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Journal ArticleDOI

Linkages between Number Concepts, Spatial Thinking, and Directionality of Writing: The SNARC Effect and the REVERSE SNARC Effect in English and Arabic Monoliterates, Biliterates, and Illiterate Arabic Speakers.

Samar Zebian
- 01 Jan 2005 - 
- Vol. 5, Iss: 1, pp 165-190
TLDR
This paper investigated the spatial orientation of the mental number line in the following groups: English monoliterates, Arabic-English biliterates and illiterate Arabic speakers who only read numerals.
Abstract
The current investigations coordinate math cognition and cultural approaches to numeric thinking to examine the linkages between numeric and spatial processes, and how these linkages are modified by the cultural artifact of writing. Previous research in the adult numeric cognition literature has shown that English monoliterates have a spatialised mental number line which is oriented from left-to-right with smaller magnitudes associated with the left side of space and larger magnitudes are associated with the right side of space. These associations between number and space have been termed the Spatial Numeric Association Response Code Effect (SNARC effect, Dehaene, 1992). The current study investigates the spatial orientation of the mental number line in the following groups: English monoliterates, Arabic monoliterates who use only the right-left writing system, Arabic-English biliterates, and illiterate Arabic speakers who only read numerals. Current results indicate, for the first time, a Reverse SNARC effect for Arabic monoliterates, such that the mental number line had a right-to-left directionality. Furthermore, a weakened Reverse SNARC was observed for Arabic-English biliterates, and no effect was observed among Illiterate Arabic speakers. These findings are especially notable since left-right biases are neurologically supported and are observed in pre-literate children regardless of which writing system is used by adults. The broader implications of how cultural artifacts affect basic numeric cognition will be discussed.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Multiple Spatial Mappings in Numerical Cognition.

TL;DR: The SNARC is reexamine in Israelis who read text from right to left but numbers from left to right to show that a SNARC effect still emerges when the response dimension is spatially orthogonal to the conflicting processing dimension.
Journal ArticleDOI

Beyond the mental number line: A neural network model of number–space interactions

TL;DR: It is proposed that spatial aspects are not inherent to number representations, but that instead spatial and numerical representations are separate, and that cultural factors establish ties between them.
Journal ArticleDOI

Professional mathematicians differ from controls in their spatial-numerical associations

TL;DR: It is proposed that professional mathematicians possess more abstract and/or spatially very flexible numerical representations and therefore do not exhibit or do have a largely reduced default left-to-right spatial-numerical orientation as indexed by the SNARC effect.
Journal ArticleDOI

Are consumers aware of top-bottom but not of left-right inferences? Implications for shelf space positions.

TL;DR: Results support the claim that verticality effects (top-bottom) are attenuated when participants are less involved with the decision task and when they are exposed to information that questions the diagnosticity of using vertical position as a cue, and the horizontality effect is robust to both of these manipulations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Development of Spatial-Numerical Associations

TL;DR: This research points to three important influences on the development of spatial-numerical associations: innate mechanisms linking space and nonsymbolic number, gross and fine motor activity that couples spatial location to both symbolic and nonsygomatic number, and culturally bound activities that shape the relationship between spatial direction and symbolic number.
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