Literature DB >> 11900752

Spatial bias: effects of early reading direction on Korean subjects.

Anna M Barrett1, Manho Kim, Gregory P Crucian, Kenneth M Heilman.   

Abstract

Spatial bias may occur in subjects performing a number of cognitive and visual-motor tasks. These include coordinate visuospatial computations (e.g. bisecting a line) and categorical representations of syntactic information (e.g. drawing a picture depicting the action of a sentence). Readers of European languages scan from left-to-right and this learned visual scanning may contribute to leftward spatial bias. In 30 subjects who first learned to read in a top-to-bottom, right-to-left direction (right-left vertical readers, RL), we tested spatial-syntactic bias by reading sentences to subjects, who drew pictures depicting the actions. We noted whether the subject of the sentence was located leftward or rightward of the object. We assessed visual-spatial bias by measuring subjects' accuracy at bisecting lines, and by measuring how closely their drawings on the house-tree-person test were centered on the page. On the spatial-syntactic task, the RL were not right- or left-biased (P=0.581). Korean controls (left-right horizontal readers, LR) also showed no significant spatial-syntactic bias. RL only tended to bisect lines leftward, but displaced house-tree-person drawings left of page center (P<0.001). LR erred leftward on line bisection, and had a smaller magnitude leftward bias on drawing tasks. We conclude that a leftward spatial-syntactic bias may not be innate and does not appear to be influenced by learned reading direction. In contrast, the leftward visual-spatial bias may occur in subjects whose cultural and reading background is neither western nor left-to-right.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 11900752     DOI: 10.1016/s0028-3932(01)00147-6

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neuropsychologia        ISSN: 0028-3932            Impact factor:   3.139


  8 in total

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2.  Spatial biases in understanding descriptions of static scenes: the role of reading and writing direction.

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Journal:  Mem Cognit       Date:  2013-05

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4.  Agency and the Annunciation.

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5.  Is it what you see, or how you say it? Spatial bias in young and aged subjects.

Authors:  Anna M Barrett; Catherine E Craver-Lemley
Journal:  J Int Neuropsychol Soc       Date:  2008-07       Impact factor: 2.892

6.  Literacy shapes thought: the case of event representation in different cultures.

Authors:  Christian Dobel; Stefanie Enriquez-Geppert; Pienie Zwitserlood; Jens Bölte
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7.  Cultural factors weaken but do not reverse left-to-right spatial biases in numerosity processing: Data from Arabic and English monoliterates and Arabic-English biliterates.

Authors:  Dominique Lopiccolo; Charles B Chang
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2021-12-16       Impact factor: 3.240

Review 8.  A Meta-Analysis of Line Bisection and Landmark Task Performance in Older Adults.

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Journal:  Neuropsychol Rev       Date:  2021-04-22       Impact factor: 6.940

  8 in total

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