Processing negative numbers by transforming negatives to positive range and by sign shortcut |
| |
Authors: | Attila Krajcsi János Igács |
| |
Affiliation: | 1. Harvard Medical School, Brigham &2. Women's Hospital, Department of Radiology , Boston, MA, USA;3. University of Szeged, Department of Psychology , Szeged, Hungary krajcsi@bwh.harvard.edu;5. University of Szeged, Department of Psychology , Szeged, Hungary |
| |
Abstract: | Numerals are processed by a phylogenetically old analogue magnitude system. Can culturally new negative numerals be processed using this same representation? To find out whether magnitude representation could be used, we contrasted three possible processing mechanisms: an extended magnitude system for both positive and negative numbers, a mirroring mechanism that could transform negative values to the positive range to be processed on the positive magnitude system, and a sign shortcut strategy that can process the signs of numbers independently of the absolute values of numerals. To test these three hypotheses, a comparison task was used and the reaction time pattern, numerical distance, and Spatial-Numerical Association of Response Codes (SNARC) effect was analysed. The results revealed a mirroring process along with a sign shortcut mechanism. The SNARC effect was observed only when positive numbers were compared. |
| |
Keywords: | Analogue magnitude system Negative numbers Numerical distance effect Spatial-Numerical Association of Response Codes effect |
|
|