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From Visual Perception to Aesthetic Appeal: Brain Responses to Aesthetically Appealing Natural Landscape Movies.

TLDR
The authors found that aesthetic appeal is not represented in well-characterized feature-and category-selective regions of visual cortex, rather, the observed activations reflect a local transformation from a feature-based visual representation to a representation of "elemental affect," computed through information-processing mechanisms that detect deviations from an observer's expectations.
Abstract
During aesthetically appealing visual experiences, visual content provides a basis for computation of affectively tinged representations of aesthetic value. How this happens in the brain is largely unexplored. Using engaging video clips of natural landscapes, we tested whether cortical regions that respond to perceptual aspects of an environment (e.g., spatial layout, object content and motion) were directly modulated by rated aesthetic appeal. Twenty-four participants watched a series of videos of natural landscapes while being scanned using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and reported both continuous ratings of enjoyment (during the videos) and overall aesthetic judgments (after each video). Although landscape videos engaged a greater expanse of high-level visual cortex compared to that observed for images of landscapes, independently localized category-selective visual regions (e.g., scene-selective parahippocampal place area and motion-selective hMT+) were not significantly modulated by aesthetic appeal. Rather, a whole-brain analysis revealed modulations by aesthetic appeal in ventral (collateral sulcus) and lateral (middle occipital sulcus, posterior middle temporal gyrus) clusters that were adjacent to scene and motion selective regions. These findings suggest that aesthetic appeal per se is not represented in well-characterized feature- and category-selective regions of visual cortex. Rather, we propose that the observed activations reflect a local transformation from a feature-based visual representation to a representation of "elemental affect," computed through information-processing mechanisms that detect deviations from an observer's expectations. Furthermore, we found modulation by aesthetic appeal in subcortical reward structures but not in regions of the default-mode network (DMN) nor orbitofrontal cortex, and only weak evidence for associated changes in functional connectivity. In contrast to other visual aesthetic domains, aesthetically appealing interactions with natural landscapes may rely more heavily on comparisons between ongoing stimulation and well-formed representations of the natural world, and less on top-down processes for resolving ambiguities or assessing self-relevance.

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The evolutionary circular and human centered city: Towards an ecological and humanistic “re-generation” of the current city governance

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors propose the profile of a "circular governance" that is also human centered, capable of reducing inequalities, enhancing the processes of real participation in the construction of a desirable future for cities, through its capacity to regenerate material and no-material components/values.
Journal ArticleDOI

Exploring the Integration Between Colour Theory and Biodiversity Values in the Design of Living Walls

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors used a colour theory framework for planting arrangements to see if they could design vegetation that is highly aesthetic and has high biodiversity in urban living walls in Malmö, Sweden using principles based on Johannes Itten's colour theories.
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Naturalistic viewing conditions can increase task engagement and aesthetic preference but have only minimal impact on EEG quality

TL;DR: In this paper , the effect of more liberal experimental settings on various measures of behavior, brain activity and physiology in an aesthetic rating task was systematically compared, and it was shown that using video stimuli does not necessarily result in lower EEG quality and can, on the contrary, significantly reduce eye movements while increasing both the participants' aesthetic response and general task engagement.
Journal ArticleDOI

Characterizing dynamic neural representations of scene attractiveness

TL;DR: In this article , the authors show that scene attractiveness is mirrored in early brain signals that arise within 200ms of vision, suggesting that the aesthetic appeal of scenes is first resolved during perceptual processing.
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Journal ArticleDOI

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