Vertical spatial representation of numbers across two cultures
There is strong evidence that numbers are spatially represented. However, much of the research has been concerned with investigating number representation within the horizontal rather than the vertical dimension. It has been suggested that the organisation of the writing system, by rows or by column...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-1488142023-03-05T15:31:31Z Vertical spatial representation of numbers across two cultures Pasqualotto, Achille Uesaki, Maiko Ashida, Hiroshi School of Social Sciences Social sciences::Psychology Mental Number Line Number Representation There is strong evidence that numbers are spatially represented. However, much of the research has been concerned with investigating number representation within the horizontal rather than the vertical dimension. It has been suggested that the organisation of the writing system, by rows or by columns, plays a pivotal role in shaping the mental number representation. We investigated the vertical number representation in British and Japanese participants, who were asked to randomly generate numbers after turning their heads up or down. Previous works showed that this method facilitated the access to the corresponding portions of the horizontal mental number representation. We found that neither group seemed to be affected by the up/ down head turns. These results are discussed in terms of cultural crossover, differences in the horizontal vs. vertical spatial and numerical representation, and sensitivity of the random number generation task. Published version This work was supported by a Marie Curie Intra-European Fellowship (grant number: PIEF-GA-2010-274163) and a grant from the EPSRC (EP/J017205/1). 2021-05-07T08:13:09Z 2021-05-07T08:13:09Z 2019 Journal Article Pasqualotto, A., Uesaki, M. & Ashida, H. (2019). Vertical spatial representation of numbers across two cultures. Psihologija, 52(2), 127-137. https://dx.doi.org/10.2298/PSI170917031P 0048-5705 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/148814 10.2298/PSI170917031P 2-s2.0-85069458089 2 52 127 137 en Psihologija © 2019 by authors. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution ShareAlike 4.0 International license. application/pdf |
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Social sciences::Psychology Mental Number Line Number Representation Pasqualotto, Achille Uesaki, Maiko Ashida, Hiroshi Vertical spatial representation of numbers across two cultures |
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There is strong evidence that numbers are spatially represented. However, much of the research has been concerned with investigating number representation within the horizontal rather than the vertical dimension. It has been suggested that the organisation of the writing system, by rows or by columns, plays a pivotal role in shaping the mental number representation. We investigated the vertical number representation in British and Japanese participants, who were asked to randomly generate numbers after turning their heads up or down. Previous works showed that this method facilitated the access to the corresponding portions of the horizontal mental number representation. We found that neither group seemed to be affected by the up/ down head turns. These results are discussed in terms of cultural crossover, differences in the horizontal vs. vertical spatial and numerical representation, and sensitivity of the random number generation task. |
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School of Social Sciences |
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School of Social Sciences Pasqualotto, Achille Uesaki, Maiko Ashida, Hiroshi |
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Article |
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Pasqualotto, Achille Uesaki, Maiko Ashida, Hiroshi |
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Pasqualotto, Achille |
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Vertical spatial representation of numbers across two cultures |
title_short |
Vertical spatial representation of numbers across two cultures |
title_full |
Vertical spatial representation of numbers across two cultures |
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Vertical spatial representation of numbers across two cultures |
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Vertical spatial representation of numbers across two cultures |
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vertical spatial representation of numbers across two cultures |
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2021 |
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https://hdl.handle.net/10356/148814 |
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