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心理学报 2005
The Effect of Spatial Language Habits on People''''s Spatial Cognition
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Abstract:
The study adopted the paradigm of the viewer's rotation initiated by Levinson, explored the effects of spatial expression habits on people's non-linguistic spatial cognition. The subjects were the undergraduates from both south and north China. The results showed a great difference between the south and the north that Southerners incline to use relative egocentric frame (left, right, front, back) while Northerners use absolute reference frame (east, west, north, south) as spatial reference in the same non-linguistic spatial cognitive task. The difference of reference frames is consistent with the habits of spatial expression. It suggested that spatial language habits affect non-linguistic spatial cognition.