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Processing Fluency and Aesthetic Pleasure: Is Beauty in the Perceiver's Processing Experience?
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155
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2004
Year
Beauty is grounded in the perceiver's processing experiences, contrasting theories that attribute aesthetic pleasure solely to objective stimulus features. The study proposes that aesthetic pleasure depends on processing fluency, offering an integrative framework that links early preferences, cultural influences, and the relationship between beauty and truth. The authors review how factors such as figural goodness, figure-ground contrast, repetition, symmetry, and prototypicality influence aesthetic judgments by modulating processing fluency. Variables that enhance processing fluency, such as visual or semantic priming, increase aesthetic pleasure, supporting the proposed framework.
We propose that aesthetic pleasure is a funnction of the perceiver's processing dynamics: The more fluently perceivers can process an object, the more positive their aesthetic response. We review variables known to influence aesthetic judgments, such as figural goodness, figure-ground contrast, stimulus repetition, symmetry, and prototypicality, and trace their effects to changes in processing fluency. Other variables that influence processing fluency, like visual or semantic priming, similarly increase judgments of aesthetic pleasure. Our proposal provides an integrative framework for the study of aesthetic pleasure and sheds light on the interplay between early preferences versus cultural influences on taste, preferences for both prototypical and abstracted forms, and the relation between beauty and truth. In contrast to theories that trace aesthetic pleasure to objective stimulus features per se, we propose that beauty is grounded in the processing experiences of the perceiver, which are in part a function of stimulus properties.
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