Research Article

Incidental Counting: Speeded Number Naming Through Finger Movements

Authors:

Abstract

The first steps in numerical cognition are usually done in conjunction with fingers. Following the assumption that abstract concepts stay associated with the sensory-motor information that was present during their acquisition and consolidation, mental number representations should always be associated with the respective finger counting components. We tested whether finger movements that imply finger counting actually prime the corresponding number concepts in adults. All participants counted number 1 with their thumb and incremented sequentially to number 5 with their pinky. In the experiment, participants sequentially and repeatedly pressed five buttons from thumb to pinky. Each button press triggered the visual presentation of a random number between 1 and 5 that had to be named aloud, resulting in 20% counting-congruent and 80% counting-incongruent finger-number mappings. Average naming latencies were significantly shorter for congruent than incongruent finger-number combinations. Furthermore, there was a distance effect where primes partly co-activated numerically close target numbers and with decreasing priming for more distant prime-target pairs. Overall, these results provide further evidence that number representations are strongly associated with finger counting experience, making fingers an effective tool for number comprehension.

Keywords:

embodied cognitionfinger countingnumerical cognitionnumber naming
  • Year: 2018
  • Volume: 1 Issue: 1
  • Page/Article: 44
  • DOI: 10.5334/joc.49
  • Submitted on 4 Jun 2018
  • Accepted on 25 Oct 2018
  • Published on 15 Nov 2018
  • Peer Reviewed