(not including conference abstracts and book reviews)
2.
WhittleP, 1965“Binocular rivalry and the contrast at contours”Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology17217–226
3.
BurkhardD AWhittleP, 1967“Spectral-sensitivity functions for homochromatic-contrast detection”Journal of the Optical Society of America57416–420
4.
WhittlePBloorD CPococksS, 1968“Some experiments on figural effects in binocular rivalry”Perception & Psychophysics4183–188
5.
WhittlePChallandsP D C, 1969“The effect of background luminance on the brightness of flashes”Vision Research91095–1110
6.
WhittleP, 1973“The brightness of coloured flashes on backgrounds of various colours and luminances”Vision Research13621–638
7.
WhittleP, 1974“Intensity discrimination between flashes which do not differ in brightness: Some new measurements on the ‘Blue’ cones”Vision Research14599–601
8.
WhittlePSwanstonM T, 1974“Luminance discrimination of separated flashes: the effects of background luminance and the shapes of T.V.I. curves”Vision Research14713–749
9.
WhittleP, 1986“Increments and decrements: luminance discrimination”Vision Research261677–1691
10.
WhittleP, 1991“Sensory and perceptual processes in seeing brightness and lightness”, in From Pigments to Perception Eds ValbergALeeB (New York: Plenum) pp 293–304
11.
WhittleP, 1992“Brightness, discriminability and the ‘crispening effect’”Vision Research321493–1507
12.
ShevellS KHollidayIWhittleP, 1992“Two separate neural mechanisms of brightness induction”Vision Research322331–2340
13.
SharpeL TWhittlePNordbyK, 1993“Spatial integration and sensitivity changes in the human rod visual system”Journal of Physiology461235–246
14.
WhittleP, 1993“A perspective for viewing the present of psychophysics”, Peer comment in Brain & Behavioral Sciences16165–166
15.
WhittleP, 1994a, “The psychophysics of contrast brightness”, in Lightness, Brightness, and Transparency Ed. GilchristA L (Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates) pp 35–110
16.
WhittleP, 1994b“Contrast brightness and ordinary seeing”, in Lightness, Brightness, and Transparency Ed. GilchristA L (Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates) pp 111–157
17.
KingdomF A AWhittleP, 1996“Contrast discrimination at high contrasts reveals the influence of local light adaptation on contrast processing”Vision Research36817–829
18.
WhittleP, 1998“Filling in does require a mechanism, and some persistent doubts”, Peer comment in Brain & Behavioral Sciences21779–780
19.
WhittleP, 2000“Experimental psychology and psychoanalysis: What we can learn from a century of misunderstanding”Neuropsychoanalysis1233–245
20.
WhittleP, 2000, “Response to Commentaries. Paul Whittle”Neuropsychoanalysis2259–264
21.
WhittleP, 2002“Contrast colours: a powerful and disturbing phenomenon”, in Theories, Technologies, Instrumentalities of Color: Anthropological and Historiographic Perspectives Eds SaundersBVan BrakelJ (Lanham, MD: University Press of America) pp 105–115
22.
WhittleP, 2003a“Contrast colours”, in Colour Perception, Mind and the Physical World Eds MausfieldRHeyerD (New York: Oxford University Press) pp 115–138
23.
WhittleP, 2003b“Colorimetry fortified”, in Colour Perception, Mind and the Physical World Eds MausfieldRHeyerD (New York: Oxford University Press) pp 63–66
24.
IttleP, 2003c“Why is this game still being played?”, in Colour Perception, Mind and the Physical World Eds MausfieldRHeyerD (New York: Oxford University Press) pp 203–204
25.
WhittleP, 2003d“Talking across the divide”, in Colour Perception, Mind and the Physical World Eds MausfieldRHeyerD (New York: Oxford University Press) pp 471–473
26.
WhittleP, 2003e“Who dictates what is real?”, in Colour Perception, Mind and the Physical World Eds MausfieldRHeyerD (New York: Oxford University Press) pp 63–66