Reading direction causes spatial biases in mental model construction in language understanding
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Román, Antonio; Flumini, Andrea; Lizano, Pilar; Escobar, Marysol; Santiago De Torres, Julio RamónEditorial
Springer Nature
Fecha
2015-12-15Referencia bibliográfica
Román, A. et. al. Sci Rep 5, 18248 (2016). [https://doi.org/10.1038/srep18248]
Resumen
Correlational evidence suggests that the experience of reading and writing in a certain direction
is able to induce spatial biases at both low-level perceptuo-motor skills and high-level conceptual
representations. However, in order to support a causal relationship, experimental evidence is required.
In this study, we asked whether the direction of the script is a sufficiente cause of spatial biases in the
mental models that understanders build when listening to language. In order to establish causality, we
manipulated the experience of reading a script with different directionalities. Spanish monolinguals
read either normal (left-to-right), mirror reversed (right-to-left), rotated downward (up-down), or
rotated upward (down-up) texts, and then drew the contents of auditory descriptions such as “the
square is between the cross and the triangle”. The directionality of the drawings showed that a brief
reading experience is enough to cause congruent and very specific spatial biases in mental model
construction. However, there were also clear limits to this flexibility: there was a strong overall
preference to arrange the models along the horizontal dimension. Spatial preferences when building
mental models from language are the results of both short-term and long-term biases.