BartlettF C, 1941“Fatigue following highly skilled work”Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B131247–257
2.
BrainW R, 1959“The neurological tradition of the London Hospital”Lancet2575–581
3.
BroadbentD E, 1977“Levels, hierarchies, and the locus of control”Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology29181–201
4.
BrooksR A, 1991“Intelligence without representation”Artificial Intelligence47139–159
5.
BuzzardE F, 1934“Hughlings Jackson and his influence on neurology”Lancet2909–913
6.
CrowT J, 1980“Positive and negative schizophrenic symptoms and the role of dopamine”British Journal of Psychiatry137383–386
7.
DewhurstK, 1982Hughlings Jackson on Psychiatry (Oxford: Sandford Publications)
8.
FerrierD, 1911“John Hughlings Jackson, 1835–1911”Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B84xviii–xxv
9.
GoodaleM AMilnerA D, 1992“Separate visual pathways for perception and action”Trends in Neurosciences1520–25
10.
GregoryR L, 1961“The brain as an engineering problem”, in Current Problems in Animal Behaviour Eds ThorpeW HZangwillO L (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press)
11.
HeckhausenHBeckmannJ, 1990“Intentional action and action slips”Psychological Review9736–48
12.
JacksonJohn HughlingsSupplement to the Dictionary of National Biography January 1901 December 1911, volume 2 (Ed. LeeSidneySir) (Oxford: Oxford University Press) pp 356–358
13.
KingS MDykemanCRedgravePDeanP, 1992“Use of a distracting task to obtain defensive head movements to looming visual stimuli by human adults in laboratory setting”Perception21245–259
14.
NormanD A, 1981“Categorization of action slips”Psychological Review881–15
15.
ReasonJ T, 1990Human Error (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press)
16.
SchneiderG E, 1969“Two visual systems”Science163895–902
17.
TaylorJ, 1958Selected Writings of John Hughlings Jackson (London: Staples Press)
18.
WalsheF M R, 1961“Contributions of John Hughlings Jackson to neurology”Archives of Neurology517–29