Following seminal introspective evidence reported by Francis Galton (1880), several investigations have suggested that people with left-to-right reading habits, mentally organize numbers along the equivalent of a horizontal ruler, the mental number line (MNL), with small magnitudes located to the left of larger ones. Here we show that RBD suffer a specific impairment in the representation of the smallest number in the series of integers it is this representational deficit, rather than left spatial neglect, that provokes a bias toward higher numbers during the mental bisection of long 7- and 9-unit number intervals
Small numbers in the right brain: Evidence from patients without and with spatial neglect / Aiello, M.; Merola, S.; Doricchi, F.. - In: CORTEX. - ISSN 0010-9452. - 49:1(2013), pp. 348-351. [10.1016/j.cortex.2012.06.002]
Small numbers in the right brain: Evidence from patients without and with spatial neglect
Aiello, M.;
2013-01-01
Abstract
Following seminal introspective evidence reported by Francis Galton (1880), several investigations have suggested that people with left-to-right reading habits, mentally organize numbers along the equivalent of a horizontal ruler, the mental number line (MNL), with small magnitudes located to the left of larger ones. Here we show that RBD suffer a specific impairment in the representation of the smallest number in the series of integers it is this representational deficit, rather than left spatial neglect, that provokes a bias toward higher numbers during the mental bisection of long 7- and 9-unit number intervalsI documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.