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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

Visualizing Thought: Topics in Cognitive Science(2010)

TL;DR: Analyzing common visual communications reveals consistencies that illuminate how people think as well as guide design; the process can be brought into the laboratory and accelerated.
Journal ArticleDOI

Numbers and space: a computational model of the SNARC effect.

TL;DR: The authors modeled the SNARC effect as the result of parallel activation of preexisting links between magnitude and spatial representation and short-term links created on the basis of task instructions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Number-space mapping in the newborn chick resembles humans’ mental number line

TL;DR: 3-day-old chicks share this representation of numbers, consistently seeking lowerNumbers to the left of a target and larger numbers to the right (see the Perspective by Brugger).
Journal ArticleDOI

Origins of mathematical intuitions: the case of arithmetic.

TL;DR: Cognitive neuroscience research shows that mathematical intuition is a valid concept that can be studied in the laboratory in reduced paradigms, and that relates to the availability of “core knowledge” associated with evolutionarily ancient and specialized cerebral subsystems.
Journal ArticleDOI

Number-Space Mapping in Human Infants

TL;DR: It is shown that preverbal infants transfer the discrimination of an ordered series of numerosities to thediscrimination of anordered series of line lengths, providing evidence that a predisposition to relate representations of numerical magnitude to spatial length develops early in life.
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