“…Moreover, when processing point-light BM, observers are able to access an actor's characteristics, such as gender (Kozlowski & Cutting, 1977;Troje, Sadr, Geyer, & Nakayama, 2006), identity (Beardsworth & Buckner, 1981;Loula, Prasad, Harber, & Shiffrar, 2005), emotions (Atkinson, Dittrich, Gemmell, & Young, 2004;Chouchourelou, Matsuka, Harber, & Shiffrar, 2006) and intentions (Iacoboni et al, 2005;Martel, Bidet-Ildei, & Coello, 2011). In relation to embodied cognition theory, which postulates that language, abstract and symbol processing emerge from sensorimotor experience (Barsalou, 1999;Wilson, 2002), some studies have shown that BM perception is also related to higher-level cognitive processes, such as action-word processing (Bidet-Ildei, Sparrow, & Coello, 2011;Bidet-Ildei & Toussaint, 2015;Springer, Huttenlocher, & Prinz, 2012;Springer & Prinz, 2010;Troyer, Curley, Miller, Saygin, & Bergen, 2014). For example, Bidet-Ildei et al (2011) show that reading an action verb facilitates the subsequent detection of congruent point-light action embedded in a high-density dynamical point light.…”