Lateralized pointing does not cause a cognitive bias
Publication date
2018
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taverne
Abstract
Lateralized pointing has been shown to cause not only a shift in visuo-motor midline, but also a shift in non-lateralized spatial attention. Non-lateralized cognitive consequences of lateralized pointing have been reported for local and global visuospatial processing. Here, we evaluate these findings and examine this effect for categorical and coordinate spatial relation processing, for which the attentional processes are thought to be highly similar to local and global visuospatial processing, respectively. Participants performed a commonly used working memory task to assess categorical and coordinate spatial relation processing. Lateralized pointing with either the left or the right hand, to either the left or the right side was introduced as a manipulation, as well as a new control condition without any pointing. Performance on the spatial relation task was measured before and after pointing. The results suggest that non-lateralized consequences of lateralized pointing cannot be generalized to other cognitive tasks relying on attentional processing. Further examination of lateralized pointing is recommended before drawing further conclusions concerning its impact on non-lateralized cognition.
Keywords
Lateralized pointing, Attention, Spatial relations, Visuospatial perception, Taverne
Citation
van der Ham, I J M, Brummelman, J, Aerts, M E, de Haan, A M & Dijkerman, H C 2018, 'Lateralized pointing does not cause a cognitive bias', Cognitive Processing, vol. 19, no. 1, pp. 17-25. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10339-017-0833-6