| Literature DB >> 33668815 |
Giulia Cartocci1,2, Dario Rossi1,3, Enrica Modica1, Anton Giulio Maglione1, Ana C Martinez Levy1,2, Patrizia Cherubino1,2, Paolo Canettieri1, Mariella Combi1, Roberto Rea1, Luca Gatti1, Fabio Babiloni1,2,4.
Abstract
Neuroaesthetics, the science studying the biological underpinnings of aesthetic experience, recently extended its area of investigation to literary art; this was the humus where neurocognitive poetics blossomed. Divina Commedia represents one of the most important, famous and studied poems worldwide. Poetry stimuli are characterized by elements (meter and rhyme) promoting the processing fluency, a core aspect of neuroaesthetics theories. In addition, given the evidence of different neurophysiological reactions between experts and non-experts in response to artistic stimuli, the aim of the present study was to investigate, in poetry, a different neurophysiological cognitive and emotional reaction between Literature (L) and Non-Literature (NL) students. A further aim was to investigate whether neurophysiological underpinnings would support explanation of behavioral data. Investigation methods employed: self-report assessments (recognition, appreciation, content recall) and neurophysiological indexes (approach/withdrawal (AW), cerebral effort (CE) and galvanic skin response (GSR)). The main behavioral results, according to fluency theories in aesthetics, suggested in the NL but not in the L group that the appreciation/liking went hand by hand with the self-declared recognition and with the content recall. The main neurophysiological results were: (i) higher galvanic skin response in NL, whilst higher CE values in L; (ii) a positive correlation between AW and CE indexes in both groups. The present results extended previous evidence relative to figurative art also to auditory poetry stimuli, suggesting an emotional attenuation "expertise-specific" showed by experts, but increased cognitive processing in response to the stimuli.Entities:
Keywords: Divina Commedia; EEG; alpha; frontal alpha asymmetry; frontal theta; neuroaesthetics; neurocognitive poetics; skin conductance response; theta; time
Year: 2021 PMID: 33668815 PMCID: PMC7996310 DOI: 10.3390/brainsci11030281
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Brain Sci ISSN: 2076-3425