Where the ‘bad’ and the ‘good’ go: A multi-lab direct replication report of Casasanto (2009, Experiment 1)

  • Yuki Yamada
  • , Jin Xue
  • , Panpan Li
  • , Susana Ruiz-Fernández
  • , Asil Ali Ozdogry
  • , Sahsenem Sari
  • , Sergio C. Torres
  • , Jose A. Hinojosa
  • , Pedro R. Montoro
  • , Bedoor AlSheli
  • , Aidos K. Bolatov
  • , Grant J. McGeechan
  • , Mircea Zloteanu
  • , Irene Razpurker-Apfeld
  • , Adil Saemkin
  • , Nurit Tal-Or
  • , Julian Tejada
  • , Raquel Freitag
  • , Omid Khatin-Zadeh
  • , Hassan Banaeuee
  • Nicolas Robin, Guillermo Briseno-Sanchez, Carlos J., Barrera-Causil, Fernando Marmolejo-Ramos

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Abstract

Casasanto (Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 138, 351–367, 2009) conceptualised the body-specificity hypothesis by empirically finding that right-handed people tend to associate a positive valence with the right side and a negative valence with the left side, whilst left-handed people tend to associate a positive valence with the left side and negative valence with the right side. Thus, this was the first paper that showed a body-specific space–valence mapping. These highly influential findings led to a substantial body of research and follow-up studies, which could confirm the original findings on a conceptual level. However, direct replications of the original study are scarce. Against this backdrop and given the replication crisis in psychology, we conducted a direct replication of Casasanto’s original study with 2,222 participants from 12 countries to examine the aforementioned effects in general and also in a cross-cultural comparison. Our results support Casasanto’s findings that right-handed people associate the right side with positivity and the left side with negativity and vice versa for left-handers.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1140-1146
Number of pages7
JournalMemory and Cognition
Volume53
Issue number4
Early online date23 Sept 2024
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 May 2025

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