Do we conceptualise the future as being behind us or in front of us? Although this question has traditionally been investigated through the lens of spatiotemporal metaphors, new impetus was recently provided by the Temporal-Focus Hypothesis. This hypothesis holds that the mapping of temporal concepts onto the front-back axis is determined by an individual's temporal focus, which varies as a function of culture, age, and short-term attention shifts. Here, we instead show that participants map the future on to a frontal position, regardless of cultural background and short-term shifts. However, one factor that does influence temporal mappings is age, such that older participants are more likely to map the future as behind than younger partici...
Attention is essential to everyday life: without some selective function to guide and limit the proc...
This study investigates the visualisation of temporal relationships between objects. A popular meth...
AbstractConceptual metaphor theory assumes that abstract concepts like time are represented by means...
Do we conceptualise the future as being behind us or in front of us? While this question has traditi...
While people around the world mentally represent time in terms of space, there is substantial cross-...
Does temporal thought extend asymmetrically into the past and the future? Do asymmetries depend on c...
In many languages the future is in front and the past behind, but in some cultures (like Aymara) the...
In many languages the future is in front and the past behind, but in some cultures (like Aymara) the...
Recent research shows that Chinese, when they gesture about time, tend to put the past “ahead” and t...
Our understanding of mind wandering (MW) has dramatically increased over the past decade. Studies ha...
Abstract concepts cannot be directly perceived through senses. How do people represent abstract conc...
What factors motivate our understanding of metaphoric statements about time? English exhibits two de...
2 Do people think about time the way they talk about it? This chapter examines dissociations between...
AbstractDo we estimate time in a different way when talking about last year's holiday or when planni...
In many cultures, humans conceptualize the past as behind the body and the future as in front. Wheth...
Attention is essential to everyday life: without some selective function to guide and limit the proc...
This study investigates the visualisation of temporal relationships between objects. A popular meth...
AbstractConceptual metaphor theory assumes that abstract concepts like time are represented by means...
Do we conceptualise the future as being behind us or in front of us? While this question has traditi...
While people around the world mentally represent time in terms of space, there is substantial cross-...
Does temporal thought extend asymmetrically into the past and the future? Do asymmetries depend on c...
In many languages the future is in front and the past behind, but in some cultures (like Aymara) the...
In many languages the future is in front and the past behind, but in some cultures (like Aymara) the...
Recent research shows that Chinese, when they gesture about time, tend to put the past “ahead” and t...
Our understanding of mind wandering (MW) has dramatically increased over the past decade. Studies ha...
Abstract concepts cannot be directly perceived through senses. How do people represent abstract conc...
What factors motivate our understanding of metaphoric statements about time? English exhibits two de...
2 Do people think about time the way they talk about it? This chapter examines dissociations between...
AbstractDo we estimate time in a different way when talking about last year's holiday or when planni...
In many cultures, humans conceptualize the past as behind the body and the future as in front. Wheth...
Attention is essential to everyday life: without some selective function to guide and limit the proc...
This study investigates the visualisation of temporal relationships between objects. A popular meth...
AbstractConceptual metaphor theory assumes that abstract concepts like time are represented by means...