Literature DB >> 30062668

East of West, West of East: a matter of global and local identity.

Ernst Pöppel1,2.   

Abstract

Research is a very personal matter. On the basis of experiences in different countries with researchers from different cultures over many years, some observations will be described. The conceptual frame of this attempt is to look for anthropological universals and cultural specifics. Much can be learned from spatial representations in the arts. Whereas in the West since Renaissance time the central perspective has become dominant in visual art, in Eastern landscape paintings the "floating view" is typical. The claim that the central perspective corresponds to geometric laws and matches how we see the world is misleading for at least two reasons: It violates mechanisms of size constancy, and the visual world is spatially reduced in pictures to the perifoveal region only. Research on spatial attention has disclosed two different attentional systems being responsible either for near-fovea vision or for the far periphery. This fundamental principle as a global characteristic of visual processing is neglected in Western art. In Eastern art with a floating view geometric laws are violated, and different potential perspectives are integrated within a holistic pattern. The semantics of what shall be expressed becomes important irrespective of physical parameters. The latter may also create the unique phenomenon of becoming subjectively part of the picture confirming personal identity. Cultural specifics like in the arts (what one might expect) can surprisingly also be observed in theoretical considerations about visual processing. Whereas in the tradition of Western science visual percepts are built up with local elements like feature detectors, in an important Chinese theory global topological features are analyzed first. An important task of the brain is to create the identity of a percept on the basis of spatially and temporally distributed neural activities. It is, thus, an important theoretical question how to deal with the challenge to create and maintain the identity of a percept for some time. It is suggested that one should leave behind a monocausal reasoning for such explanations but adopt for analytical strategies the concept of complementarity as a generative principle.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Anthropological universals; Art; Complementarity; Cultural specifics; Eccentricity effect; Floating view; Identity; Imprinting; Spatial attention; Topology; Visual field

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 30062668     DOI: 10.1007/s10339-018-0885-2

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cogn Process        ISSN: 1612-4782


  31 in total

1.  The "third abstraction" of the Chinese artist LaoZhu: Neural and behavioral indicators of aesthetic appreciation.

Authors:  Yan Bao; Taoxi Yang; Jinfan Zhang; Jiyuan Zhang; Xiaoxiong Lin; Marco Paolini; Ernst Pöppel; Sarita Silveira
Journal:  Psych J       Date:  2017-06

2.  Spatial orienting in the visual field: a unified perceptual space?

Authors:  Yan Bao; Yi Wang; Ernst Pöppel
Journal:  Cogn Process       Date:  2012-08

3.  Light-difference threshold and subjective brightness in the periphery of the visual field.

Authors:  E Pöppel; L O Harvey
Journal:  Psychol Forsch       Date:  1973

4.  Excitability cycles in central intermittency.

Authors:  E Pöppel
Journal:  Psychol Forsch       Date:  1970

5.  A time window of 3 s in the aesthetic appreciation of poems.

Authors:  Chen Zhao; Dongxue Zhang; Yan Bao
Journal:  Psych J       Date:  2018-01-03

6.  Brightness perception in the visual field. Effects of retinal position and adaptation level.

Authors:  J Zihl; P Lissy; E Pöppel
Journal:  Psychol Res       Date:  1980

7.  Seeing without knowing: Operational principles along the early visual pathway.

Authors:  Bin Zhou; Ernst Pöppel; Lingyan Wang; Taoxi Yang; Yuliya Zaytseva; Yan Bao
Journal:  Psych J       Date:  2016-09

8.  Sadness is unique: neural processing of emotions in speech prosody in musicians and non-musicians.

Authors:  Mona Park; Evgeny Gutyrchik; Lorenz Welker; Petra Carl; Ernst Pöppel; Yuliya Zaytseva; Thomas Meindl; Janusch Blautzik; Maximilian Reiser; Yan Bao
Journal:  Front Hum Neurosci       Date:  2015-01-30       Impact factor: 3.169

9.  Aesthetic Preferences for Eastern and Western Traditional Visual Art: Identity Matters.

Authors:  Yan Bao; Taoxi Yang; Xiaoxiong Lin; Yuan Fang; Yi Wang; Ernst Pöppel; Quan Lei
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2016-10-20

10.  Neural correlates of moral judgments in first- and third-person perspectives: implications for neuroethics and beyond.

Authors:  Mihai Avram; Kristina Hennig-Fast; Yan Bao; Ernst Pöppel; Maximilian Reiser; Janusch Blautzik; James Giordano; Evgeny Gutyrchik
Journal:  BMC Neurosci       Date:  2014-04-01       Impact factor: 3.288

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