CruickshankW. M., and TrippeM. J., Services to Blind Children in New York State, Syracuse, New York: Syracuse University Press, 1959, pp. 80-82.
2.
HarperR. A., FischerL. K., and RiderR. V., “Neurological and Intellectual Status of Prematures at Three to Five Years of Age,”The Journal of Pediatrics, 55 (1959), pp. 679–690.
3.
KannerL., Child Psychiatry, 3rd ed.Springfield, Illinois: Charles C Thomas, 1957, pp. 739–742.
4.
KeelerW. R., “Autistic Patterns and Defective Communication in Blind Children with Retrolental Fibroplasia,” in Psychopathology of Communication, ed., HockP. H., and ZubinJ., New York: Grune & Stratton, 1958, pp. 64–83.
5.
Keeler, op. cit., pp. 75–76.
6.
KnoblochH., RiderR., HarperP., and PasamanickB., “Neuropsychiatric Sequelae of Prematurity: A Longitudinal Study,” reprinted with additions from The Journal of the American Medical Association, 161 (1956), pp. 581–585.
7.
LowenfeldB., “Psychological Problems of Children with Impaired Vision,” in Psychology of Exceptional Children and Youth, ed., CruickshankW. M., Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey: Prentice-Hall, Inc., 1963, in publication.
8.
National Committee for Research in Neurological Disorders, “Exploring the Brain of Man,” p. 25.
9.
MorrisM., SpauldingP. J., and BrodieF. H., Blindness in Children, Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1957.
10.
ParmeleeA. H.Jr., “The Developmental Evaluation of the Blind Premature Infant,”AMA Journal of Diseases of Children, 90 (1955), pp. 135–140.
11.
ParmeleeA. H.Jr., FiskeC. E., and WrightR. H., “The Development of Ten Children with Blindness as a Result of Retrolental Fibroplasia,”AMA Journal of Diseases of Children, 98 (1959), pp. 198–220.