“…Several studies have shown that inversion also disrupts recognition of emotional expressions in faces (e.g., McKelvie, 1995;Prkachin, 2003;Bombari et al, 2013). Inversion effects have also been reported for bodies, for a range of judgments, including of body posture (Reed et al, 2003(Reed et al, , 2006, identity (Robbins & Coltheart, 2012;Cazzato, Walters, & Urgesi, 2021), size (Walsh, Vormberg, Hannaford, & Longo, 2018), attractiveness (Cook & Duchaine, 2011), and orientation (Bernard et al, 2012;Schmidt & Kistemaker, 2015). Of particular relevance here, body inversion effects have also been reported for emotional expressions, for stimuli including still photographs (Thoma et al, 2020), movies (Atkinson, Tunstall, & Dittrich, 2007;Zieber, Kangas, Hock, & Bhatt, 2014), and point-light displays (Dittrich, Troscianko, Lea, & Morgan, 1996;Clarke, Bradshaw, Field, Hampson, & Rose;Atkinson et al, 2007).…”