The body-specificity hypothesis proposes that people with different bodies should also have
different conceptual systems. The test case of this hypothesis has been the association of emotional
valence (good vs. bad) with lateral space (left vs. right) in people of different handedness. As expected,
right-handers tend to associate the good with the right space, whereas left-handers show the opposite
association. This body-specific effect has been very influential and followed up by an important
number of studies. Here, we undertake a systematic examination of the quality of this literature by
means of z-curve analysis. The results show that the expected replicability rate (statistical power)
of this literature is reasonably high (71−76%), especially for those studies using binomial tasks and
those that entail the severest tests for the hypothesis, whereas it is lower in reaction time studies.
Moreover, the presence of publication bias cannot be statistically asserted. All in all, the literature on
space-valence body-specificity appears solid, although there is still room for improvement.Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (Grant Numbers: PREP2023-002041, FPU20/01946, PDI2023-152001NB-100
Is data on this page outdated, violates copyrights or anything else? Report the problem now and we will take corresponding actions after reviewing your request.