Space-Time Congruency Effects Using Eye Movements During Processing of Past- and Future-Related Words
In Western cultures where people read and write from left to right, time is represented along a spatial continuum that goes from left to right (past to future), known as the mental timeline (MTL). In language, this MTL was supported by space-time congruency effects: People are faster to make lexical...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Experimental psychology 2022-07, Vol.69 (4), p.210-217 |
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Zusammenfassung: | In Western cultures where people read and write from left
to right, time is represented along a spatial continuum that goes from left to
right (past to future), known as the mental timeline (MTL). In language, this
MTL was supported by space-time congruency effects: People are faster to
make lexical decisions to words conveying past or future information when
left/right manual responses are compatible with the MTL. Alternatively, in
cultures where people read from right to left, space-time congruency
effects go in the opposite direction. Such cross-cultural differences suggest
that repeated writing and reading dynamic movements are critically involved in
the spatial representation of time. In most experiments on the space-time
congruency effect, participants use their hand for responding, an effector that
is associated to the directionality of writing. To investigate the role of the
directionality of reading in the space-time congruency effect, we asked
participants to make lateralized eye movements (left or right saccades) to
indicate whether stimuli were real words or not (lexical decision). Eye movement
responses were slower and higher in amplitude for responses incompatible with
the direction of the MTL. These results reinforce the claim that repeated
directional reading and writing movements promote the embodiment of time-related
words. |
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ISSN: | 1618-3169 2190-5142 |
DOI: | 10.1027/1618-3169/a000559 |