According to the spatial agency bias model, in Western cultures agentic targets are envisaged as facing and acting rightward, in line with writing direction. In four studies of Italian participants, we examined the symbolic association between agency and the rightward direction (Study 1, N = 96), its spontaneous activation when attributing agency to female and male targets (Study 2, N = 80) or when judging the authenticity of photographs of men and women (Study 3, N = 57), and its possible relation to stereotype endorsement (Study 4, N = 80). In Study 4, we used a conditioning paradigm in which participants learned a counterstereotypical new association; we developed a novel measure to assess the association between gender and spatial direc...
Effects of language learning on categorical perception have been detected in multiple domains. We ex...
Broadly, gender identity research has received more attention in recent years as research indicates ...
Recent studies have shown that men and women are differently envisaged in the horizontal vector of t...
We propose that spatial imagery is systematically linked to stereotypic beliefs, such that more agen...
Social psychological research has shown the existence and pervasiveness of gender stereotypes. Women...
In this chapter, we argue that the way we read and write exerts a pervasive, subtle, and generally u...
"We propose that spatial imagery is systematically linked to stereotypic beliefs, such that more age...
Writing direction has surprising effects on social cognition. These effects are addressed with a spe...
According to the Spatial Agency Bias (SAB), more agentic groups (men) are envisioned to the left of ...
In Western cultures, human interactions are generally envisaged such that the agent appears on the l...
Where an object or person is located in space can communicate important attributes, such as power, a...
Repeated everyday actions such as writing and reading have been proved to produce consistent mental ...
We examined whether reading and writing habits known to drive agency perception also shape the attri...
Scientific literature highlighted gender differences in spatial orientation. In particular, men and ...
© 2015 Taylor & Francis. Effects of language learning on categorical perception have been detected i...
Effects of language learning on categorical perception have been detected in multiple domains. We ex...
Broadly, gender identity research has received more attention in recent years as research indicates ...
Recent studies have shown that men and women are differently envisaged in the horizontal vector of t...
We propose that spatial imagery is systematically linked to stereotypic beliefs, such that more agen...
Social psychological research has shown the existence and pervasiveness of gender stereotypes. Women...
In this chapter, we argue that the way we read and write exerts a pervasive, subtle, and generally u...
"We propose that spatial imagery is systematically linked to stereotypic beliefs, such that more age...
Writing direction has surprising effects on social cognition. These effects are addressed with a spe...
According to the Spatial Agency Bias (SAB), more agentic groups (men) are envisioned to the left of ...
In Western cultures, human interactions are generally envisaged such that the agent appears on the l...
Where an object or person is located in space can communicate important attributes, such as power, a...
Repeated everyday actions such as writing and reading have been proved to produce consistent mental ...
We examined whether reading and writing habits known to drive agency perception also shape the attri...
Scientific literature highlighted gender differences in spatial orientation. In particular, men and ...
© 2015 Taylor & Francis. Effects of language learning on categorical perception have been detected i...
Effects of language learning on categorical perception have been detected in multiple domains. We ex...
Broadly, gender identity research has received more attention in recent years as research indicates ...
Recent studies have shown that men and women are differently envisaged in the horizontal vector of t...