Unbound MEDLINE

Art in the eye of the beholder: the perception of art during monocular viewing. Cognitive and behavioral neurology : official journal of the Society for Behavioral and Cognitive Neurology [Cogn Behav Neurol] Journal article

 
TitleArt in the eye of the beholder: the perception of art during monocular viewing.
Author(s)Finney GR, Heilman KM 
InstitutionMemory and Cognitive Disorders Program, Department of Neurology, University of Florida College of Medicine, Gainesville, FL 32610-0236, USA. finney@neurology.ufl.edu
SourceCogn Behav Neurol 2008 Mar; 21(1):5-7.
AbstractOBJECTIVE: To explore whether monocular viewing affects judgment of art.
BACKGROUND: Each superior colliculus receives optic nerve fibers primarily from the contralateral eye, and visual input to each colliculus activates the ipsilateral hemisphere. In previous studies, monocular viewing influenced performance on visual-spatial and verbal memory tasks.
METHOD: Eight college-educated subjects, 6 men and 2 women, monocularly viewed 10 paintings with the right eye and another 10 with the left. Subjects had not previously seen the paintings. Each time, 5 paintings were abstract expressionist and 5 were impressionist. The orders of eye viewing and painting viewed were pseudorandomized and counterbalanced. Subjects rated on a 1 to 10 scale 4 qualities of the paintings: representation, aesthetics (beauty), novelty, and closure (completeness).
RESULTS: Paintings in the abstract expressionist style had a significant difference in the rating of novelty; the paintings were rated more novel when viewed with the left eye than with the right eye. There was a trend for rating paintings as having more closure when viewing with the right eye than with the left. Impressionist paintings show no differences.
CONCLUSIONS: Monocular viewing influences artistic judgments; novelty being rated higher when viewed with the left eye. Asymmetric projections from each eye and hemispheric specialization are posited to explain these differences.
Languageeng
Pub Type(s)Journal Article
Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.
PubMed ID18327016
  
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