“…For instance, participants are known to initiate a button-press more quickly when it is followed by a spatially compatible light effect (e.g., a right button-press followed by a light on the right side), as compared to an incompatible light effect (e.g., a right button-press followed by a light on the left side; Kunde, 2001; see also Horváth, Bíró, & Neszmélyi, 2018;Kunde, Koch, & Hoffmann, 2004;Pfister, Janczyk, Wirth, Dignath, & Kunde, 2014). Importantly, the sociomotor framework (Kunde et al, 2018) holds that such mechanism of action planning can be extended to social interactions, i.e., an action can also become associated with the behavior that it typically evokes in others. Under this premise, agents may represent their action in terms of the expected response of their interaction partner, and therefore, in social contexts, action execution should come with an anticipation of the partner's upcoming response.…”