The spatial agency bias predicts that people whose native language is rightward written will predominantly envisage action along the same direction. Two mechanisms contribute jointly to this asymmetry: (a) an embodied process related to writing/reading; (b) a linguistic regularity according to which sentence subjects (typically the agent) tend to precede objects (typically the recipient). Here we test a novel hypothesis in relation to the second mechanism, namely, that this asymmetry will be most pronounced in languages with rigid word order. A preregistered study on 14 European languages (n = 420) varying in word order flexibility confirmed a rightward bias in drawings of interactions between two people (agent and recipient). This bias was...
International audienceIn the present study, we explore how reading habits (e.g., reading from left t...
Movement is generally conceived of as unfolding laterally in the writing direction that one is socia...
International audienceIn his typology Talmy distinguishes two types of languages as a function of ho...
The spatial agency bias predicts that people whose native language is rightward written will predomi...
The spatial agency bias predicts that people whose native language is rightward written will predomi...
The spatial agency bias predicts that people whose native language is rightward written will predomi...
The spatial agency bias predicts that people whose native language is rightward written will predomi...
In Western cultures, human interactions are generally envisaged such that the agent appears on the l...
The role of standard word order in the syntax of standard simple phrases was investigated in realti...
Writing direction has surprising effects on social cognition. These effects are addressed with a spe...
In this chapter, we argue that the way we read and write exerts a pervasive, subtle, and generally u...
Prior research has demonstrated a linguistic asymmetry between the sources and goals of motion event...
The world's languages make use of different writing system orientations, running from left to r...
People show a systematic preference for the trajectory implied by the writing direction of their lan...
The distribution of typological patterns across languages has occupied considerable space in recent ...
International audienceIn the present study, we explore how reading habits (e.g., reading from left t...
Movement is generally conceived of as unfolding laterally in the writing direction that one is socia...
International audienceIn his typology Talmy distinguishes two types of languages as a function of ho...
The spatial agency bias predicts that people whose native language is rightward written will predomi...
The spatial agency bias predicts that people whose native language is rightward written will predomi...
The spatial agency bias predicts that people whose native language is rightward written will predomi...
The spatial agency bias predicts that people whose native language is rightward written will predomi...
In Western cultures, human interactions are generally envisaged such that the agent appears on the l...
The role of standard word order in the syntax of standard simple phrases was investigated in realti...
Writing direction has surprising effects on social cognition. These effects are addressed with a spe...
In this chapter, we argue that the way we read and write exerts a pervasive, subtle, and generally u...
Prior research has demonstrated a linguistic asymmetry between the sources and goals of motion event...
The world's languages make use of different writing system orientations, running from left to r...
People show a systematic preference for the trajectory implied by the writing direction of their lan...
The distribution of typological patterns across languages has occupied considerable space in recent ...
International audienceIn the present study, we explore how reading habits (e.g., reading from left t...
Movement is generally conceived of as unfolding laterally in the writing direction that one is socia...
International audienceIn his typology Talmy distinguishes two types of languages as a function of ho...