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Investigating Object Orientation Effects Across 14 Languages
- Sau-Chin Chen
- Anna Szabelska
- Christopher R. Chartier
- Zoltan Kekecs
- Dermot Lynott
- Pablo Bernabeu
- Benedict C. Jones
- Lisa DeBruine
- Carmel Levitan
- Kaitlyn M. Werner
- Kelly Wang
- Marina Milyavskaya
- Erica D. Musser
- Marietta Papadatou-Pastou
- Nicholas A. Coles
- Steve Janssen
- Asil Ozdogru
- Daniel Storage
- Harry Manley
- Benjamin T. Brown
- Krystian Barzykowski
- Thomas Rhys Evans
- Elisabeth Oberzaucher
- Manyu Li
- Leigh Ann Vaughn
- Balazs Aczel
- Attila Szuts
- Carlota Batres
- William J. Chopik
- Kim Olivia Peters
- Jerome Olsen
- Martin Voracek
- Christian K. Tamnes
- Miroslav Sirota
- Dawn Liu Holford
- Glenn Patrick Williams
- Arti Parganiha
- Priyanka Chandel
- Margaret Messiah Singh
- Chrystalle B. Y. Tan
- John Protzko
- Jack Arnal
- Stefan Stieger
- Marco Tullio Liuzza
- Pavol Kačmár
- Jozef Bavolar
- Gabriel Baník
- Matus Adamkovic
- Ivan Ropovik
- Peter Babincak
- Martin Seehuus
- Vanja Kovic
- Kathleen Schmidt
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Description: Mental simulation theories of language comprehension propose that people automatically create mental representations of real objects. Evidence from sentence-picture verification tasks has shown that people mentally represent various visual properties such as shape, color, and size. However, the evidence for mental simulations of object orientation is limited. We report a study that investigates the match advantage of object orientation across speakers of different languages. This multi-laboratory project aims to achieve two objectives. First, we examine the replicability of the match advantage of object orientation across multiple languages and laboratories. Second, we will use a mental rotation task to measure participants’ mental imagery after the sentence-picture verification task. The relationship between the participants’ performance of the two tasks will provide a cross-linguistic examination of perceptual simulation processes. With the (broad) evaluation of individual mental imagery ability and potential linguistic moderators, we expect a robust estimation of match advantage of object orientation.