Recent research has found that children reverse mainly the leftoriented characters when writing from memory (e.g. they write ɩ and ε instead of J and 3). In order to obtain an objective definition of the left-orientation of a character, the ratings of the level of leftorientation of all the asymmetrical capital letters and digits by 142 adult students was analysed in Study 1. Study 2, on 298 five-sixyear-old children, examined an immediate prediction of Study 1, namely that the children reverse mainly the digits that the adult students have rated left-oriented. Other predictions, both of the posited representation of the writing during the reversal stage and the neurological process of mirror generalisation, were verified: the simplicity of the representation of the symmetrical digits 0 and 8 makes incorrect writings very rare; the mirror generalisation, which operates only in the left-right direction, makes other transformations (inversion or 180° rotation) very rare. Finally, the explanatory power of some putative individual factors of reversal (e.g. writing with the left hand) is shown to be far lower than that of the left-orientation of the characters.
A short historical backgroundReversal of characters -letters and digits (for digits see Figure 1) -in the writing of the typical developing child is a phenomenon know at least since the beginning of the twentieth century. This is testified by Fuller (1916) who, speaking on mirror writing, of which left-right reversal of the characters is a component, wrote that 'nearly every child at a certain period of its development will be found to produce spontaneous, fragmentary mirror-writing with the right hand' (p. 201). However, the fact that neuropsychologists and developmental psychologists have thought having a 'good' explanation of the phenomenon -the left-handedness of the children -has restricted the spreading of this information (incompatible with the good explanation) and prevented the emergence of another explanation. On the contrary, the paper by Fischer and Koch (2016a), in questioning and even rejecting the explanation by hand of writing, encourages the exploration of another explanation. Such other explanation was already suggested by Simner (1984) who remarked that children 'reverse the left-facing letters more often than the right-facing letters' (p. 141).