Highlights
- Neuroscience-based studies indicate that our brain responds
differently to situations when we are told beforehand about the type of
situation
- This reaction controls our emotional response to the particular
situation
- Researchers have found that people tend to appreciate an image
more if they are told that it is a work of art than if when told that it
is a real-life situation
Ever wondered
how we can appreciate an abstract painting in an art gallery? Or why we cannot
appreciate a toddler’s scribbling on the wall?
Neuroscience researchers probably have the answer – if we are told that
an image is a work of art, the way we react to it changes and we tend to
appreciate it.
Sounds complex,
doesn’t it? Well, anything to do with the central nervous system is complex.
Studies on the
brain have shown that the brain is capable of
changing our emotions depending on the context. If we are told before a
situation about its type, for example if it is a fact or a fiction, our
reaction to the situation changes accordingly.
‘Beauty lies in the eye - or the brain - of the beholder.’
Researchers from the Erasmus University in Rotterdam
conducted an experiment on student volunteers. Twenty-four students were shown
several pictures, some of which were pleasant, while others were unpleasant. They were told beforehand whether they were real-life photographs or
works of arts. Their brain electrical activity was recorded with the help of an
instrument called an
electroencephalogram
(EEG), in which a brain signal called late positive potential (LPP)
was measured. At the end of the experiment, the volunteers were asked to rate
the images in terms of likeability and attractiveness. A follow-up experiment
was also conducted, in which researchers added another set of images consisting
of scenes of movies or documentaries which were classified as fiction.
The researchers found that:
- The amplitude of the LPP brain signal was greater when the
volunteers were told that the image was a real-life image than when they
were told that it was a work of art.
- The volunteers also gave higher ratings for works of art in
terms of likeability as compared to real images.
- The effect of the brain on the emotional response was
attenuated with the introduction of the third set of images.
Thus, the researchers feel that our brain changes our
emotional and behavioral responses on being informed in advance whether an
image is a work of art or not. When we perceive something as artwork, our
emotional responses are subdued and we can appreciate the image from an
artistic perspective.
References:- Noah N.N. Van Dongen et al. Implicit emotion regulation in the context of viewing artworks: ERP evidence in response to pleasant and unpleasant pictures. Brain and Cognition 107 (2016), 48–54. doi 0.1016/j.bandc.2016.06.003.
- N. Van Dongen, J.W. Van Strie, K. Dijkstra. Implicit emotion regulation while viewing fictive and real pictures: event related potential evidence in response to affective pictures. Poster presented at The European College of Neuropsychopharmacology (ECNP), Vienna September 2016.
Source-Medindia