Egocentric reference in bidirectional readers as measured by the straight-ahead pointing task

Seta Kazandjian, Eve Dupierrix, Esther Gaash, Itamar Y. Love, Ari Z. Zivotofsky, Maria De Agostini, Sylvie Chokron

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

15 Scopus citations

Abstract

The present study aimed to show that bidirectional reading and language exposure influence the position of egocentric reference (ER), the perceived direction of the body's sagittal axis proposed to act as an anchor for movements in extracorporeal space. Directional factors (e.g., visual scanning bias and reading habits) have been proposed to influence visuospatial performance, such as in line bisection and figure drawing. In past studies, bidirectional readers have been less consistent in demonstrating a bias compared to unidirectional readers. Using a straight-ahead pointing task to assess egocentric reference, we compared 14 unidirectional left-to-right readers (Uni-LR) to three bidirectional reading groups that differed in the reading direction of their native language and/or the level of their second language literacy: 16 low-English literate, native right-to-left, bidirectional readers (Lo-Bi-RL), 13 high-English literate, native right-to-left, bidirectional readers (Hi-Bi-RL), and 15 native left-to-right, bidirectional readers (Bi-LR). Participants were asked to point straight-ahead while blindfolded using either a left-to-right or a right-to-left scanning direction to approach the subjective sagittal midline. Uni-LRs showed left-side spatial bias when scanning left-to-right and right-side bias during right-to-left scanning, Bi-LRs and Lo-Bi-RLs (i.e., intermediate level or less in their second language) demonstrated the opposite pattern, and Hi-Bi-RLs showed left-side spatial bias regardless of scanning direction. Results are discussed in terms of accuracy and spatial bias regarding the interaction between reading direction and spatial cognition based on the level of bidirectional literacy and language exposure.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)133-141
Number of pages9
JournalBrain Research
Volume1247
DOIs
StatePublished - 9 Jan 2009

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
This research was funded by the B. and E. De Rothschild Foundations (New York, Geneva) and the Université Pierre Mendès France.

Funding

This research was funded by the B. and E. De Rothschild Foundations (New York, Geneva) and the Université Pierre Mendès France.

FundersFunder number
Université Pierre Mendès France

    Keywords

    • Cross-cultural difference
    • Egocentric reference
    • Reading habit Bidirectional reading
    • Spatial organization

    Fingerprint

    Dive into the research topics of 'Egocentric reference in bidirectional readers as measured by the straight-ahead pointing task'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

    Cite this