Canonical finger-numeral configurations facilitate the processing of Arabic numerals in adults: An Event-Related Potential study
- PMID: 35318029
- DOI: 10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2022.108214
Canonical finger-numeral configurations facilitate the processing of Arabic numerals in adults: An Event-Related Potential study
Abstract
Various studies claim that early-learned, culture-typical (canonical) finger configurations used to communicate or represent numerosity, have stronger connections to numerical concepts stored in long-term memory than cultural-unfamiliar finger configurations, thereby allowing for faster access to their numerical meaning. The current study investigated whether presentation of canonical finger configurations gesturing numerosities 1-4 or 6-9 would facilitate young adults' behavioral and neural processing of Arabic numerals. Thirty-one adults performed a number comparison task in which they had to decide whether simultaneously presented Arabic numerals and canonical or non-canonical finger configurations showed the same or a different numerosity, while measuring their performance and Event-Related Potentials (ERPs). The results showed faster responses when comparisons involved canonical (versus non-canonical) finger configurations, but only on numerosity-congruent trials where finger configuration and Arabic numeral matched in number identity. Canonical, and small-number finger configurations 1-4 in general (irrespective of their canonicity), also elicited enhanced amplitude of the early right-parietal P2p, and the later centro-parietal P3 on numerosity-congruent trials. We suggest these P2p and P3 findings respectively reflect facilitated numerical access and easier categorization of canonical finger-numeral configurations. The current results provide behavioral and neurophysiological evidence for the embodiment of culture-specific, canonical, finger-numeral configurations, and their link with other number representations in the adult brain, likely emerging from their more frequent use in daily life communication and/or in early childhood during number symbol acquisition.
Keywords: Embodiment; Event-related brain potentials; Finger-numeral configurations; Number gestures; Numerical processing; Numerical range.
Copyright © 2022 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.
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