1. Registered Replication Report on Fischer, Castel, Dodd, and Pratt (2003)
- Author
-
Julio Santiago, Mojtaba Soltanlou, Lincoln J. Colling, Marek A. Vranka, Paul M. Corballis, Brenda Ocampo, Christine K. Chrystall, Peter J. B. Hancock, Edward M. Hubbard, Dénes Szűcs, Damiano De Marco, Sau-Chin Chen, Juanma de la Fuente, Simone Cutini, Marc Ouellet, Tia A. Tummino, Juan Lupiáñez, Laura Mieth, Stephen R. H. Langton, Barbara Treccani, Irene C. Mammarella, Oliver Lindemann, Celia Goffin, Donna Bryce, Elizabeth Y. Toomarian, Krzysztof Cipora, Remo Job, Raoul Bell, Javier Ortiz-Tudela, Dion T. Henare, Ailsa E. Millen, Kevin J. Holmes, Adéla Becková, Jiří Lukavský, Jan Philipp Röer, Mark S. Saviano, Rolf Ulrich, Daniel Ansari, Rolf A. Zwaan, Elise Klein, H. Moriah Sokolowski, Korbinian Moeller, Stefan Huber, Claudio Mulatti, Axel Buchner, Hans-Christoph Nuerk, Philipp A. Schroeder, Blakeley B. McShane, Laboratoire de psychologie du développement et de l'éducation de l'enfant (LaPsyDÉ - UMR 8240), Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Université de Paris (UP), Leibniz-Institut für Wissensmedien [Tübingen], Szucs, Denes [0000-0002-9477-0801], Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository, Department of Psychology, Education and Child Studies, Research Methods and Techniques, and Brain and Cognition
- Subjects
Open materials ,open data ,[SHS.PSY]Humanities and Social Sciences/Psychology ,01 natural sciences ,Preregistered ,050105 experimental psychology ,meta-analysis, multivariate, open data, open materials, preregistered ,preregistered ,Developmental psychology ,010104 statistics & probability ,Fluency ,multivariate ,ddc:150 ,Replication (statistics) ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,0101 mathematics ,Association (psychology) ,General Psychology ,Mathematics anxiety ,[SCCO.NEUR]Cognitive science/Neuroscience ,05 social sciences ,Open data ,open materials ,meta-analysis ,Meta-analysis ,Mental number line ,Multivariate - Abstract
International audience; The attentional spatial-numerical association of response codes (Att-SNARC) effect (Fischer, Castel, Dodd, & Pratt, 2003)-the finding that participants are quicker to detect left-side targets when the targets are preceded by small numbers and quicker to detect right-side targets when they are preceded by large numbers-has been used as evidence for embodied number representations and to support strong claims about the link between number and space (e.g., a mental number line). We attempted to replicate Experiment 2 of Fischer et al. by collecting data from 1,105 participants at 17 labs. Across all 1,105 participants and four interstimulus-interval conditions, the proportion of times the effect we observed was positive (i.e., directionally consistent with the original effect) was .50. Further, the effects we observed both within and across labs were minuscule and incompatible with those observed by Fischer et al. Given this, we conclude that we failed to replicate the effect reported by Fischer et al. In addition, our analysis of several participantlevel moderators (finger-counting habits, reading and writing direction, handedness, and mathematics fluency and mathematics anxiety) revealed no substantial moderating effects. Our results indicate that the Att-SNARC effect cannot be used as evidence to support strong claims about the link between number and space.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF