“…Avoiding the need for categorical divisions, feature mapping, or dimensional approaches, which have previously been used in social cognition and psychopathology ( Brown & Barlow, 2009 ; Cross & Ramsey, 2021 ; Oosterhof & Todorov, 2008 ), could provide a fruitful alternative perspective in defining “aesthetic” and “non-aesthetic.” According to dimensional perspectives, different stimulus or task features could be more or less aesthetically oriented. For example, the assessment of visual clarity ( Whittlesea et al, 1990 ), implied motion ( Bara, Darda, et al, 2021 ), or symmetry ( Jacobsen & Höfel, 2003 ; Jacobsen et al, 2006 ) could be regarded as less aesthetically oriented than assessing liking, preference, or beauty. Furthermore, this definition means that stimuli, tasks, and contexts that possess fewer aesthetic features are not necessarily devoid of any aesthetic features.…”