“…Crucially, this methodology should also provide a means of disentangling traditional mentalising accounts for spontaneous visual 7 perspective-taking from directional (or sub-mentalising) accounts, which suggest that attention is driven by domain-general processes based on directional features of the avatar (Heyes, 2014;Santiesteban, Catmur, Hopkins, Bird, & Heyes, 2014). Specifically, Santiesteban et al (2014) found a comparable reaction time difference between consistent and inconsistent trials when the central avatar was replaced with an arrow (but see Schurz, Kronbichler, Weissengruber, Surtees, Samson, &Perner, 2015 andNielsen et al, 2015). Since arrows provide directional, but not agentive, cues the authors interpret this as evidence against an implicit mentalising account of the altercentric effect, and instead supports the role of attentional processes.…”