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Books and Book Chapters
- Brannon E. M. & Cantlon, J. F. (in press). A comparative perspective on the origin of numerical thinking . Book edited by Lynn Nadel.
- Purves, D., Brannon, E., Cabeza, R., Huettel, S., LaBar, K., Platt, M., Woldorff, M. (2007). Principles of Cognitive Neuroscience. Sunderland , MA: Sinauer Associates. [Undergraduate/Graduate Textbook]
- Brannon, E. M. (2005). Quantitative thinking: From monkey to human and human infant to adult. In S. Dehaene, J. Duhamel, M. D. Hauser, & G. Rizzolatti (Eds.), From Monkey Brain to Human Brain (pp. 97-116). Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
- Brannon, E. M. (2005). What Animals Know About Numbers. In J. I. D. Campbell (Ed.), Handbook of Mathematical Cognition (pp. 85-108). New York, NY: Psychology Press.
- Brannon, E. M., & Roitman, J. (2003). Nonverbal representations of time and number in animals and human infants. In W. Meck (Ed.), Functional and Neural Mechanisms of Interval Timing (pp. 143-182). New York, NY: CRC Press.
- Brannon, E. M., & Terrace, H. S. (2002). The Evolution and Ontogeny of Ordinal Numerical Ability. In M. Bekoff, C. Allen, & G. M. Burghardt (Eds.), The Cognitive Animal (pp. 197-204). Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press.
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