about
Shaping and reshaping the aesthetic brain: Emerging perspectives on the neurobiology of embodied aestheticsThere or not there? A multidisciplinary review and research agenda on the impact of transparent barriers on human perception, action, and social behaviorAdditive Routes to Action Learning: Layering Experience Shapes Engagement of the Action Observation NetworkThe shaping of social perception by stimulus and knowledge cues to human animacy.Sensitivity of the action observation network to physical and observational learningDance experience sculpts aesthetic perception and related brain circuitsUsing guitar learning to probe the Action Observation Network's response to visuomotor familiarity.Neurocognitive control in dance perception and performance.Physical experience leads to enhanced object perception in parietal cortex: insights from knot tyingContorted and ordinary body postures in the human brainAction prediction in younger versus older adults: neural correlates of motor familiarity.Dynamic modulation of the action observation network by movement familiarity.The impact of aesthetic evaluation and physical ability on dance perception.Building a motor simulation de novo: observation of dance by dancers.The Impact of Experience on Affective Responses during Action Observation.On-line grasp control is mediated by the contralateral hemisphere.Action observation in the infant brain: the role of body form and motionTransient disruption of M1 during response planning impairs subsequent offline consolidationThe timing and precision of action prediction in the aging brainPredicting others' actions via grasp and gaze: evidence for distinct brain networks.The influence of visual training on predicting complex action sequences.Disentangling neural processes of egocentric and allocentric mental spatial transformations using whole-body photos of self and other.Learning to tie the knot: The acquisition of functional object representations by physical and observational experience.Understanding self and others: from origins to disorders.Supramodal and modality-sensitive representations of perceived action categories in the human brain.Decreased reward value of biological motion among individuals with autistic traits.Robotic movement preferentially engages the action observation network.Have I grooved to this before? Discriminating practised and observed actions in a novel context.Dissociable substrates for body motion and physical experience in the human action observation network.Simulating and predicting others' actions.Motor control in action: using dance to explore the intricate choreography between action perception and production in the human brain.Representing others' actions: the role of expertise in the aging mind.No two are the same: Body shape is part of identifying others.Testing key predictions of the associative account of mirror neurons in humans using multivariate pattern analysis.Neural substrates of contextual interference during motor learning support a model of active preparation.Do alternative names block young and older adults' retrieval of proper names?Anodal tDCS over Primary Motor Cortex Provides No Advantage to Learning Motor Sequences via Observation.Observing action sequences elicits sequence-specific neural representations in frontoparietal brain regionsNeuroaesthetics and beyond: new horizons in applying the science of the brain to the art of danceFrom dancing robots to action aesthetics: Re-examining mirror system activity as a function of the observer's experience
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hulumtuese
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Emily S Cross
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Emily S Cross
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