Literature DB >> 25550227

"The Memory of Beauty" Survives Alzheimer's Disease (but Cannot Help Memory).

Maria Caterina Silveri1, Ilaria Ferrante1, Anna Clelia Brita1, Paola Rossi1, Rosa Liperoti2, Federica Mammarella2, Roberto Bernabei2, Maria Vittoria Marini Chiarelli3, Martina De Luca3.   

Abstract

The aesthetic experience, in particular the experience of beauty in the visual arts, should have neural correlates in the human brain. Neuroesthetics is principally implemented by functional studies in normal subjects, but the neuropsychology of the aesthetic experience, that is, the impact of brain damage on the appreciation of works of art, is a neglected field. Here, 16 mild to moderate Alzheimer's disease patients and 15 caregivers expressed their preference on 16 works of art (eight representational and eight abstract) during programmed visits to an art gallery. A week later, all subjects expressed a preference rate on reproductions of the same works presented in the gallery. Both patients and caregivers were consistent in assigning preference ratings, and in patients consistency was independent of the ability to recognize the works on which the preference rate had been given in an explicit memory task. Caregivers performed at ceiling in the memory task. Both patients and caregivers assigned higher preference ratings for representational than for abstract works and preference consistency was comparable in representational and abstract works. Furthermore, in the memory task, patients did not recognize better artworks they had assigned higher preference ratings to, suggesting that emotional stimuli (as presumably visual works of art are) cannot enhance declarative memory in this pathology. Our data, which were gathered in an ecological context and with real-world stimuli, confirm previous findings on the stability of aesthetic preference in patients with Alzheimer's disease and on the independence of aesthetic preference from cognitive abilities such as memory.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Aesthetic preference; Alzheimer's disease; art; dementia; emotional memory enhancement; memory; memory disorders; neuroesthetics

Mesh:

Year:  2015        PMID: 25550227     DOI: 10.3233/JAD-141434

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Alzheimers Dis        ISSN: 1387-2877            Impact factor:   4.472


  4 in total

1.  Aesthetic Preference for Negatively-Valenced Artworks Remains Stable in Pathological Aging: A Comparison Between Cognitively Impaired Patients With Alzheimer's Disease and Healthy Controls.

Authors:  Elisabeth Kliem; Michael Forster; Helmut Leder
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2022-05-26

2.  Neuropsychology of Aesthetic Judgment of Ambiguous and Non-Ambiguous Artworks.

Authors:  Maddalena Boccia; Sonia Barbetti; Laura Piccardi; Cecilia Guariglia; Anna Maria Giannini
Journal:  Behav Sci (Basel)       Date:  2017-03-18

3.  Processing emotion from abstract art in frontotemporal lobar degeneration.

Authors:  Miriam H Cohen; Amelia M Carton; Christopher J Hardy; Hannah L Golden; Camilla N Clark; Phillip D Fletcher; Kankamol Jaisin; Charles R Marshall; Susie M D Henley; Jonathan D Rohrer; Sebastian J Crutch; Jason D Warren
Journal:  Neuropsychologia       Date:  2015-12-31       Impact factor: 3.139

4.  Museum Moving to Inpatients: Le Louvre à l'Hôpital.

Authors:  Jean-Jacques Monsuez; Véronique François; Robert Ratiney; Isabelle Trinchet; Pierre Polomeni; Georges Sebbane; Séverine Muller; Marylène Litout; Cécile Castagno; Didier Frandji
Journal:  Int J Environ Res Public Health       Date:  2019-01-13       Impact factor: 3.390

  4 in total

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