Chen Sau-Chin, de Koning Bjorn B, Zwaan Rolf A
Department of Human Development and Psychology, Tzu-Chi University, Taiwan.
Department of Psychology, Education & Child Studies, Erasmus University Rotterdam, The Netherlands.
Exp Psychol. 2020 Jan;67(1):56-72. doi: 10.1027/1618-3169/a000468. Epub 2020 May 11.
Language comprehenders have been arguing to mentally represent the implied orientation of objects. However, compared to the effects of shape, size, and color, the effect of orientation is rather small. We examined a potential explanation for the relatively low magnitude of the orientation effect: Object size moderates the orientation effect. Theoretical considerations led us to predict a smaller orientation effect for small objects than for large objects in a sentence-picture verification task. We furthermore investigated whether this pattern generalizes across languages (Chinese, Dutch, and English) and tasks (picture-naming task). The results of the verification task show an orientation effect overall, which is not moderated by object size (contrary to our hypothesis) and language (consistent with our hypothesis). Meanwhile, the preregistered picture-picture verification task showed the predicted interaction between object size and orientation effect. We conducted exploratory analyses to address additional questions.
语言理解者一直在争论要在心理上表征物体的隐含方向。然而,与形状、大小和颜色的影响相比,方向的影响相当小。我们研究了方向效应相对较小的一个潜在解释:物体大小调节方向效应。理论上的考虑使我们预测,在句子-图片验证任务中,小物体的方向效应要比大物体小。我们还进一步研究了这种模式是否在不同语言(中文、荷兰语和英语)和任务(图片命名任务)中普遍存在。验证任务的结果总体上显示出方向效应,该效应不受物体大小(与我们的假设相反)和语言(与我们的假设一致)的调节。同时,预先注册的图片-图片验证任务显示了物体大小和方向效应之间的预期交互作用。我们进行了探索性分析以解决其他问题。