His empirical research sought to determine how access to language, language acquisition, and participation in conversation influence cognitive processes in development[1][2] and their breakdown in adulthood following brain injury,[3] especially in the areas of numerical, spatial, social, and moral cognition.[4][5][6] This work was carried out in different cultures[7] and involves monolingual and bilingual children,[8][9] atypically developing children such as deaf children,[10][11] and children and adults with aphasia.[12]
Marvelous Minds: The Discovery of What Children Know. (Oxford University Press, 2008)
Access to Language and Cognitive Development. with Luca Surian (Oxford University Press, 2011) ISBN9780199592722
References
^Siegal, M. (2004). Neuroscience. Signposts to the essence of language. Science, 305(5691), 1720-1721.
^Siegal, M., & Surian, L. (2011). Access to Language and Cognitive Development. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
^Surian, L., & Siegal, M. (2001). Sources of performance on theory of mind tasks in right hemisphere damaged patients. Brain and Language, 78, 224–232.
^Siegal, M., & Beattie, K. (1991). Where to look first for children's knowledge of false beliefs. Cognition, 38(1), 1-12. [1]
^Siegal, M., & Surian, L. (2004). Conceptual development and conversational understanding. Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 8, 534–538.
^Siegal, M. (2008). Marvelous Minds: The Discovery of What Children Know. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
^Siegal, M., Butterworth, G., & Newcombe, P. A. (2004). Culture and children's cosmology. Developmental Science, 7(3), 308-324.
^Siegal, M. et al. (2010). Bilingualism accentuates children's conversational understanding. PLoS ONE, Feb 3, 5(2):e9004. Epub [2]
^Siegal, M., Iozzi, L., & Surian, L. (2009). Bilingualism and conversational understanding in young children. Cognition, 110, 115–122.
^Woolfe, T., Want, S. C., & Siegal, M. (2002). Signposts to development: theory of mind in deaf children. Child Development, 73(3), 768-778.
^Woolfe, T., Want, S. C., & Siegal, M. (2003). Siblings and theory of mind in deaf native signing children. Journal of Deaf Studies and Deaf Education, 8(3), 340-347.
^Siegal, M., & Varley, R. (2006). Aphasia, language, and theory of mind. Social Neuroscience, 1(3-4), 167-174.