Abstract

AbstractThe mental imagination of (social) actions has been shown to follow a left‐to‐right trajectory, with the thematic agent associated with the left position (Spatial Agency Bias, Suitner & Maass in Advances in Experimental Social Psychology, 53, 2016, p. 245–301). For example, individuals asked to choose a picture that visualizes the sentence “Tom kicks George” tend to choose an image where the agent, Tom, is positioned on the left‐hand side rather than on the right‐hand side. However, as an alternative to the thematic role of the agent, such findings may reflect a mental representation following pragmatic relevance. Specifically, a pragmatic perspective holds that word order and syntactic functions are strategic devices to communicate that the element is important for the sentence. Thus, positioning in the described picture‐matching task may actually reflect the agent's pragmatic relevance instead of agency per se. As a test, we vary whether sentences are written in the active versus the passive voice. Results from five studies indicate that the passive voice results in the tendency to place the agent on the right‐hand side rather than on the left‐hand side of a picture. Instead, the acted‐upon person is positioned on the left‐hand side of a picture. A sixth experiment reveals that for the passive voice, the agent is still seen as more agentic than the receiver, but is considered less relevant. The findings are congruent with the proposed pragmatic relevance account. Implications for the Spatial Agency Bias as well as for building mental representations in general are discussed.

Highlights

  • Two processes explain the Spatial Agency Bias (SAB) (Maass et al, 2014; Suitner & Maass, 2016)

  • Simple intercept analysis revealed that passive voice significantly reversed the SAB in Study 2a (b = -0.39, SE = .14, Wald’s-χ2(1) = 7.56, p = .006, OR = 0.68, 95% CI [0.52, 0.90]) and marginally significant in Study 2b (b = -0.23, SE = .13, Wald’s-χ2(1) = 2.85, p = .092, OR = 0.68, 95% CI [0.61, 1.04]

  • Results indicate that participants preferred the thematic agent on the left for active voice scene descriptions (b = 0.96, SE = .24, Wald’s-χ2(1) = 15.68, p < .001, OR = 2.6, 95% CI [1.62, 4.20])

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Two processes explain the SAB (Maass et al, 2014; Suitner & Maass, 2016). Firstly, script direction shapes spatial cognitive representations of agency. Because reading and writing are such ubiquitous and prevailing tasks in modern life, script direction internalizes as a mental scheme of the directionality of action (Maass, Pagani & Berta, 2007, Suitner & Mass, 2016) According to this visuo-motor account, the starting point of reading represents the starting point of actions. Italian participants (reading from left to right) tended to draw the agent on the left-hand side and Iraqi participants (reading from right to left) on the right-hand side Further supporting this notion, people who are exposed to cultures with different script directions show a reduced SAB (Maas et al, 2014, Maass & Russo, 2003). Due to left-to-right script direction the first element is likely to be placed on the left side of the picture (Geminiani, Bisiach, Berti, & Rusconi, 1995)

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call