Papers:
- Cross, ES, Mackie, EC, Wolford, G, & Hamilton, AF (in press). Contorted and ordinary static body postures in the human brain. Experimental Brain Research: Special Issue on Body representation.
- Cross, ES, Hamilton, AFdeC., Kraemer, DJ, Kelley, WM, & Grafton, ST (2009). Dissociable substrates for body motion and physical experience in the human action observation network. European Journal of Neuroscience, 30(7), 1383-1392. * Featured Article
- Cohen, NR, Cross, ES, Wymbs, N, & Grafton, ST (2009). Transient disruption of M1 during encoding abolishes the contextual interference effect. Experimental Brain Research, 196(2), 303-309.
- Cohen, NR, Cross, ES, Tunik, E, Grafton, ST, & Culham, JC (2009). Ventral and dorsal stream contributions to immediate and delayed grasping: A TMS approach. Neuropsychologia, 47(6), 1553-1562.
- Cross, ES, Kraemer, DJ, Hamilton, AFdeC, Kelley, WM, & Grafton, ST (2009). Sensitivity of the action observation network to physical and observational learning. Cerebral Cortex, 19(2), 315-326.
- Cross, ES, Schmitt, PS, & Grafton, ST (2007). Neural substrates of contextual interference during motor learning support a model of active preparation. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 19(11), 1854-1871.
- Rice, NJ, Tunik, E, Cross, ES, & Grafton, ST (2007). Grasping is mediated by the contralateral hemisphere, independent of hand. Brain Research, 1175C, 76-84.
- Cross, ES, Hamilton, AF, & Grafton, ST (2006). Building a simulation de novo: Observation of dance by dancers. Neuroimage, 31(3), 1257-1267.
- Cross, ES & Burke, DM (2004). Do alternative names impair proper name retrieval? Brain and Language, 89(1), 174-181.