“…Similar effects of mind perception on human-nonhuman interaction can also be found in behavioral studies, such that increased mind perception is associated with improvements in social-cognitive processing (e.g., Abubshait & Wiese, 2017; Caruana, de Lissa, & McArthur, 2015Wykowska, Wiese, Prosser, & Müller, 2014;Wiese, Wykowska, Zwickel & Mueller, 2012). There is also evidence that variation in activation in prefrontal social brain areas, such as the left vmPFC, can be linked to variations in social-cognitive performance (Wiese, Abubshait, Azarian, & Blumberg, 2019;Wiese et al, 2018): using fMRI and tDCS stimulation, it was shown that the degree to which gaze signals (or cues) were followed differently as a function of brain activation in left vmPFC associated with mind perception.…”