While aesthetic experiences are not limited to any particular context, their sensorial, cognitive and behavioral properties can be profoundly affected by the circumstances in which they occur. Given the ubiquitous nature of contextual effects in nearly all aspects of behavior, investigations aimed at delineating the context-dependent and contextindependent aspects of aesthetic experience and engagement with aesthetic objects in a diverse range of settings are important in empirical aesthetics. Here, we analyze the viewing behavior of visitors (N = 19) freely viewing 15 paintings in the 20th-century Australian collection room at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. In particular, we focus on how aspects of viewing behavior including viewing distance in the gallery condition and eye gaze measures such as fixation count, total fixation duration and average fixation duration are affected by the artworks' physical characteristics including size and image statistics properties such as Fourier amplitude spectrum, fractal dimension and entropy. In addition, the same artworks were viewed in the laboratory, either scaled to fit most of the screen (N = 22) or to preserve their relative size as in the museum condition (N = 17) to assess the robustness of these relationships across different presentation contexts. We find that the effects of presentation context are modulated by the artworks' physical characteristics.
Theoretical conceptualizations of symptomatology in patients with borderline personality disorder (BPD) have noted an inability to integrate contradictory perceptions (splitting, or dichotomous thinking) as a hallmark of the disorder. This study investigated contradictions manifest in the thinking and behavior of BPD patients, using the concept of paradox. A paradox occurs when an apparent contradiction contains an underlying logic which makes the contradiction comprehensible. Using qualitative methods of analysis, this study explored paradoxes evident in 10 BPD patient narratives about relationship events. Specific paradoxes relating to interpersonal conflicts and self-destructiveness are presented, along with the underlying logic of each paradox as described by patients. Implications for treatment are discussed.
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