Do picture books affect counting directionality in preliterate children? Developmental course and potential mechanisms
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Santiago De Torres, Julio Ramón; Jiménez Carvelo, Ana María; Rivera, Laura; Serrano Chica, FranciscaEditorial
Elsevier
Materia
Mental number line Preliterate children Development
Fecha
2026-03-05Referencia bibliográfica
Santiago, J.; Jiménez, A.; Rivera, L. & Serrano, F. (2026). Do picture books affect counting directionality in preliterate children? Developmental course and potential mechanisms. Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 267, 106495. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jecp.2026.106495
Patrocinador
MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033(PSI2015-67531-P and PID2021-126589OB-I00); ERDF (European Regional Development Fund)Resumen
Why the number line in preliterate children is already consistent with the direction of the script?
Here we aimed to 1) show that being read a mirror-printed picture book is able to change lateral
biases in counting; 2) trace the development of preliterate biases; and 3) test the role of mental
model construction processes. Spanish-speaking 3 and 4 year-olds (N = 155, white, 87 female)
carried out a task of counting a row of objects and a task in which they built a toy scene before
and after being exposed to a mirror-reversed storybook. The left-to-right or right-to-left direc
tionality of their responses was recorded. Only the older group showed pre-test lateral biases. The
mirror book changed the lateral biases in counting, and induced a congruent, but smaller change
in the model construction task. The two tasks did not correlate, against the implication of shared
mechanisms in them.





