Beyond fixed sets: boundary conditions for obtaining SNARC-like effects with continuous semantic magnitudes

Previous research has demonstrated the presence of an effect (i.e., the spatial-numerical association of response codes or SNARC) in both numerical parity and magnitude judgment tasks in which smaller numerical magnitudes are manually responded to faster on the left side and larger numerical magnitu...

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Veröffentlicht in:Psychological research 2024-07, Vol.88 (5), p.1575-1589
Hauptverfasser: Leth-Steensen, Craig, Moshirian Farahi, Seyed Mohammad Mahdi, Al-Juboori, Noora
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Moshirian Farahi, Seyed Mohammad Mahdi
Al-Juboori, Noora
description Previous research has demonstrated the presence of an effect (i.e., the spatial-numerical association of response codes or SNARC) in both numerical parity and magnitude judgment tasks in which smaller numerical magnitudes are manually responded to faster on the left side and larger numerical magnitudes on the right side. Such a result has typically been attributed to a spatially based representation of numerical magnitude in long-term memory, the format of which has recently been postulated to be positional in line with learning of a canonically ordered number sequence. As a test of this view, in the current research, participants made classification judgments involving either the size ( N  = 88) or the living-nonliving status ( N  = 114) corresponding to the names of animals/objects etc. to which no learned canonical ordering of size exists. Names were taken from a very large set of 400 animals/objects etc. and each name was presented only once in an experimental session. Responses were made using left and right manual keypresses. In this work, the relation between response time and the relative sizes of the animals/objects did not differ across the left–right side of response indicating that SNARC-like effects did not occur. As such, the results suggest that space is not an inherent aspect of the long-term representation of magnitude in the brain and that some form of positional coding of magnitude is necessary for SNARC-like effects to occur.
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subjects Adolescent
Adult
Animals
Behavioral Science and Psychology
Boundary conditions
Female
Humans
Judgment - physiology
Learning
Long term memory
Male
Mathematical Concepts
Memory
Neural coding
Parity
Psychological research
Psychology
Psychology Research
Psychomotor Performance - physiology
Reaction Time - physiology
Semantics
Space Perception - physiology
Young Adult
title Beyond fixed sets: boundary conditions for obtaining SNARC-like effects with continuous semantic magnitudes
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