Elsevier

NeuroImage

Volume 59, Issue 4, 15 February 2012, Pages 3139-3148
NeuroImage

You can count on the motor cortex: Finger counting habits modulate motor cortex activation evoked by numbers

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuroimage.2011.11.037Get rights and content
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Abstract

The embodied cognition framework suggests that neural systems for perception and action are engaged during higher cognitive processes. In an event-related fMRI study, we tested this claim for the abstract domain of numerical symbol processing: is the human cortical motor system part of the representation of numbers, and is organization of numerical knowledge influenced by individual finger counting habits? Developmental studies suggest a link between numerals and finger counting habits due to the acquisition of numerical skills through finger counting in childhood. In the present study, digits 1 to 9 and the corresponding number words were presented visually to adults with different finger counting habits, i.e. left- and right-starters who reported that they usually start counting small numbers with their left and right hand, respectively. Despite the absence of overt hand movements, the hemisphere contralateral to the hand used for counting small numbers was activated when small numbers were presented. The correspondence between finger counting habits and hemispheric motor activation is consistent with an intrinsic functional link between finger counting and number processing.

Highlights

►Individual finger counting habits modulate motor cortex activation to numbers. ►Small digits activate motor areas contralateral to the hand used in finger counting. ►Number processing is grounded in individual experience related to finger counting. ►Abstract symbol processing is embodied in perceptual-motor brain networks.

Keywords

Embodied cognition
Numerical cognition
Finger counting habits
SNARC effect

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