“…For example, the use of an internal, oriented, spatial continuum to represent number was demonstrated by showing that judgments about small numbers are faster when performed with the left hand, and judgments about large numbers are faster when performed with the right hand—the so-called SNARC effect (Spatial-Numerical Association of Response Codes; Dehaene, Bossini, & Giraux, 1993), and the processing of numerical magnitude influences the deployment of visual attention in space, with small numbers speeding up leftward relative to rightward orienting and the converse for larger numbers (e.g., Myachykov, Ellis, Changelosi, & Fischer, 2016). Similar spatial biases have been reported in the classification of such varied stimuli as visual shapes (e.g., Ren, Nicholls, Ma, & Chen, 2011), temporal events (e.g., Vallesi, Binns, & Shallice, 2008), pitches of sounds (e.g., Rusconi, Kwan, Giordano, Umiltà, & Butterworth, 2006), months of the year or days of the week (e.g., Gevers, Reynvoet, & Fias, 2003), letters of the alphabet (e.g., Gevers et al, 2003), and even elements in a learned list of unrelated words (e.g., Previtali, de Hevia, & Girelli, 2010; Van Opstal, Fias, Peigneux, & Verguts, 2009).…”