| Literature DB >> 27199697 |
Matthew Pelowski1, Patrick S Markey1, Jon O Lauring2, Helmut Leder1.
Abstract
The last decade has witnessed a renaissance of empirical and psychological approaches to art study, especially regarding cognitive models of art processing experience. This new emphasis on modeling has often become the basis for our theoretical understanding of human interaction with art. Models also often define areas of focus and hypotheses for new empirical research, and are increasingly important for connecting psychological theory to discussions of the brain. However, models are often made by different researchers, with quite different emphases or visual styles. Inputs and psychological outcomes may be differently considered, or can be under-reported with regards to key functional components. Thus, we may lose the major theoretical improvements and ability for comparison that can be had with models. To begin addressing this, this paper presents a theoretical assessment, comparison, and new articulation of a selection of key contemporary cognitive or information-processing-based approaches detailing the mechanisms underlying the viewing of art. We review six major models in contemporary psychological aesthetics. We in turn present redesigns of these models using a unified visual form, in some cases making additions or creating new models where none had previously existed. We also frame these approaches in respect to their targeted outputs (e.g., emotion, appraisal, physiological reaction) and their strengths within a more general framework of early, intermediate, and later processing stages. This is used as a basis for general comparison and discussion of implications and future directions for modeling, and for theoretically understanding our engagement with visual art.Entities:
Keywords: aesthetic experience; art; cognitive models; emotion; evaluation; information processing
Year: 2016 PMID: 27199697 PMCID: PMC4844603 DOI: 10.3389/fnhum.2016.00160
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Hum Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5161 Impact factor: 3.169
Figure 1Chatterjee model adapted from original visual model in Chatterjee (. Original elements shown in black. Additions not originally included in model shown in blue. If possible, original wording has been retained or adapted from model author's publications.
Figure 2Locher model (adapted from Locher, .
Figure 3Leder model (adapted from Leder et al., .
Figure 4Silvia model (created by the authors for this paper).
Figure 5Pelowski model (adapted from Pelowski and Akiba, .
Figure 6Cupchik model (created by the authors for this paper).
Overview of explicitly mentioned inputs and outputs in models of art experience.
| Personality | – | ○ | – | ○ | ○ | ○ |
| Prior affective state | – | ○ | ○ | – | ○ | |
| Memory, knowledge | ○ | ○ | ○ | ○ | ○ | ○ |
| Art display, context | – | ○ | ○ | • | ○ | – |
| Artwork qualities | ○ | ○ | • | • | – | ○ |
| Social/cultural setting | – | ○ | ○ | • | ○ | – |
| Affect | ○ | • | ○ | ○ | ○ | ○ |
| Physiology | • | – | – | ○ | ○ | – |
| Action | • | ○ | – | • | ○ | – |
| Appraisal | ○ | ○ | ○ | ○ | ○ | ○ |
| Meaning | ○ | ○ | ○ | ○ | ○ | ○ |
| Novelty | • | • | • | • | ○ | • |
| Transcendence | – | – | • | – | ○ | • |
| Aesthetic/detached | • | – | ○ | – | ○ | ○ |
| Negative | • | – | – | ○ | ○ | ○ |
| Self Adjustment | • | – | • | ○ | ○ | ○ |
| Social | ○ | – | • | – | ○ | – |
| Health | – | – | • | – | – | • |
Circle (○) signifies explicit mention and discussion of Input/Output factor by author(s). Dot (•) signifies implicit mention. Dash (–) signifies no mention.
Models of art experience and noted Outputs.
| Primarily tied to visual processing experience and successful classification, identification and understanding. | (?) Aesthetic experiences can enhance cortical sensory processing. | (?) Aesthetic experiences can enhance cortical sensory processing and thus eye movement. | Primarily tied to visual processing experience and successful classification, identification and understanding. | Result of processing of objects, extraction of prototypes, connection to memory, and final decision. | (?) Aesthetic experiences can enhance cortical sensory processing and thus new attention. | |
| (?) Outcome of visual processing and integration of information with memory. | (Eye movement). Driven by initial pre-conscious processing for gist followed by detailed assessment and influenced by object qualities and viewer personality/expertise. | Outcome of visual processing and integration of information with memory. | Outcome of visual processing and integration of information with memory. | (?) Possible outcome of augmented information and feedback from art processing to memory/personal context. | ||
| Primarily tied to intellectual/processing experience and successful mastery or understanding. | Primarily tied to intellectual/processing experience and successful mastery or understanding. | Through classification and implicit memory integration. | (?) May result from feedback at evaluation stage. | |||
| From combination of processing for collative properties from matching of art and schema (and resulting assessment for goal congruence and relevance) and coping potential. | (?) From combination of processing for goal congruence and relevance) and coping potential. | (?) Action tendencies (fight/flight, avoidance): from combination of processing for goal congruence and relevance) and coping potential. | From combination of processing for collative properties from matching of art and schema (and resulting assessment for goal congruence and relevance) and coping potential. | Primarily tied to intellectual matching of stimuli to schema, typically in high coping contexts, with resulting reflection and motivated by “knowledge emotion.” | (?) Presumably tied to mismatches between schema and art (low congruency) with sufficient coping and goal relevance. | |
| Determined by relative stage and type of self-engagement/self protection. Classed into three main outcomes: little emotion, negative emotion in secondary control, highly positive. | Determined by stage and type of self-engagement/self protection. Classed into three outcomes: little response, sympathetic fight/flight reaction in secondary control, parasympathetic response in aesthetic phase. | Need to leave, fidget, clap, talk may be tied to self protection strategies in Abortive outcome (Secondary control). | Determined by relative stage and type of self-engagement/self protection. Classed into three main outcomes: facile, negative, highly positive. | Brought about by creation of new schema (self image) via previous process of facing and overcoming discrepancy. Allows one to reset engagement with new schema allowing novel ideas/concepts. | Brought about by creation of new schema (self image) via previous process of facing and overcoming discrepancy. Allows one to reset engagement with new schema allowing novel perception. | |
| Result of: (1) analytical/ schema-based processing of content, leading to primary “category” type emotions (happy, sad…) and (2) holistic/experiential processing leading to “dimension” type emotions relating to hedonic affect. | Result of reactive/aesthetic mode. Based initially on assessed complexity or ease of processing. | Result of reflective/pragmatic mode. Based on later integration of context, viewer and work. | (?) Potentially result of: (1) sudden new view of things/revelation via “aesthetic middle.” (2) Adaptation via reflection on personally-related emotion. | |||
| (?) Intermediate processing of compelling or pleasing qualities (symmetry, balance, content) may engage frontal-parietal attention circuits, which may lead to “a feed forward system,” in which object attributes engage attention, and attention enhances processing, leading to heightened engagement/pleasure. | (?) Primarily tied to unsuccessful visual processing experience. | (?) Result of aesthetic experience brought about by making special. | Result of aesthetic experience brought about by making special, causing social cohesion. | |||
| (?) May result from feedback at evaluation stage. | Derived from highly successful mastery experience. | (?) May result from feedback at evaluation stage. | (?) May result from feedback at evaluation stage. | (?) Possibly outcome of positive mastery experience. | ||
| From low congruency plus a felt “deliberate trespass” (Silvia, 2009) against goals and values (low coping). | Primarily tied to intellectual matching of stimuli to schema, typically in high coping contexts, with resulting reflection and motivated by “knowledge emotion.” | |||||
| Brought about by creation of new schema (self image) via previous process of facing and overcoming discrepancy. Coincides with final “aesthetic phase” of latency following change. | Brought about by creation of new schema (self image) via previous process of facing and overcoming discrepancy. Coincides with final “aesthetic phase” of latency following change. | Result of self-protectionary actions in secondary control stage. Negative emotions/evaluations are used to minimize danger to expectations/self. | Brought about by creation of new schema (self image) via previous process of facing and overcoming discrepancy. May cause positive adjustment with specific work and general class of art. | Relation between self and art or artists may be changed depending on abortive (Negative change) or transformative (positive) outcome. May involve hedonic and potency assessments. Transformative outcome may cause new art interest. | ||
| (?) Potentially result of: (1) sudden new view of things/revelation via “aesthetic middle.” (2) Adaptation via reflection on personally-related emotion. | When a work “expressively embodies a person's sense of identity” leads to suspension of perception of time “in which the person and the work become one.” | Based on: (1) difficulty in understanding or initially processing, leading to hedonic aversion through reactive/aesthetic mode, (2) “under-distancing,” where art is to close to one's self, or (3) negative emotional content as processed in the reflective mode. | Result of: (1) primary emotions experienced through reflective mode and “emotional elaboration” where person searches for underlying layers of meaning. (2) bond created between person/work via “aesthetic middle.” | (?) Potentially result of return to homeostasis as result of successful aesthetic engagement. | ||
Output descriptions based on authors' published models and related publications. Factors preceded by a question mark (?) were not specifically mentioned by the authors, but were proposed by the present paper.