Spatial concepts of number, size, and time in an indigenous culture
Author(s)
Gibson, Edward A
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In industrialized groups, adults implicitly map numbers, time, and size onto space according to cultural practices like reading and counting (e.g., from left to right). Here, we tested the mental mappings of the Tsimane', an indigenous population with few such cultural practices. Tsimane' adults spatially arranged number, size, and time stimuli according to their relative magnitudes but showed no directional bias for any domain on any spatial axis; different mappings went in different directions, even in the same participant. These findings challenge claims that people have an innate left-to-right mapping of numbers and that these mappings arise from a domain-general magnitude system. Rather, the direction-specific mappings found in industrialized cultures may originate from direction-agnostic mappings that reflect the correlational structure of the natural world.
Date issued
2021-08-13Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Brain and Cognitive SciencesJournal
Science Advances
Publisher
American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
Citation
Pitt, Benjamin, Ferrigno, Stephen, Cantlon, Jessica F, Casasanto, Daniel, Gibson, Edward et al. 2021. "Spatial concepts of number, size, and time in an indigenous culture." Science Advances, 7 (33).
Version: Final published version
ISSN
2375-2548