Reversing the manual digit bias in two-digit number comparison

Thomas J. Faulkenberry, Alexander Cruise, Samuel Shaki

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

2 Scopus citations

Abstract

Though recent work in numerical cognition has supported a strong tie between numerical and spatial representations (e.g., a mental number line), less is known about such ties in multi-digit number representations. Along this line, Bloechle, Huber, and Moeller (2015) found that pointing positions in two-digit number comparison were biased leftward toward the decade digit. Moreover, this bias was reduced in unitdecade incompatible pairs. In the present study, we tracked computer mouse movements as participants compared two-digit numbers to a fixed standard (55). Similar to Bloechle et al. (2015), we found that trajectories exhibited a leftward bias that was reduced for unit-decade incompatible comparisons. However, when positions of response labels were reversed, the biases reversed. That is, we found a rightward bias for compatible pairs that was reduced for incompatible pairs. This result calls into question a purely embodied representation of place value structure and instead supports a competition model of two-digit number representation.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)191-204
Number of pages14
JournalExperimental Psychology
Volume64
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - May 2017

Keywords

  • Computer mouse tracking
  • Place value
  • Response competition
  • Two-digit comparison

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