“…Conversely, a large number (8) shifted the per-Since the rods were positioned centrally to the midline of the participants, it cannot be excluded that both blind and sighted individuals relied on a body-centered representation of space in performing the task, using their body midline as a reference for distance judgments. Previous studies suggest that blind individuals rely on egocentric space representation in perception of near space (see Gaunet & Rossetti, 2006;Postma, Zuidhoek, Noordzij, & Kappers, 2008), whereas sighted individuals tend to shift from an egocentric reference frame to an allocentric reference frame after a few seconds (see Rossetti, 1998;Rossetti & Pisella, 2002;Rossetti & Régnier, 1995;Zuidhoek, Kappers, van der Lubbe, & Postma, 2003), and it has been demonstrated that the adoption of an egocentric versus an allocentric spatial reference frame may modulate the direction of numerical magnitude representation (e.g., Conson, Mazzarella, & Trojano, 2009). On the basis of our findings, it is not possible to disentangle whether the rods' lengths were encoded into an egocentric or an allocentric reference frame; what is critical is that the mental number line was found to modulate the perception of haptic space in a crossmodal fashion.…”