Does the Brain Care Which Direction We Read? A Cross‐Cultural tDCS Study on Functional Lateralization of Number Processing

Author:

Bahreini Narjes1ORCID,Artemenko Christina12ORCID,Plewnia Christian23,Rostami Reza4,Nuerk Hans‐Christoph12

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology University of Tuebingen Tuebingen Germany

2. German Center for Mental Health (DZPG) Tuebingen Germany

3. Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, Neurophysiology & Interventional Neuropsychiatry University Hospital of Tuebingen Tuebingen Germany

4. Department of Psychology University of Tehran Tehran Iran

Abstract

ABSTRACTPurposeThe potential influence of culture on functional lateralization was rarely investigated, yet it may be an important factor in our understanding of the human brain. In numerical processing, evidence was found for differential directional preferences of space–number associations in cultures with opposite reading direction systems. This may affect finger‐counting preferences like the starting hand, which in turn have previously been associated with differing lateralization. Such studies raise the question of whether number culture may also play a distinct role in the lateralization of the intraparietal sulcus (IPS), the hallmark region of numerical magnitude processing.MethodIn our preregistered cross‐cultural study, we applied anodal transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) over the left versus right IPS to investigate the effect of stimulation as compared to sham in Iranians (with right‐to‐left reading system) and Germans (with left‐to‐right reading system).FindingResults indicated no overall effect of stimulation; however, exploratory analyses revealed that tDCS over the left and right IPS facilitated number processing in Iranians compared to Germans after controlling for training effects. Finger‐counting direction was not found to be decisive for this effect.ConclusionAt the end, number processing might be bilaterally represented in the IPS; however, our exploratory analyses emphasize the need for further investigation on the potential role of culture in the representations of numbers.

Publisher

Wiley

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