Sharing a mental number line across individuals? The role of body position and empathy in joint numerical cognition

Hartmann, Matthias; Fischer, Martin H; Mast, Fred W. (2019). Sharing a mental number line across individuals? The role of body position and empathy in joint numerical cognition. Quarterly journal of experimental psychology, 72(7), pp. 1732-1740. Sage 10.1177/1747021818809254

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A growing body of research shows that the human brain acts differently when performing a task together with another person than when performing the same task alone. In this study, we investigated the influence of a co-actor on numerical cognition using a joint random number generation (RNG) task. We found that participants generated relatively smaller numbers when they were located to the left (vs. right) of a co-actor (Experiment 1), as if the two individuals shared a mental number line and predominantly selected numbers corresponding to their relative body position. Moreover, the mere presence of another person on the left or right side or the processing of numbers from loudspeaker on the left or right side had no influence on the magnitude of generated numbers (Experiment 2), suggesting that a bias in RNG only emerged during interpersonal interactions. Interestingly, the effect of relative body position on RNG was driven by participants with high trait empathic concern towards others, pointing towards a mediating role of feelings of sympathy for joint compatibility effects. Finally, the spatial bias emerged only after the co-actors swapped their spatial position, suggesting that joint spatial representations are constructed only after the spatial reference frame became salient. In contrast to previous studies, our findings cannot be explained by action co-representation because the consecutive production of numbers does not involve conflict at the motor response level. Our results therefore suggest that spatial reference coding, rather than motor mirroring, can determine joint compatibility effects. Our results demonstrate how physical properties of interpersonal situations, such as the relative body position, shape seemingly abstract cognition.

Item Type:

Journal Article (Original Article)

Division/Institute:

07 Faculty of Human Sciences > Institute of Psychology > Cognitive Psychology, Perception and Methodology

UniBE Contributor:

Maalouli-Hartmann, Matthias, Mast, Fred

Subjects:

100 Philosophy > 150 Psychology

ISSN:

1747-0218

Publisher:

Sage

Language:

English

Submitter:

Matthias Maalouli-Hartmann

Date Deposited:

13 May 2019 16:36

Last Modified:

05 Dec 2022 15:28

Publisher DOI:

10.1177/1747021818809254

PubMed ID:

30304994

BORIS DOI:

10.7892/boris.129718

URI:

https://boris.unibe.ch/id/eprint/129718

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