2022
DOI: 10.1037/aca0000368
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Altar-ing aesthetic emotions: Exploring responses to ecologically valid beauty stimuli and their relationship to trait engagement with beauty.

Abstract: Few studies have examined aesthetic emotional responses to ecologically valid beauty stimuli, and even fewer have done so with a comprehensive measure of a full range of possible aesthetic emotions. Study 1 examines beauty appreciators’ (N = 41) aesthetic emotional reactions to a wide range of stimuli (wild nature; Nez Perce Tribal artifacts; moral beauty of human elders; and slides of architecture, paintings, and nature). All stimuli evoked significantly higher levels of prototypical, pleasing, and epistemic … Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…However, there are also interindividual differences in individuals’ responsiveness to different types of aesthetic stimuli, regardless of culture (Afhami & Mohammadi-Zarghan, 2018; Belfi et al, 2018; Carlson et al, 2016; Chamorro-Premuzic et al, 2009; Fayn et al, 2015; Jacobsen, 2004; McManus & Furnham, 2006; Rentfrow et al, 2011). There is evidence to suggest that some people are simply more or less responsive to aesthetic stimuli in general (Brook, 2022; Diessner et al, 2020; Nelson, 1985; Saarikallio et al, 2013). Given the strong cultural impacts on what people like, it is reasonable to ask whether culture also impacts aesthetic responsiveness.…”
Section: The Aesthetic Responsiveness Assessment (Area)mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, there are also interindividual differences in individuals’ responsiveness to different types of aesthetic stimuli, regardless of culture (Afhami & Mohammadi-Zarghan, 2018; Belfi et al, 2018; Carlson et al, 2016; Chamorro-Premuzic et al, 2009; Fayn et al, 2015; Jacobsen, 2004; McManus & Furnham, 2006; Rentfrow et al, 2011). There is evidence to suggest that some people are simply more or less responsive to aesthetic stimuli in general (Brook, 2022; Diessner et al, 2020; Nelson, 1985; Saarikallio et al, 2013). Given the strong cultural impacts on what people like, it is reasonable to ask whether culture also impacts aesthetic responsiveness.…”
Section: The Aesthetic Responsiveness Assessment (Area)mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Beauty surrounds us; we may seek it out intentionally or happen upon it by accident. Humans' ability to perceive and appreciate beauty, their sense of beauty, has been found to have a number of influences, including guiding attention 1,2 , eliciting and enhancing emotions 3,4 , and reducing stress 5 . But why are we able to see and appreciate beauty in the first place?…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%