Kevin J Holmes

University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, CA, USA

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Publications (3)9.23 Total impact

  • Article: When Numbers Get Heavy: Is the Mental Number Line Exclusively Numerical?
    Kevin J Holmes, Stella F Lourenco
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    ABSTRACT: The mental number line, with its left-to-right orientation of increasing numerical values, is often regarded as evidence for a unique connection between space and number. Yet left-to-right orientation has been shown to extend to other dimensions, consistent with a general magnitude system wherein different magnitudes share neural and conceptual resources. Such observations raise a fundamental, yet relatively unexplored, question about spatial-numerical associations: What is the nature of the information represented along the mental number line? Here we show that this information is not exclusive to number, simultaneously accommodating numerical and non-numerical magnitudes. Participants completed the classic SNARC (Spatial-Numerical Association of Response Codes) task while sometimes wearing wrist weights. Weighting the left wrist-thereby linking less and more weight to right and left, respectively-worked against left-to-right orientation of number, leaving no behavioral trace of the mental number line. Our findings point to the dynamic integration of magnitude dimensions, with spatial organization instantiating representational currency (i.e., more/less relations) shared across magnitudes.
    PLoS ONE 01/2013; 8(3):e58381. · 4.09 Impact Factor
  • Article: Orienting numbers in mental space: horizontal organization trumps vertical.
    Kevin J Holmes, Stella F Lourenco
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    ABSTRACT: While research on the spatial representation of number has provided substantial evidence for a horizontally oriented mental number line, recent studies suggest vertical organization as well. Directly comparing the relative strength of horizontal and vertical organization, however, we found no evidence of spontaneous vertical orientation (upward or downward), and horizontal trumped vertical when pitted against each other (Experiment 1). Only when numbers were conceptualized as magnitudes (as opposed to nonmagnitude ordinal sequences) did reliable vertical organization emerge, with upward orientation preferred (Experiment 2). Altogether, these findings suggest that horizontal representations predominate, and that vertical representations, when elicited, may be relatively inflexible. Implications for spatial organization beyond number, and its ontogenetic basis, are discussed.
    Quarterly journal of experimental psychology (2006) 05/2012; 65(6):1044-51. · 1.96 Impact Factor
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    Article: Common spatial organization of number and emotional expression: a mental magnitude line.
    Kevin J Holmes, Stella F Lourenco
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    ABSTRACT: Converging behavioral and neural evidence suggests that numerical representations are mentally organized in left-to-right orientation. Here we show that this format of spatial organization extends to emotional expression. In Experiment 1, right-side responses became increasingly faster as number (represented by Arabic numerals) or happiness (depicted in facial stimuli) increased, for judgments completely unrelated to magnitude. Additional experiments suggest that magnitude (i.e., more/less relations), not valence (i.e., positive/negative), underlies left-to-right orientation of emotional expression (Experiment 2), and that this orientation accommodates to the context-relevant emotion (e.g., happier faces are more rightward when judged on happiness, but more leftward when judged on angriness; Experiment 3). These findings show that people automatically extract magnitude from a variety of stimuli, representing such information in common left-to-right format, perhaps reflecting a mental magnitude line. We suggest that number is but one dimension in a hyper-general representational system uniting disparate dimensions of magnitude and likely subserved by common neural mechanisms in posterior parietal cortex.
    Brain and Cognition 08/2011; 77(2):315-23. · 3.17 Impact Factor

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Institutions

  • 2013
    • University of California, Berkeley
      Berkeley, CA, USA
  • 2011–2012
    • Emory University
      • Department of Psychology
      Atlanta, GA, USA