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- Title
Beauty and the brain: culture, history and individual differences in aesthetic appreciation.
- Authors
Jacobsen, Thomas
- Abstract
Human aesthetic processing entails the sensation-based evaluation of an entity with respect to concepts like beauty, harmony or well-formedness. Aesthetic appreciation has many determinants ranging from evolutionary, anatomical or physiological constraints to influences of culture, history and individual differences. There are a vast number of dynamically configured neural networks underlying these multifaceted processes of aesthetic appreciation. In the current challenge of successfully bridging art and science, aesthetics and neuroanatomy, the neuro-cognitive psychology of aesthetics can approach this complex topic using a framework that postulates several perspectives, which are not mutually exclusive. In this empirical approach, objective physiological data from event-related brain potentials and functional magnetic resonance imaging are combined with subjective, individual self-reports.
- Subjects
HUMAN anatomy; HUMAN biology; MEDICAL sciences; AESTHETICS; MAGNETIC resonance imaging
- Publication
Journal of Anatomy, 2010, Vol 216, Issue 2, p184
- ISSN
0021-8782
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/j.1469-7580.2009.01164.x