BarkerRoger G.Ecological Pyschology. Stanford : Stanford University Perss, 1968.
2.
SaarinenThomas F.Perception of Environment. Washington : Association of American Geographers, 1969.
3.
BarkerRoger G. and GumpPaul V.Big School, Small School. Stanford : Stanford University Press, 1964.
4.
KleemanWalterJr.How to Establish Office Distance: 66 Inches or 6600 MilesContract. Vol. 12, No. 8, 1971, pp. 74–79.
5.
ProshanskyHarold M., IttlesonWilliam H., and RivlinLeanne G.The Environmental Psychology of the Psychiatric WardEnvironmental Psychology. New York : Rinehart and Winston, 1970.
6.
LynchKevinThe Image of the City. Cambridge : The MIT Press, 1960.
7.
MooreGary T.Conceptual Issues in the Study of Environmental CognitionEnvironmental Design: Research and practice. WilliamJ. Mitchell Proceedings of EDRA 3AR8 Los angeles : School of Architecture and Urban Planning, University of California, 1972.
8.
AppleyardDonald. Styles and Methods of Structuring a CityEnvironment and Behavior. Vol. 2, No. 1, 1970, pp. 100–117.
9.
SteaDavid and DownsRoger M.From the Outside In at Looking OutEnvironment and Behavior. Vol. 2, No. 1, June, 1970, pp. 3–12.
10.
LaddFlorence C.Black Youth View Their EnvironmentEnvironment and Behavior. Vol. 2, No. 1, June, 1970, pp. 74–79.
11.
LaddFlorence C.Black Youths View Their Environment: Some Views of HousingAmerican Institute of Planners Journal. March, 1972, pp. 108–115.
12.
AppleyardDonald, LynchKevin, and MeyerJ.The View From the Road. Cambridge : The MIT Press, 1964.
13.
PiagetJ. and InhelderB.The Child's Conception of Space. New York : W. W. Norton, 1948.
14.
CossRichard G.Mood Provoking Visual Stimuli: Their Origins and Applications. Los Angeles : University of California Press, 1965.
15.
CossRichard G.The Ethological Command In ArtLeonardo. Vol. 1, pp. 273–287, 1968.
16.
CossRichard G.The Perceptual Aspects of Eye–Spot Patterns and Their Relevance to Gaze BehaviorBehaviour Studies in Psychiatry. HuttS. J. and HuttCorinne. New York : Pergamon Press, 1970.
17.
HessEckhard H.Imprinting in AnimalsScientific American. March, 1958, pp. 3–719.
18.
FantzR. L.Pattern Vision in Newborn InfantsScience. Vol. 140, 1963, pp. 296–297.
19.
CooperClareThe House as Symbol of Self. Berkeley : Institute of Urban and Regional Development, University of California1971.
20.
Rapoport, Amos. House Form and Culture. Englewood Cliffs : Prentice–Hall, Inc., 1969.
21.
RueschJurgen and KeesWeldonNonverbal Communication. Berkeley and Los Angeles : University of California Press, 1956.
22.
Anonymous. “The Shrink Who Came to DinnerHuman Behavior. Vol. 1, No. 2, 1972, p. 24.
23.
GoffmanErving. The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life. Garden City : Doubleday Anchor Books, Doubleday & Co., Inc., 1959.
24.
BettelheimBrunoHow Interior Environment Affects People. Paper presented at NEOCON, the Merchandise Mart, Chicago, 1969.
25.
AlexanderChristopher, HirshenSanford, IshikawaSara, CoffinChristie, AngelSchlomo. Houses Generated by Patterns. Berkeley : Center for Environmental Structure, 1969.
26.
LaumannE. O. and HouseJ. S.Living Room Styles and Social Attributes: The Patterning of Material Artifacts in a Modern Urban CommunitySociolog;y and Social Research. No. 54, 1970, pp. 321–342.
27.
WinickCharles and HoltHerbert. Seating Position as Nonverbal Communication in Group AnalysisPsychiatry. Vol. 24, 1961, pp. 171–182.
28.
HallEdward T.Spatial Behavior of Older People. PastalanLeon A. and CarsonDaniel H.Ann Arbor : the University of Michigan – Wayne State University Institute of Gerontology, 1970.