Abstract

Neuropsychological, behavioral, and neurophysiological evidence indicates that the coding of space as near and far depends on the involvement of different neuronal circuits. These circuits are recruited on the basis of functional parameters, not of metrical ones, reflecting a general distinction of human behavior, which alternatively attributes to the individual the role of agent or observer. Although much research in cognitive psychology was devoted to demonstrating that language and concepts are rooted in the sensorimotor system, no study has investigated the presence of implicit associations between different adverbs of place (far vs. near) and actions with different functional characteristics. Using a series of Implicit Association Test (IAT) experiments, we tested this possibility for both actions performed in physical space (grasp vs. look at) and those performed when using digital technology (content generation vs. content consumption). For both the physical and digital environments, the results showed an association between the adverb near and actions related to the role of agent, and between the adverb far and actions related to the role of observer. Present findings are the first experimental evidence of an implicit association between different adverbs of place and different actions and of the fact that adverbs of place also apply to the digital environment.

Highlights

  • The first objective of this study was to fill this gap by studying the presence of implicit associations between adverbs of space and labels referring to different actions performed in the physical environment

  • Results of Experiment 1 indicated the presence of implicit associations between adverbs of space and different actions performed in the physical environment

  • Participants associated the adverb of space near more with the app icon WhatsApp and the adverb of space far more with the app icons Weather

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Summary

Introduction

Crosslinguistic research suggests that a large proportion of languages in the world make a fundamental binary distinction between terms that refer to something that is a short distance away and terms that refer to something that is a great distance away [1]. Among these terms, the adverbs of place serve to specify the place of action, the position of a person or an object in space, and the distance of a person or object from the speaker or listener. Far is who or what is at a great distance, and near is who or what is close to where one is

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