The universal SNARC effect: The association between number magnitude and space is amodal

HC Nuerk, G Wood, K Willmes - Experimental psychology, 2005 - econtent.hogrefe.com
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 …

The SNARC effect does not imply a mental number line

S Santens, W Gevers - Cognition, 2008 - Elsevier
In this study, we directly contrast two approaches that have been proposed to explain the
SNARC effect. The traditional direct mapping account suggests that a direct association …

Spatial structure of quantitative representation of numbers: Evidence from the SNARC effect

Y Ito, T Hatta - Memory & cognition, 2004 - Springer
Abstract Dehaene, Bossini, and Giraux (1993) revealed that subjects responded to large
numbers faster with the choice on the right than with the choice on the left, whereas the …

[PDF][PDF] The hunt for SNARC

W Gevers, J Lammertyn - Psychology Science, 2005 - biblio.ugent.be
The SNARC effect specifically relates small magnitudes to the left hand side and larger
magnitudes to the right hand side (eg Dehaene et al., 1990; Dehaene et al., 1993). It is …

[HTML][HTML] The cognitive mechanisms of the SNARC effect: an individual differences approach

A Viarouge, EM Hubbard, BD McCandliss - PloS one, 2014 - journals.plos.org
Access to mental representations of smaller vs. larger number symbols is associated with
leftward vs. rightward spatial locations, as represented on a number line. The well-replicated …

Two routes for the processing of verbal numbers: Evidence from the SNARC effect

W Fias - Psychological Research, 2001 - Springer
The functional locus of the semantic system is an important issue in number processing. In
the present article, the necessity of addressing a central semantic magnitude system in the …

Towards a common processing architecture underlying Simon and SNARC effects

W Gevers, B Caessens, W Fias - European Journal of Cognitive …, 2005 - Taylor & Francis
It has been shown repeatedly that relatively small numbers are responded to faster with the
left hand and relatively large numbers are responded to faster with the right hand. This so …

Numbers, space, and action–from finger counting to the mental number line and beyond

G Wood, MH Fischer - Cortex, 2008 - Elsevier
We spontaneously associate numbers with space: we think of small numbers as being lower
and to the left of us, and larger numbers as being further up and to the right of us. Even …

Searching for the functional locus of the SNARC effect: Evidence for a response-related origin

IM Keus, W Schwarz - Memory & Cognition, 2005 - Springer
Abstract Dehaene, Bossini, and Giraux (1993) showed that when participants make parity
judgments, responses to numerically small numbers are made faster with the left hand …

[HTML][HTML] Size matters: Non-numerical magnitude affects the spatial coding of response

P Ren, MER Nicholls, Y Ma, L Chen - PLoS One, 2011 - journals.plos.org
It is known that small and large numbers facilitate left/right respectively (the SNARC effect).
Recently, it has been proposed that numerical magnitude is just one example of a range of …