Everyday actions such as writing have been proven to produce consistent mental schemata, which are used to represent social interactions. The preference for depicting the agent of an action to the left of the recipient is known as the spatial agency bias (SAB) and has been related to writing direction. The question which we addressed through two studies is whether the mental construal level (CL) affects this embodied bias. We hypothesized that high-CL (vs. low-CL) priming increases the SAB, as it promotes the use of an abstract mental schema to represent the situation. We found that, when asked to depict two interacting targets, participants in a high-CL condition were more likely to adopt a left-to-right representation (Studies 1 and 2). I...
We examined how social cues (the conversational partner’s viewpoint) and representational ones (the ...
Research on spatial perspective-taking often focuses on the cognitive processes of isolated individu...
The spatial agency bias predicts that people whose native language is rightward written will predomi...
Everyday actions such as writing have been proven to produce consistent mental schemata, which are u...
Repeated everyday actions such as writing and reading have been proved to produce consistent mental ...
Repeated everyday actions such as writing have been proved to produce consistent mental schemata lat...
The mental imagination of (social) actions has been shown to follow a left-to-right trajectory, with...
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...
People show a systematic preference for the trajectory implied by the writing direction of their lan...
According to the spatial agency bias model, in Western cultures agentic targets are envisaged as fac...
The spatial agency bias predicts that people whose native language is rightward written will predomi...
We propose that spatial imagery is systematically linked to stereotypic beliefs, such that more agen...
The spatial agency bias predicts that people whose native language is rightward written will predomi...
The present research investigates the role of individual differences in preference for adopting extr...
We examined how social cues (the conversational partner’s viewpoint) and representational ones (the ...
Research on spatial perspective-taking often focuses on the cognitive processes of isolated individu...
The spatial agency bias predicts that people whose native language is rightward written will predomi...
Everyday actions such as writing have been proven to produce consistent mental schemata, which are u...
Repeated everyday actions such as writing and reading have been proved to produce consistent mental ...
Repeated everyday actions such as writing have been proved to produce consistent mental schemata lat...
The mental imagination of (social) actions has been shown to follow a left-to-right trajectory, with...
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...
People show a systematic preference for the trajectory implied by the writing direction of their lan...
According to the spatial agency bias model, in Western cultures agentic targets are envisaged as fac...
The spatial agency bias predicts that people whose native language is rightward written will predomi...
We propose that spatial imagery is systematically linked to stereotypic beliefs, such that more agen...
The spatial agency bias predicts that people whose native language is rightward written will predomi...
The present research investigates the role of individual differences in preference for adopting extr...
We examined how social cues (the conversational partner’s viewpoint) and representational ones (the ...
Research on spatial perspective-taking often focuses on the cognitive processes of isolated individu...
The spatial agency bias predicts that people whose native language is rightward written will predomi...