4.5 Article

Spatialization in working memory is related to literacy and reading direction: Culture literarily directs our thoughts

Journal

COGNITION
Volume 175, Issue -, Pages 96-100

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.cognition.2018.02.013

Keywords

Short-term memory; SPoARC; Ordinal position effect; Serial order; SNARC

Funding

  1. Research Foundation - Flanders [12C4715N]

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The ability to maintain arbitrary sequences of items in the mind contributes to major cognitive faculties, such as language, reasoning, and episodic memory. Previous research suggests that serial order working memory is grounded in the brain's spatial attention system. In the present study, we show that the spatially defined mental organization of novel item sequences is related to literacy and varies as a function of reading/writing direction. Specifically, three groups (left-to-right Western readers, right-to-left Arabic readers, and Arabic-speaking illiterates) were asked to memorize random (and non-spatial) sequences of color patches and determine whether a subsequent probe was part of the memorized sequence (e.g., press left key) or not (e.g., press right key). The results showed that Western readers mentally organized the sequences from left to right, Arabic readers spontaneously used the opposite direction, and Arabic-speaking illiterates showed no systematic spatial organization. This finding suggests that cultural conventions shape one of the most fluid aspects of human cognition, namely, the spontaneous mental organization of novel non-spatial information.

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