“…Incorporated are studies that use the following temporal cues as stimulus, prime, or response, presented either visually or auditorily: - Past‐ or future‐related words or phrases (Aguirre & Santiago, ; Bottini, Crepaldi, Casasanto, Crollen, & Collignon, ; Casasanto & Bottini, ; De la Vega, Eikmeier, Ulrich, & Kaup, ; Ding, Feng, Cheng, Liu, & Fan, ; Eikmeier, Alex‐Ruf, Maienborn, & Ulrich, , experiment 2; Eikmeier, Hoppe, & Ulrich, ; Eikmeier, Schröter, Maienborn, Alex‐Ruf, & Ulrich, , experiment 2; Hartmann & Mast, ; Kong & You, ; Ouellet, Román, & Santiago, ; Ouellet, Santiago, Funes, & Lupiáñez, ; Ouellet, Santiago, Israeli, et al., ; Rolke et al., ; Rolke, Ruiz Fernández, Seibold, & Rahona, ; Santiago, Lupiáñez, Pérez, & Funes, ; Torralbo et al., ; Weger & Pratt, , experiment 2);
- Sentences containing temporal information (Eikmeier, Alex‐Ruf, et al., , experiment 1; Eikmeier et al., , experiment 1; Maienborn et al., ; Scheifele et al., ; Sell & Kaschak, ; Ulrich & Maienborn, ; Ulrich et al., ); and
- Triplets of pictures showing the progression of an event at which the middle stage represents the reference point for an earlier and a later stage (Boroditsky, Fuhrman, & McCormick, ; Fuhrman & Boroditsky, ; Fuhrman et al., ) and entities such as buildings, actors, or life events that can be categorized as earlier or later compared to some given reference point (Loeffler, Raab, & Cañal‐Bruland, ; Miles, Tan, Noble, Lumsden, & Macrae, ; Walker, Bergen, & Núñez, , ; Weger & Pratt, , experiment 1).
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