Buch, Englisch, 280 Seiten, Format (B × H): 166 mm x 237 mm, Gewicht: 510 g
Essays Bringing Neuroaesthetics into Focus
Buch, Englisch, 280 Seiten, Format (B × H): 166 mm x 237 mm, Gewicht: 510 g
ISBN: 978-0-19-751362-0
Verlag: Oxford University Press Inc
Aesthetics has long been the preserve of philosophy, art history, and the creative arts but, more recently, the fields of psychology and neuroscience have entered the discussion, and the field of neuroaesthetics has been born.
In Brain, Beauty, and Art, leading scholars in this nascent field reflect on the promise of neuroaesthetics to enrich our understanding of this universal yet diverse facet of human experience. The volume consists of essays from foundational researchers whose empirical work launched the field. Each essay is anchored to an original, peer-reviewed paper from the short history of this new and burgeoning subdiscipline of cognitive neuroscience. Authors of each essay were asked three questions: 1) What motivated the original paper? 2) What were the main findings or theoretical claims made? and, 3) How do those findings or claims fit with the current state and anticipated near future of neuroaesthetics? Together, these essays establish the territory and current boundaries of neuroaesthetics and identify its most promising future directions. Topics include models of neuroaesthetics, and discussions of beauty, art, dance, music, literature, and architecture.
Brain, Beauty, and Art will inform and stimulate anyone with an abiding interest in why it is that, across time and culture, we respond to beauty, engage with art, and are affected by music and architecture.
Autoren/Hrsg.
Fachgebiete
Weitere Infos & Material
- Foreword. Where have we been and where are now? A Chatterjee, E Cardlillo
- Frameworks
- 1. An early framework for a cognitive neuroscience of visual aesthetics. A Chatterjee
- 2. Bringing it all together: neurological and neuroimaging evidence of the neural underpinnings of visual aesthetic. M Nadal, CJ Cela-Conde
- 3. But, what actually happens when we engage with art? M Pelowski, H Leder
- 4. Naturalizing aesthetics. Steven Brown
- 5. Moving towards emotions in the aesthetic experience. C Di Dio and V Gallese
- 6. The aesthetic triad. O Vartanian and A Chatterjee
- 7. How neuroimaging is transforming our understanding of aesthetic taste. M Skov
- 8. The cognitive neuroscience of aesthetic experience. M Nadal and M Pearce
- Beauty
- 9. Facial beauty and the medial orbitofrontal cortex. JP O'Doherty, RJ. Dolan
- 10. Beautiful people in the brain of the beholder. A Chatterjee
- 11. The mark of villainy: the connection between appearance and perceived morality. F Hartung
- 12. A quest for beauty. T Jacobsen
- 13. Scene preferences, aesthetic appeal and curiosity: revisiting the neurobiology of the infovore. EA Vessel, X Yue, I Biederman
- 14. Kinds of beauty and the prefrontal cortex. T Pegors
- 15. Expertise and aesthetic liking. M Skov and U Kirk
- 16. Social meaning brings beauty: neural response to the beauty of abstract Chinese characters. X He and W Zhang
- Art
- 17. The contributions of emotion and reward to aesthetic judgment of visual art. O Vartanian
- 18. Embodiment and the aesthetic experience of images. V Gallese, D Freedberg, M Alessandra Umiltà
- 19. The role of left dorsolateral prefrontal cortices in aesthetic valuation. E Munar and CJ Cela-Conde
- 20. The role of the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex in aesthetic appreciation. M Nadal, Z Cattaneo, and CJ Cela-Conde
- 21. Is artistic composition in abstract art detected automatically? C Menzel, G Kovács, GU Hayn-Leichsenring, C Redies
- 22. The contribution of visual area V5 to the perception of implied motion in art and its appreciation. M Nadal and Z Cattaneo
- 23. Art Is Its own reward. S Lacey, K Sathian
- 24. Imaging the subjective. EA Vessel, GG Starr
- 25. Cultural neuroaesthetics of delicate sadness induced by Noh masks. N Osaka
- 26. Towards a computational understanding of neuroaesthetics. K Iigaya and JP O'Doherty
- 27. Artists, artworks, aesthetics, cognition. WP Seeley
- 28. Aesthetic liking is not only driven by object properties, but also by your expectations. M Skov, U Kirk
- 29. Finding mutual interest between neuroscience and aesthetics: a brush with reality? AJ Parker
- 30. What can we learn about art from people with neurological disease? A Chatterjee
- Music
- 31. Chills, Bets, And Dopamine: a journey Into music reward. L Ferreri, J Riba, R Zatorre, A Rodriguez-Fornells
- 32. Why does music evoke strong emotions? Testing the endogenous opioid hypothesis. DJ Levitin and LA Fleming
- 33. Music in all its beauty: adopting the naturalistic paradigm to uncover brain processes during the aesthetic musical experience. E Brattico and V Alluri
- 34. Investigating musical emotions in people with unilateral brain damage. AM Belfi, A Pralus, C Hirel, D Tranel, B Tillmann*, A Caclin*
- Language and Literature
- 35. The neurocognitive poetics model of literary reading 10 years after. AM Jacobs
- 36. The power of poetry. E Wassiliwizky, W Menninghaus
- 37. Pictograph portrays what it is: neural response to the beauty of concrete Chinese characters. X He and W Zhang
- Dance
- 38. Movement, synchronization, and partnering in dance. S Brown
- 39. Dance, expertise and sensorimotor aesthetics. B Calvo-Merino
- 40. An eye for the impossible: exploring the attraction of physically impressive dance movements. ES Cross
- 41. The mind, the brain and the moving body: dance as a topic in cognitive neuroscience. B Blaesing, B Calvo-Merino
- 42. Training effects on affective perception of body movements. LP Kirsch, ES Cross
- Architecture
- 43. The neuroaesthetics of architecture. O Vartanian
- 44. Architectural styles as subordinate scene categories. DB Walther
- 45. Architectural affordances: linking action, perception, and cognition. Z Djebbara, K Gramann
- 46. Architectural design and the mind. A Coburn
- Afterword. Where are we now and where are we going? A Chatterjee, E Cardlillo




