“…To our knowledge, although several studies have asked how children map time onto external spatial artifacts (e.g., Berteletti, Lucangeli, & Zorzi, 2012;Busby Grant & Suddendorf, 2009;Friedman, 2000Friedman, , 2002Friedman & Kemp, 1998;Hudson & Mayhew, 2011;Tillman, Marghetis, Barner, & Srinivasan, 2017), and others have examined the direction of children's counting (e.g., Göbel, McCrink, Fischer, & Shaki, 2018;Shaki, Fischer, & Göbel, 2012), only two previous studies have tested whether children produce LR representations of time in the absence of training or experimentally imposed artifacts that force the use of a line. One study (Dobel, Diesendruck, & Bölte, 2007) showed that while adults and literate children tended to represent the agent, object, and recipient in a verbally described event congruently with their reading/ writing direction, preschoolers did not show this bias.…”