“…Behavioral and neuroimaging studies have suggested that the human brain could encode whole-persons in a holistic rather than part-based manner ( McKone et al, 2001 ; Maurer et al, 2002 ; Zhang et al, 2012 ; Soria Bauser and Suchan, 2013 ), indicating that the whole-person’s emotional expression might not be integrated from the isolated emotional faces and bodies. Our latest study has found that in the EBA, the whole-person patterns were almost equally associated with weighted sums of face and body patterns, using different weights for happy expressions but equal weights for angry and fearful ones ( Yang et al, 2018 ), but this was not established for the other regions. Although some other regions like MPFC, left STS and precuneus have been demonstrated to be capable of coding the facial and bodily emotions at an abstract level regardless of the sensory cue ( Peelen et al, 2010 ; Klasen et al, 2011 ; Chikazoe et al, 2014 ; Skerry and Saxe, 2014 ; Aube et al, 2015 ; Kim et al, 2017 ; Schirmer and Adolphs, 2017 ), these regions that were not sensitive to whole-person stimuli might not be able to represent the emotions of whole-person stimuli ( Tsao et al, 2003 ; Pinsk et al, 2005 ; Heberlein and Atkinson, 2009 ).…”