reviewed by Cazala, Vienney, and Stoléru (2015). Clinical stories involving
phantom limbs, anosognosia, and other neurological syndromes are told in
Sacks (1985) and Ramachandran and Blakeslee (1998).
Somatosensory neurobiology: Kandel et al. (2013, chaps. 22-23).
Central nervous system processes involved in motor movement: Kandel et al.
(2013, chaps. 37-38).
Chapter 17
“One spring morning”: the event that inspired Hans Berger in his study of the
human brain, and led him to record the first human EEG: Millett (2001).
Energy needs of the human brain and the notion of neural dark energy:
Raichle (2006).
Chapter 18
The history and contemporary use of the Wada test is described in Brain and
Cognition by Jones-Gotman, Rouleau, and Snyder (1997). In the same jour-
nal issue is an autobiographical essay by Juhn Wada (1997a) and a transla-
tion of his original 1949 publication on the amobarbital procedure (Wada,
1997b).
Mirror neurons and speculations on the evolutionary origin of language: Ra-
machandran (2011, chaps. 4 and 6).
The seminal publication on the study of human split-brain patients:
Gazzaniga, Bogen, and Sperry (1962). Roger Sperry’s Nobel Prize lecture:
Sperry (1982). Recent reviews of the history and current status of split-
brain research: Gazzaniga (2005) and Wolman (2012). A detailed exposition
of lateralized functions in the human brain: Gazzaniga, Ivry, and Mangun
(2014, chap. 4).
The similarity between Freudian psychological defenses and the behavior of
anosognosia patients: Ramachandran and Blakeslee (1998, chap. 7).
Neural correlates of consciousness: Crick and Koch (1990), Crick (1994), and