TY - JOUR
T1 - Automatic numerical-spatial association in synaesthesia
T2 - An fMRI investigation
AU - Arend, Isabel
AU - Ashkenazi, Sarit
AU - Yuen, Kenneth
AU - Ofir, Shiran
AU - Henik, Avishai
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2017 Elsevier Ltd
PY - 2017/1/27
Y1 - 2017/1/27
N2 - A horizontal mental number line (MNL) is used to describe how quantities are represented across space. In humans, the neural correlates associated with such a representation are found in different areas of the posterior parietal cortex, especially, the intraparietal sulcus (IPS). In a phenomenon known as number-space synaesthesia, individuals visualise numbers in specific spatial locations. The experience of a MNL for number-space synaesthetes is explicit, idiosyncratic, and highly stable over time. It remains an open question whether the mechanisms underlying numerical-spatial association are shared by synaesthetes and nonsynaesthetes. We address the neural correlates of number-space association by examining the brain response in a number-space synaestheste (MkM) whose MNL differs dramatically in its ordinality and direction from that of a control group. MkM and 15 nonsynaesthetes compared the physical size of two numbers, while ignoring their numerical value, during an event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging session (fMRI). Two factors were analysed: the numerical distance effect (NDE; e.g., 2−4 small distance vs. 1−6 large distance), and the size congruity effect (e.g., 2−8 congruent vs. 2−8 incongruent). Only for MkM, the NDE elicited significant activity in the left and right IPS, supramarginal gyrus (bilateral), and in the left angular gyrus. These results strongly support the role of the parietal cortex in the automatic coding of space and quantity in number-space synaesthesia, even when numerical values are task-irrelevant.
AB - A horizontal mental number line (MNL) is used to describe how quantities are represented across space. In humans, the neural correlates associated with such a representation are found in different areas of the posterior parietal cortex, especially, the intraparietal sulcus (IPS). In a phenomenon known as number-space synaesthesia, individuals visualise numbers in specific spatial locations. The experience of a MNL for number-space synaesthetes is explicit, idiosyncratic, and highly stable over time. It remains an open question whether the mechanisms underlying numerical-spatial association are shared by synaesthetes and nonsynaesthetes. We address the neural correlates of number-space association by examining the brain response in a number-space synaestheste (MkM) whose MNL differs dramatically in its ordinality and direction from that of a control group. MkM and 15 nonsynaesthetes compared the physical size of two numbers, while ignoring their numerical value, during an event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging session (fMRI). Two factors were analysed: the numerical distance effect (NDE; e.g., 2−4 small distance vs. 1−6 large distance), and the size congruity effect (e.g., 2−8 congruent vs. 2−8 incongruent). Only for MkM, the NDE elicited significant activity in the left and right IPS, supramarginal gyrus (bilateral), and in the left angular gyrus. These results strongly support the role of the parietal cortex in the automatic coding of space and quantity in number-space synaesthesia, even when numerical values are task-irrelevant.
KW - Automaticity
KW - Distance effect
KW - FMRI
KW - Numerical Stroop
KW - Synaesthesia
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85008315541&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2016.12.023
DO - 10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2016.12.023
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C2 - 28025017
AN - SCOPUS:85008315541
SN - 0028-3932
VL - 95
SP - 259
EP - 266
JO - Neuropsychologia
JF - Neuropsychologia
ER -