Although fluency theory predominates psychological research on human aesthetics, its most severe limitation may be to explain why art that challenges or even violates easy processing can nevertheless be aesthetically rewarding. We discuss long-standing notions on art's potential to offer mental growth opportunities and to tap into a basic epistemic predisposition that hint at a fluency counteracting aesthetic pleasure mechanism. Based on divergent strands of literature on empirical, evolutionary, and philosophical aesthetics, as well as research on disfluency, we presumed that challenging art requires deliberate reflexive processing at the level of "aboutness" in order to be experientially pleasing. Here, we probed such a cognitive masterin...
We report an experiment investigating how stimulus complexity and conceptual fluency (i.e., the ease...
<div><p>Explanations of aesthetic pleasure based on processing fluency have shown that ease-of-proce...
We investigated the relationship between need for cognitive closure (NFC), that is, the need for a c...
<div><p>Although fluency theory predominates psychological research on human aesthetics, its most se...
From art portraits, the observer may derive at least two different hedonic values: The attractivenes...
Based on findings that fluency of mental operations is hedonically marked and associated with more f...
Background: Aesthetic experience begins through an intentional shift from automatic visual perceptua...
Background: Aesthetic experience begins through an intentional shift from automatic visual perceptua...
Are challenging stimuli appreciated due to perceptual insights during elaboration? Drawing on the li...
Familiarity and novelty are fundamental yet competing factors influencing aesthetic preference. Howe...
Art is universal across cultures. Yet, it is biologically expensive because of the energy expended a...
Most recent studies in experimental aesthetics have focused on the cognitive processing of visual ar...
An unmade bed. A cigarette glued to the wall. A replica of a soup can box. Drippings on a canvas. Ca...
Studies of visual esthetic preference have shown that people without art training generally prefer r...
Two major mechanisms of aesthetic evolution have been suggested. One focuses on naturally selected p...
We report an experiment investigating how stimulus complexity and conceptual fluency (i.e., the ease...
<div><p>Explanations of aesthetic pleasure based on processing fluency have shown that ease-of-proce...
We investigated the relationship between need for cognitive closure (NFC), that is, the need for a c...
<div><p>Although fluency theory predominates psychological research on human aesthetics, its most se...
From art portraits, the observer may derive at least two different hedonic values: The attractivenes...
Based on findings that fluency of mental operations is hedonically marked and associated with more f...
Background: Aesthetic experience begins through an intentional shift from automatic visual perceptua...
Background: Aesthetic experience begins through an intentional shift from automatic visual perceptua...
Are challenging stimuli appreciated due to perceptual insights during elaboration? Drawing on the li...
Familiarity and novelty are fundamental yet competing factors influencing aesthetic preference. Howe...
Art is universal across cultures. Yet, it is biologically expensive because of the energy expended a...
Most recent studies in experimental aesthetics have focused on the cognitive processing of visual ar...
An unmade bed. A cigarette glued to the wall. A replica of a soup can box. Drippings on a canvas. Ca...
Studies of visual esthetic preference have shown that people without art training generally prefer r...
Two major mechanisms of aesthetic evolution have been suggested. One focuses on naturally selected p...
We report an experiment investigating how stimulus complexity and conceptual fluency (i.e., the ease...
<div><p>Explanations of aesthetic pleasure based on processing fluency have shown that ease-of-proce...
We investigated the relationship between need for cognitive closure (NFC), that is, the need for a c...