“…It is perhaps not surprising, therefore, that regardless of source, it correlates with activity in field A1 of mOFC [Ishizu and Zeki, 2011], a region of the emotional brain which has been generally associated with pleasure and reward (e.g., O'Doherty et al, 2001); activity in it has been shown to correlate parametrically with the declared intensity of the experience of beauty derived from a variety of stimuli, such as faces, colors, motion, paintings, music, architectures, moral judgments, and mathematical equations [Ikeda et al, 2015;Ishizu and Zeki, 2011;Kawabata and Zeki, 2004;Kuhn and Gallinat, 2012;O'Doherty et al, 2003;Zeki and Stutters, 2012;Tsukiura and Cabeza, 2011;Vartanian et al, 2013 for a meta-analysis; Zeki et al, 2014] though apparently not from the performing (dance) arts [e.g., Calvo-Merino, et al, 2008;Cross et al, 2011]. Moreover, a recent study has reported an increase in aesthetic ratings of visual stimuli [Nakamura and Kawabata, 2015] following the application of anodal transcranial direct current stimulation to the mOFC, presumably because of enhanced neural activity within it.…”