Research employing metaphors to explore embodied cognition has shown bidirectional relationships between cognitions and sensory-motor stimuli, such as importance and weight (e.g., “weighty tome”). This research has typically used cognition-relevant metaphor primes (e.g., weighted backpacks when making steepness judgments, weighted clipboards when judging importance of written information) but has yet to consider the role of stimuli features like focality in these findings. The current study examined wearing a heavy versus light backpack on social judgments to explore the effect of this unrelated weight prime on established weight-relevant cognitions. Participants were 40 undergraduate psychology students who wore a heavy (~5 kg) or light ( ...
Current approaches on cognition hold that concrete concepts are grounded in concrete experiences. Th...
Previous studies have found that bodily stimulation, such as hardness biases social judgment and eva...
The traditional approach in cognitive sciences holds that cognition is a matter of manipulating abst...
Previous research shows that bodily experiences can unconsciously influence perception, judgment, an...
Previous work showed that concrete experiences of weight influence people’s judgments of how importa...
Inconsistency among findings in the embodied cognition literature suggests a need for theoretical bo...
Previous work showed that concrete experiences of weight influence people’s judgments of how importa...
Previous work showed that concrete experiences of weight influence people’s judgments of how importa...
Previous work showed that concrete experiences of weight influence people’s judgments of how importa...
Four studies show that the abstract concept of importance is grounded in bodily experiences of weigh...
The present paper briefly describes recent advances in cognitive science on the embodied nature of h...
Our bodily experiences can exert an influence on determining how we think, feel, and behave. This is...
In different cultures, people use the concept of weight to refer to important matters. Recent studie...
The size-weight illusion (SWI) pertains to the experience of perceiving the smaller of two equally w...
Embodied cognition is an approach to cognition which suggests that our bodies and their actions play...
Current approaches on cognition hold that concrete concepts are grounded in concrete experiences. Th...
Previous studies have found that bodily stimulation, such as hardness biases social judgment and eva...
The traditional approach in cognitive sciences holds that cognition is a matter of manipulating abst...
Previous research shows that bodily experiences can unconsciously influence perception, judgment, an...
Previous work showed that concrete experiences of weight influence people’s judgments of how importa...
Inconsistency among findings in the embodied cognition literature suggests a need for theoretical bo...
Previous work showed that concrete experiences of weight influence people’s judgments of how importa...
Previous work showed that concrete experiences of weight influence people’s judgments of how importa...
Previous work showed that concrete experiences of weight influence people’s judgments of how importa...
Four studies show that the abstract concept of importance is grounded in bodily experiences of weigh...
The present paper briefly describes recent advances in cognitive science on the embodied nature of h...
Our bodily experiences can exert an influence on determining how we think, feel, and behave. This is...
In different cultures, people use the concept of weight to refer to important matters. Recent studie...
The size-weight illusion (SWI) pertains to the experience of perceiving the smaller of two equally w...
Embodied cognition is an approach to cognition which suggests that our bodies and their actions play...
Current approaches on cognition hold that concrete concepts are grounded in concrete experiences. Th...
Previous studies have found that bodily stimulation, such as hardness biases social judgment and eva...
The traditional approach in cognitive sciences holds that cognition is a matter of manipulating abst...