REFERENCES AND NOTES

[1]Plinius Secundus. Natural History. III, Book IX.

[2]Aristotle. Historia Animalium. Books I-IX.

[3]Donaldson, Henry H. The Growth of the Brain. London: Walter Scott, 1895.

[4]Smith, G. Elliot, in Royal College of Surgeons of England, Museum, Descriptive and Illustrated Catalogue of the Physiological Series of Comparative Anatomy. London: Taylor and Francis, 1902, pp. 349, 351, 356.

[5]Scammon, Charles Melville. The Marine Mammals of the North-Western Coast of North America, Described and Illustrated: Together with an Account of the American Whale-Fishery. San Francisco: J. H. Carmany, 1874, p. 78.

[6]von Bonin, Gerhardt. “Brain-Weight and Body-Weight in Mammals,” Journal of General Psychology, XVI (1937), 379-389.

[7]Lilly, John C. Man and Dolphin. Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday, 1961; London: Victor Gollancz, 1962.

[8]McBride, Arthur F., and Hebb, D.O. “Behavior of the Captive Bottle-Nose Dolphin, Tursiops truncatus,” Journal of Comparative and Physiological Psychology, XLI (1948), 111-123.

[9]Griffin, Donald R. Echoes of Bats and Men. Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday, 1959.

[10]Kellogg, Winthrop N. Porpoises and Sonar. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1961.

[11]Lilly, John C., and Miller, Alice M. “Vocal Exchanges between Dolphins; Bottlenose Dolphins ‘Talk’ to Each Other with Whistles, Clicks, and a Variety of Other Noises,” Science, CXXXIV (1961), 1873-1876.

[12]Schevill, William E., and Lawrence, Barbara. “Auditory Response of a Bottlenosed Porpoise, Tursiops truncatus, to Frequencies above 100 KC,” Journal of Experimental Zoology, CXXIV (1953), 147-165.

[13]Lilly, John C. “Vocal Behavior of the Bottlenose Dolphin,” Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society, CVI (1926), 520-529.

[14]Norris, Kenneth S., Prescott, John H., Asa-Dorian, Paul V., and Perkins, Paul. “An Experimental Demonstration of Echo-Location Behavior in the Porpoise, Tarsiops truncatus: (Montagu),” Biological Bulletin, CXX (1961), 163-176.

[15]Lilly, John C. “Interspecies Communication,” McGraw-Hill Yearbook of Science and Technology 1962. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1962, pp. 279-281.

[16]Lilly, John C. “Some Considerations Regarding Basic Mechanisms of Positive and Negative Types of Motivations,” American Journal of Psychiatry, CXV (1958), 498-504.

[17]Lilly, John C. “Some Aspects of the Adaptation of the Mammals to the Ocean,” in John Field, ed., Handbook of Physiology. Washington: American Physiological Society (in press).

[18]Lilly, John C., and Miller, A. M. “Operant Conditioning of the Bottlenose Dolphin with Electrical Stimulation of the Brain,” Journal of Comparative and Physiological Psychology, LV (1962), 73-79.

[19]Lilly, John C. “Some Problems of Productive and Creative Scientific Research with Man and Dolphin,” Archives of General Psychiatry (1963, in press).

[20]Lilly, John C. “Critical Brain Size and Language,” Perspectives in Biology and Medicine (in press).

[21]Skinner, Burrhus F. Verbal Behavior. New York: Appleton-Century-Crofts, 1957.

[22]Lewis, Morris M. How Children Learn to Speak. New York: Basic Books, 1959.

[23]Support for the program of the Communication Research Institute, St. Thomas, Virgin Islands, is from the National Institute of Mental Health and the National Institute of Neurological Diseases and Blindness of the National Institutes of Health; from the Coyle Foundation; from the Office of Naval Research; from the U. S. Air Force Office of Scientific Research; and from private gifts and contributions to the Communication Research Institute.

William Andrews Clark Memorial Library Seminar Papers

Editing Donne and Pope. 1952.

Problems in the Editing of Donne’s Sermons, by George R. Potter.

Editorial Problems in Eighteenth—Century Poetry, by John Butt.

Music and Literature in England in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries. 1953.

Poetry and Music in the Seventeenth Century, by James E. Phillips.

Some Aspects of Music and Literature in the Eighteenth Century, by Bertrand H. Bronson.

Restoration and Augustan Prose. 1956.

Restoration Prose, by James R. Sutherland.

The Ironic Tradition in Augustan Prose from Swift to Johnson, by Ian Watt.

Anglo-American Cultural Relations in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries. 1958.

The Puritans in Old and New England, by Leon Howard.

William Byrd: Citizen of the Enlightenment, by Louis B. Wright.

The Beginnings of Autobiography in England, by James M. Osborn. 1959.

Scientific Literature in Sixteenth and Seventeenth Century England. 1961.

English Medical Literature in the Sixteenth Century, by C. D. O’Malley.

English Scientific Literature in the Seventeenth Century, by A. Rupert Hall.

Francis Bacon’s Intellectual Milieu. A Paper delivered by Virgil K. Whitaker at a meeting at the Clark Library, 18 November 1961, celebrating the 400th anniversary of Bacon’s birth.

Methods of Textual Editing, by Vinton A. Dearing. 1962.