Reading direction shifts visuospatial attention: An Interactive Account of attentional biases

被引:91
|
作者
Rinaldi, Luca [1 ]
Di Luca, Samuel [2 ]
Henik, Avishai [3 ,4 ]
Girelli, Luisa [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Milano Bicocca, Dept Psychol, Milan, Italy
[2] Catholic Univ Louvain, Inst Rech Sci Psychol, Ctr Neurosci Syst & Cognit, Louvain La Neuve, Belgium
[3] Ben Gurion Univ Negev, Dept Psychol, IL-84105 Beer Sheva, Israel
[4] Ben Gurion Univ Negev, Zlotowski Ctr Neurosci, IL-84105 Beer Sheva, Israel
关键词
Cancellation task; Line bisection task; Reading habits; Hemispheric specialization; Visuospatial attention; VIEWING PERCEPTUAL ASYMMETRIES; LINE-BISECTION; VISUAL-SEARCH; CANCELLATION TASKS; SPATIAL ATTENTION; NEGLECT; HABITS; HANDEDNESS; REPRESENTATION; PERFORMANCE;
D O I
10.1016/j.actpsy.2014.05.018
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
A growing amount of evidence confirms the influence of reading and writing habits on visuospatial processing, although this phenomenon has been so far testified mainly as a lateralized shift of a single behavioral sign (e.g., line bisection), with lack of proof from pure right-to-left readers. The present study contributed to this issue by analyzing multiple attentional and motor indexes in monolingual Italian (i.e., reading from left-to-right), and monolingual (i.e., reading from right-to-left) and bilingual Israeli (i.e., reading from right-to-left in Hebrew hut also from left-to-right in English) participants' visuospatial performance. Subjects were administered a computerized standard star cancellation task and a modified version in which English letters and words were replaced by Hebrew ones. Tasks were presented on a graphics tablet, allowing recording of both chronometric and spatial parameters (i.e., measured in (x, y) vector coordinates). Results showed that reading direction modulated the on-line visuomotor performance (i.e., left-to-right vs. right-to-left shifts) from the beginning (i.e., first mark) to the end of the task (i.e., spatial distribution of omissions and subjective epicenter). Additionally, the spatial bias observed in a computerized line bisection task was also related to the participants' habitual reading direction. Overall, the results favor the proposal of an Interactive Account of visuospatial asymmetries, according to which both cultural factors, such as the directional scanning associated with language processing, and biological factors, such as hemispheric specialization, modulate visuospatial processing. Results are discussed in light of recent behavioral and neuroanatomical findings. (C) 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:98 / 105
页数:8
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