“…People can perform a same/different mental rotation task more efficiently when the stimuli are human bodies ( Amorim et al, 2006 ; Jansen et al., 2012 ; Voyer & Jansen, 2016 ) or cube objects with human-like features (e.g., head, face) that are analogous to human bodies ( Amorim et al, 2006 ; Krüger et al, 2014 ; Makinae et al, 2015 ; Makinae & Kasai, 2017 ; Muto et al, 2020 ; Muto & Nagai, 2020 ; Sayeki, 1981 ; Voyer & Jansen, 2016 ) compared with nonsense cube objects. Amorim et al (2006) proposed two underlying processes in the human-body advantage in mental rotation, called “spatial embodiment” and “motoric embodiment.” The spatial embodiment describes the process of projecting one's body axes onto human bodies or human-like objects with intrinsic axes (e.g., the top–bottom axis can be defined by the head position), while the motoric embodiment describes the process of the mental emulation of the posture of stimuli.…”