“…From mirror neurons to extended action observation networks (AONs), it is well‐known that executing and observing others' actions activates similar brain regions (Caspers, Zilles, Laird, & Eickhoff, 2010; Hardwick, Caspers, Eickhoff, & Swinnen, 2018; Rizzolatti & Craighero, 2004). Such sensorimotor activations are stronger for actions within the observer's expert motor repertoire (Calvo‐Merino, Glaser, Grezes, Passingham, & Haggard, 2005; Calvo‐Merino, Grezes, Glaser, Passingham, & Haggard, 2006), likely reflecting anticipatory resonant mechanisms rather than passive responses to visual stimuli (Aglioti, Cesari, Romani, & Urgesi, 2008; Chen, Chang, Huang, & Yen, 2020; Tomeo, Cesari, Aglioti, & Urgesi, 2013). This aligns with current predictive accounts of action processing (Avenanti, Paracampo, Annella, Tidoni, & Aglioti, 2018; Kilner, Friston, & Frith, 2007; Paracampo, Montemurro, de Vega, & Avenanti, 2018; Urgen & Saygin, 2020; Urgesi et al, 2010; Wilson & Knoblich, 2005), suggesting that we use our sensorimotor system to predict other's forthcoming actions.…”