Results 181 to 190 of about 2,780 (194)
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Experimental Psychology, 2005
Abstract. It is thought that number magnitude is represented in an abstract and amodal way on a left-to-right oriented mental number line. Major evidence for this idea has been provided by the SNARC effect ( Dehaene, Bossini, & Giraux, 1993 ): responses to relatively larger numbers are faster for the right hand, those to smaller numbers for the ...
Hans-Christoph, Nuerk +2 more
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Abstract. It is thought that number magnitude is represented in an abstract and amodal way on a left-to-right oriented mental number line. Major evidence for this idea has been provided by the SNARC effect ( Dehaene, Bossini, & Giraux, 1993 ): responses to relatively larger numbers are faster for the right hand, those to smaller numbers for the ...
Hans-Christoph, Nuerk +2 more
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The Future for Snarc Could Be Stark…
Cortex, 2006The present report by Wood et al. (2006, this issue) invites us to reconsider what we should believe about the cognitive representation of numbers. Researchers interested in numerical cognition have quickly embraced the idea that systematic spatial performance biases in number-related tasks must reflect an inherent spatial attribute of the underlying ...
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Journal of Comparative Psychology, 2019
In this essay, the author notes that for the past half-century, psychologists have examined how humans make use of spatial representations when making judgments about numerical properties of sets of items. This line of work was initiated by Frank Restle (1970), who asked college students at Indiana University to choose the larger number, either the sum
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In this essay, the author notes that for the past half-century, psychologists have examined how humans make use of spatial representations when making judgments about numerical properties of sets of items. This line of work was initiated by Frank Restle (1970), who asked college students at Indiana University to choose the larger number, either the sum
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The SNARC effect: an instance of the Simon effect?
Cognition, 2003Our aim was to investigate the relations between the Spatial-Numerical Association of Response Codes (SNARC) effect and the Simon effect. In Experiment 1 participants were required to make a parity judgment to numbers from 1 to 9 (without 5), by pressing a left or a right key.
MAPELLI, DANIELA +2 more
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SNARC hunting: Examining number representation in deaf students
Learning and Individual Differences, 2005Abstract Many deaf children and adults show lags in mathematical abilities. The current study examines the basic number representations that allow individuals to perform higher-level arithmetical procedures. These representations are normally present in the earliest stages of development, but they may be affected by cultural, developmental, and ...
Rebecca Bull +2 more
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Digits affect actions: The SNARC effect and response selection
Cortex, 2008The SNARC (spatial-numerical association of response codes) effect refers to the finding that processing digits can modulate response times, with low digits facilitating left responses and high digits facilitating right responses. Recent evidence indicates that the locus of this effect is in the response selection stage. To examine this possibility, we
Marwan, Daar, Jay, Pratt
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Investigating No SNARC: Do Reading Habits Provide Insight into the SNARC Patterns of Turkish Sample?
Journal of Cognition and CultureAbstract The mental number line (MNL) represents numbers spatially, with smaller numbers on the left and larger numbers on the right, as demonstrated by the SNARC effect. This effect is influenced by reading direction, with left-to-right languages (e.g., English) showing a stronger SNARC effect compared to right-to-left languages (e.g., Hebrew ...
Ceren Kaya +4 more
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It Takes Just One Word to Quash a SNARC
Experimental Psychology, 2009Our directional reading habit seems to contribute to the widely reported association of small numbers with left space and larger numbers with right space (the spatial-numerical association of response codes, SNARC, effect). But how can this association be so flexible when reading habits are not?
Fischer, Martin H. +2 more
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Color SNARC: response latency and semantic processing
2022Supplementary materials (i.e., raw and processed data and the annotated R code used for the analysis) for the paper: Didino, D., Brandtner, M., Glaser, M., & Knops, A. (2023). Probing the dual-route model of the SNARC effect by orthogonalising processing speed and depth. Experimental Psychology, 70(1), 1–13.
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