These differences in spatial visual perspective may exert an important influence on the emergence of embodied behavior. Elsewhere, neuroimaging investigations have revealed greater activity in motor and sensorimotor regions when people imagine actions (and body parts) from an egocentric than allocentric viewpoint (e.g., Lorey et al., 2009 and Ruby and Decety, 2001). In addition, the contents of mental simulations comprise more information about bodily sensations, affective reactions and psychological states when events are imagined from a first- than third-person perspective (Libby and Eibach, 2011 and McIssac and Eich, 2002).