Department of Psychology, Emory University, Atlanta, GA, USA.
Department of Psychology, Yale University, New Haven, CT, USA.
Q J Exp Psychol (Hove). 2021 Oct;74(10):1829-1840. doi: 10.1177/17470218211008733. Epub 2021 Apr 12.
Multiple tasks have been used to demonstrate the relation between numbers and space. The classic interpretation of these directional spatial-numerical associations (d-SNAs) is that they are the product of a mental number line (MNL), in which numerical magnitude is intrinsically associated with spatial position. The alternative account is that d-SNAs reflect task demands, such as explicit numerical judgements and/or categorical responses. In the novel "Where was The Number?" task, no explicit numerical judgements were made. Participants were simply required to reproduce the location of a numeral within a rectangular space. Using a between-subject design, we found that numbers, but not letters, biased participants' responses along the horizontal dimension, such that larger numbers were placed more rightward than smaller numbers, even when participants completed a concurrent verbal working memory task. These findings are consistent with the MNL account, such that numbers specifically are inherently left-to-right oriented in Western participants.
多项任务已被用于证明数字与空间之间的关系。这些定向空间-数字关联(d-SNAs)的经典解释是,它们是心理数字线(MNL)的产物,其中数字大小与空间位置内在相关。另一种解释是,d-SNAs 反映了任务需求,例如明确的数字判断和/或类别反应。在新颖的“数字在哪里?”任务中,没有进行明确的数字判断。参与者只需在矩形空间内复制数字的位置。使用被试间设计,我们发现数字而不是字母会使参与者的反应沿着水平维度偏向右侧,使得较大的数字比较小的数字更靠右放置,即使参与者同时完成了口头工作记忆任务。这些发现与 MNL 解释一致,即数字在西方参与者中具有特定的从左到右的固有方向。