The research on mental imagery in general and on multimodal mental imagery in particular involved a lot of interdisciplinary collaboration, with psychologists and neuroscientists, and the aim of achieiing an understanding of these mental phenomena heavily depended on integrating findings from psychology and neuroscience with philosophy. This general interdisciplinary approach was maintained also in the publications that resulted from the project, including the monograph by the PI on the topic of the ERC project, which was published in 2023 by Oxford University Press. The title of this book is Mental Imagery: Philosophy, Psychology, Neuroscience and it has several book symposia already devoted to it. The interdisciplinarity of the project is also evident in the special issue of Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B on the topic of the grant, which was published in 2021 (title: Offline perception), edited by a philosopher (the PI), a psychologist (Peter Fazekas) and a neuroscientidd (Joel Pearson). The results of the research were also communicated to non-expert audiences, for example, by giving talks to large non-specialized audiences, like the Hay-on-Wye festival (UK) or the National Portrait Gallery (UK), by interviews in popular venues like the magazine Der Spiegel (Germany), or GQ (UK), as well as by a TED-Ed video.