Miller:
Miller, N. E. (1948). Theory and experiment relating psychoanalytic displacement to stimulus-response generalization. Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology, 43, 155-178.
Miller, N. E. (1951). Comments on theoretical models. Illustrated by the development of a theory of conflict behavior. Journal of Personality, 20, 82-100.
Miller, N. E. (1957). A psychologist speaks. In H. D. Kruse (Ed.), Integrating the approaches to
mental disease (pp. 43-45). New York: Hoeber.
Miller, N. E. (1964). Some implications of modern behavior theory for personality change and psychotherapy. In D. Byrne & P. Worchel (Eds.), Personality change (pp. 149-175). New York: Wylie.
Miller, N. E. (1968). Experiments relevant to psychopathology. In F. C. Redlich, G. L. Klerman, R. K. McDonald, & J. F. O’Connor (Eds.), The university and community mental health (pp. 53-69). New Haven: Yale University Press.
Miller, N. E. (1968). Visceral learning and other additional facts potentially applicable to psychotherapy. In R. Porter (Ed.), The role of learning in psychotherapy (pp. 294-309).
Miller et.al.
Miller, N. E., Brown, J., Klebanoff, S., & Lipofsky, M. (1939). Indecision and conflict; psychological theory tested by experiments on rats. Yale Science Magazine, 13, 22-33.
Miller, N. E. (with Sears, R. R., Mowrer, O. H., Doob, L. W., & Dollard, J.) (1941). I. The frustration-aggression hypothesis. Psychological Review, 48, 337-342.