perception, in Graham С. H., Vision and Visual Perception, New York, 1965.

18. Bruner S. J., On perceptual readiness, Psych. Rev., 64, 123- 152 (1957).

19. Bruner S. J., Studies in Cognitive Growth, New York, 1966.

20. Brunswik E., Die Zuganglichkeit von Gegenstanden fur Wahrnehmungen und deren orientative Bestimmung, Arch. Ges. Psychol,, 88, 377-419 (1933).

21. Brunswik E., Distal focusing of perception; size constancy in a representative sample of situations, Psych. Monogr., 56, 254 (1944).

22. Budge E. A. Wallis, The Egyptian Book of the Dead, 1967.

23. Cherry C., On Human Communication, New York, 1966.

24. Chomsky N., Syntactic Structures, The Hague, 1957.

25. Chomsky N., The formal nature of language, in Lenneberg E. H., The Biological Foundations of Language, New York, 1967.

26. Cohen J. C., Gordon D. A., The Prevost-Fechner-Benham subjective colours, Psych. Bull., 46, 2, 97-136 (1949).

27. Constable W. G., Canaletto, London, 1962.

28. Craik K. J. W., The Nature of Explanation, London, 1943.

29. Декарт Р., Избранные произведения, M., Госполитиздат, 1950.

30. Декарт Р., Диоптрика, в кн. "Рассуждение о методе", М., Изд-во АН СССР, 1953.

31. Desroches-Noblecourt С., Tutankhamen, London, 1963.

32. Diringer D., Writing, London, 1962.

33. Diringer D., The Alphabet: a Key to the History of Mankind, London, 1968.

34. Dudley L. P., Stereoptics, London, 1951.

35. Duke-Elder W. S., System of Ophthalmology, 1, London, 1958.

36. Eisler K., Gestaltkonstanz der Sehdinge bei Variation der Objekte und ihre Einwirkungsweise auf den Wahrnehmenden, Arch. Ges. Psychol., 88, 487-551 (1933).

37. Ellis W. H. (ed.), Source Book of Gestalt Psychology, London - New York, 1938.

38. Ellis B., Basic Concepts of Measurement, London, 1958.

39. Evans C., Some studies of pattern recognition using a stabilised image, Brit. Journ. Psychol, 56, 121-133 (1965);

40. Evans C., Further study of pattern perception and stabilised retinal images: the use of prolonged after images to achieve perfect stabilisation, Brit. Journ. Psychol., 58, 315-327 (1967).

41. Feigenbaum E. A., Feldman J., Computers and Thought, London, 1963.

42. Fodor J. A., Katz J., The Structure of Language, Englewood Cliffs, 1964.

43. Gardiner A., Egyptian Grammar, Oxford, 1957.

44. Geschwind N., The Development of the Brain and the Evolution of Language, Monogr. Series on Language and Linguistics N 17, Report on the 15th Annual R. T. M. on Linguistic and Language Studies, 1964.

45. Gibson J. J., The Perception of the Visual World, London - New York, 1950.

46. Gibson J. J., The Senses Considered as Perceptual Systems, New York, 1966.

47. Gombrich E. H., Art and Illusion, London, 1960.

48. Gombrich E. H., Visual discovery through art, Arts Magazine (1965). См. также: Hogg J. (ed.), Psychology and the Visual Arts, Harmondsworth, 1969.

49. Graham C. H., Vision and Visual Perception, New York, 1965.

50. Gregory R. L., A technique for minimizing the effects of atmospheric disturbance on photographic telescopes, Nature, London, 203, 4942, 274-275 (1964).

51. Gregory R. L., Wallace J. G., Campbell F. W., Changes in size of visual after-images during changes of position in space, Quart. Journ. Exp. Psychol., 11, 1, 54-55 (1959).

52. Gregory R. L., Anstis S. M., Shopland C. D., Measuring visual constancy for stationary or moving objects, Nature, London, 193, 4815, 605-606 (1961).

53. Gregory R. L., Distortion of visual space as inappropriate constancy scaling, Nature, London, 119, 678 (1963).

54. Gregory R. L., Shopland C. D., The effect of touch on a visually ambiguous three-dimensional figure, Quart. Journ. Exp. Psychol., 16, 1 (1964).

55. Gregory R. L., Stereoscopic Shadow-images, Nature, 203,1407- 1408 (1964).

56. Gregory R. L., Will seeing machines have illusions? Machine Intelligence, 1, Edinburgh - London, 1967.

57. Gregory R. L., Seeing in depth, Proc. Roy. Inst., 40, 185 (i965).

58. Грегори Р. Л., Глаз и мозг, M., "Прогресс", 1970.

59. Gregory R. L., Origin of eyes and brains, Nature, London, 213, 5047, 369-372 (1967).

60. Gregory R. L., Perceptual illusions and brain models, Proc. Roy. Soc. "B" (1968).

61. Hawkins G. S., Stonehenge Decoded, London, 1966.

62. Helmholtz H., Handbook of Physiological Optics, Dover reprint, 1963.

63. Henle P. (ed.), Language, Thought and Culture, Univ. Michigan Press/Ambassador, Canada (1958).

64. Hochberg J. E., Effects of the Gestalt revolution, Psych. Rev., 64, 2, 16-19 (1957).

65. Hochberg J. E., Perception, Englewood Cliffs, 1964.

66. Holland H. C., The Spiral After-Effect, Oxford, 1965.

67. Holway A. H., Boring E. G., Determinants of apparent visual size with distance variant, Amer. Journ. Psychol., 54, 21 (1941).

68. Hospers J., Meaning and Truth in the Arts, Chapel Hill, N. C., 1946.

69. Hoyle F., Speculations on Stonehenge, Antiquity, 40, 160, 262- 276 (1966).

70. Hubel D. H., Wiesel T. N., Receptive fields, binocular interaction and functional architecture in the cat's visual cortex, Journ. Physiol., 160, 106 (1962).

71. Hubel D. H., Wiesel T. N., Receptive fields and functional architecture of monkey striate cortex, Journ. Physiol., 195, 215-243 (1968).

72. Ittelson W. H., Size as a cue to distance, Amer. Journ. Psychol., 64. 54-67; 188-202 (1951).

73. Ittelson W. H., Visual Space Perception, New York, 1960.

74. Ittelson W. H., The Ames Demonstrations in Perception, New York, 1968.

75. Julesz B., Binocular depth perception of computer-generated patterns, Journ. Bell Telephone Co., 39, 1125 (1960).

76. Kaufman L., Rock I., The moon illusion, Sci. Amer., 204, 120 (1962).

77. Katz J. J., The Philosophy of Language, New York - London, 1966.

78. Koffka K., Principles of Gestalt Psychology, New York, 1935.

79. Kohler W., Physical Gestalten, 1920.

80. Kohler W., Dynamics of Psychology, London - New York, 1940.

81. Langdon F. J., The perception of a changing shape, Quart. Journ. Exp. Psychol., 3, 157-165 (1951).

82. Langdon F. J., Further studies in the perception of a changing shape, Quart. Journ. Exp. Psychol., 5, 89-107 (1953).

83. Larousse Encyclopedia of Astronomy, Eng. tr. London, 1959.

84. Lee D., Theory of the stereoscopic shadow-caster, an instrument for the study of binocular kinetic space perception, Vision Research, 9, 145-156 (1969).

85. Leibowitz H., Visual Perception, New York, 1965.

86. Lenneberg E. H., The Biological Foundations of Language, New York, 1967.

87. Lenneberg E. H., A Biological Perspective of Language. New Directions in the Study of Language, Cambridge, Mass., 1964.

88. Lettvin J. Y., Maturana H. R., Pitts W., McCulloch W. S., What the frog's eye tells the frog's brain, Proc. Inst. Rad. Eng., New York, 47, 1940 (1959).

89. Mach E., Space and Geometry in the Light of Physiological, Psychological and Physical Inquiry (1906), tr. McCormack, T. J., Chicago, 1906.

90. Max Э., Анализ ощущений и отношение физического к психическому, М., 1907.

91. Medawar P. B., The Art of the Soluble, London, 1967.

92. Medawar P. B., Induction and Intuition in Scientific Thought, London, 1969.

93. Miller G. A., Language and Communication, London, 1951.

94. Miller G. A., The magic number seven; plus or minus two; some limits to our capacity for processing information, Psych. Rev., 63, 81-97 (1956).

95. Morgan W. D., Lester H., Stereo Realist Manual, New York, 1954.

96. Morris D., The Biology of Art, London, 1962.

97. Morrison P., Morrison E., Charles Babbage and his Calculating Engines, Dover, 1961.

98. Miiller-Lyer F. C., Optische Urteilsuntersuchungen. Arch. Physiol. Suppl., Bd. 2, 263-270 (1889).

99. Mc Callough C., Colour adaptation of edge detectors in the human visual system, Science, 149, 1115-1116 (1965).

100. Nasmyth J., James Nasmyth Engineer: an Autobiography, ed. by Smiles S., London, 1885.

101. Necker L. A., Observations on some remarkable phenomena seen in Switzerland; and an optical phenomenon which occurs on viewing of a crystal or geometrical solid, Phil. Mag.{3 ser.),l, 329- 337 (1832).

102. Neisser U., Cognitive Psychology, New York, 1967.

103. Newell A., Simon H. A., G. P. S., a programme that stimulates human thought, Lernende Autometen, Munich: R. Oldenberg K. G. (1961), and in Feigenbaum E. A., Feldman J. (eds.), Computers and Thought, London, 1963.

104. Ogle K. N., Researches in Binocular Vision, London, 1950.

105. Oldfield R. C., Marshall J. C., Language, Harmondsworth, 1968.

106. Oldfield R. C., Zangwill O. L., Head's concept of schema and its application in contemporary British psychology, Brit. Journ. Psychol., 32, 4, 267-286 (1942)

107. Penrose L. S., Penrose R., Impossible objects: a special type of illusion, Brit. Journ. Psychol., 49, 31 (1958).

108. Piaget J., The Origins of Intelligence in Children, New York, 1952.

109. Piaget J., The Language and Thought of the Child (1926), London, 1960.

110. Pierce J. R., Signals, Symbols and Noise, London, 1962.

111. Popper K. R., The Logic of Scientific Discovery, London, 1959.

112. Pritchard R. M.. Heron W., Hebb D. O., Visual perception approached by the method of stabilised images, Canadian Journ. Psychol., 14, 67-77 (1960).

113. Pullan J. M., The History of the Abacus, New York, 1969.

114. Rubin E., Synoplevede gurer, Copenhagen, 1915.

115. Rushton W. A. H., Visual Adaptation, the Ferrier Lecture 1962, Proc. Roy. Soc. "B", 162, 20-46 (1965).

116. Rushton W. A. H., Bleached rhodopsin and visual adaptation, Journ. Physiol., 181, 645-655 (1965).

117. Russedl B., History of Western Philosophy, London, 1946.

118. Schiller P., Wiener M., Binocular and Stereoscopic Viewing of Geometric Illusions, Perceptual and Motor Skills, 15, 739-747 (1962).

119. Seckel H. P. G., Birdheaded Dwarfs: studies in developmental anthropology including human proportions, Springfield, 111., 1960.

120. Segall M. H., Campbell D. T., Herskovits M. J., The Influence of Culture on Visual Perception, New York, 1966.

121. Shannon С. E., Weaver W., A Mathematical Theory of Communication, Urbana, 1949.

122. Short E., A History of Religious Architecture (1925), London, 1955.

123. Spottiswoode R., Spottiswoode N., The Theory of Stereoscopic Transmission and its Application to the Motion Picture, Berkeley, 1953.

124. Tausch R., Optische Tauschungen als artifizielle Effect der Gestaltungsprozess von Grossen und Formenkonstanz in der natiirlichen Raumwahmehmung, Psychol. Forsch., 24, 299-348 (1954).i

125. Thiery A., Ober geometrisch-optische Tauschungen, Phil. Stud.. 12, 67-125 (1896).

126. Thorne J. P., Grammars and Machines, Trans. Phil. Soc., 30-45 (1964).

127. Thorne J. P., Bralley P., Dewer H., The syntactical analysis of English by machine, in D. Michie (ed.), Machine Intelligence, 3, Edinburgh, 1968.

128. Thouless R. H., Phenomenal Regression to the Real Object, 1, Brit. Journ. Psychol., 21, 339 (1931).

129. Thouless R. H., Individual Differences in Phenomenal Regression, Brit. Journ. Psychol., 22, 216 (1932).

130. Tibbetts P. (ed.), Perception: Selected Readings in Science and Phenomenology, Chicago, 1969.

131. Толанский С., Оптические иллюзии, M., "Мир", 1967.

132. Valyus N. A., Stereoscopy, London - New York, 1962.

133. Vernon M. D., The functions of schemata in perceiving, Psych. Rev., 62. 180-192 (1955).

134. Walls G. L., The Vertebrate Eye and its Adaptive Radiation, Cranbrook Institute Science Bull., 19 (1942).

135. Wertheimer M., Principles of Perceptual Organisation (1923), tr. in Ellis W. H., Source Book of Gestalt Psychology, London - New York, 1938.

136. Wheatstone C, On some remarkable, and hitherto unobserved phenomena of binocular vision, Phil. Trans. Roy. Soc., 128 (1838).

137. White J., The Birth and Rebirth of Pictorial Space, London, 1958.

138. Wittgenstein L., Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus, London, 1922.

139. Wittgenstein L., Philosophical Investigations, Oxford, 1953.

140. Wollheim R., Art and Illusion, Brit. Journ. Aesthet., 3, 15-37 (1963).

141. WohlmgemuthA., On the After-Effect of Seen Movement, Brit. Journ. Psychol. Monogr. 1 (1911).

142. Young J. Z., Doubt and Certainty in Science, London, 1951.

143. Zweigler H. P., Leibowitz H. W., Apparent visual size as a function of distance for children and adults. Amer. Journ. Psychol., 70, 1, 106-109.