Rugani Rosa, de Hevia Maria-Dolores
Department of General Psychology, University of Padova, Via Venezia, 8, Padova, Italy.
Université Paris Descartes, Sorbonne Paris Cité, Paris, France.
Psychon Bull Rev. 2017 Apr;24(2):352-369. doi: 10.3758/s13423-016-1126-2.
It is well known that humans describe and think of numbers as being represented in a spatial configuration, known as the 'mental number line'. The orientation of this representation appears to depend on the direction of writing and reading habits present in a given culture (e.g., left-to-right oriented in Western cultures), which makes this factor an ideal candidate to account for the origins of the spatial representation of numbers. However, a growing number of studies have demonstrated that non-verbal subjects (preverbal infants and non-human animals) spontaneously associate numbers and space. In this review, we discuss evidence showing that pre-verbal infants and non-human animals associate small numerical magnitudes with short spatial extents and left-sided space, and large numerical magnitudes with long spatial extents and right-sided space. Together this evidence supports the idea that a more biologically oriented view can account for the origins of the 'mental number line'. In this paper, we discuss this alternative view and elaborate on how culture can shape a core, fundamental, number-space association.
众所周知,人类将数字描述和理解为以一种空间构型呈现,即所谓的“心理数字线”。这种表征的方向似乎取决于特定文化中书写和阅读习惯的方向(例如,西方文化中是从左到右的方向),这使得这个因素成为解释数字空间表征起源的理想候选因素。然而,越来越多的研究表明,非语言主体(尚不能言语的婴儿和非人类动物)会自发地将数字与空间联系起来。在这篇综述中,我们讨论了相关证据,这些证据表明,尚不能言语的婴儿和非人类动物会将较小的数值大小与较短的空间范围和左侧空间联系起来,而将较大的数值大小与较长的空间范围和右侧空间联系起来。这些证据共同支持了这样一种观点,即一种更具生物学导向的观点可以解释“心理数字线”的起源。在本文中,我们将讨论这种不同的观点,并详细阐述文化如何塑造一种核心的、基本的数字 - 空间关联。