Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
916988 | Cognitive Psychology | 2010 | 23 Pages |
It is commonly assumed that there is an interaction between the representations of number and space (e.g., Dehaene et al., 1993 and Walsh, 2003), typically ascribed to a mental number line. The exact nature of this interaction has remained elusive, however. Here we propose that spatial aspects are not inherent to number representations, but that instead spatial and numerical representations are separate. However, cultural factors establish ties between them. By extending earlier models (Gevers et al., 2006 and Verguts et al., 2005) based on this hypothesis, the authors present computer simulations showing that a model incorporating this idea can account for data from a series of studies. These results suggest that number–space interactions are emergent properties resulting from the interaction between different brain areas.