Abstract

Visual aesthetic experiences unfold over time, yet most of our understanding of such experiences comes from experiments using static visual stimuli and measuring static responses. Here, we investigated the temporal dynamics of subjective aesthetic experience using temporally extended stimuli (movie clips) in combination with continuous behavioral ratings. Two groups of participants, a rate group (n = 25) and a view group (n = 25), watched 30-second video clips of landscapes and dance performances in test and retest blocks. The rate group reported continuous ratings while watching the videos, with an overall aesthetic judgment at the end of each video, in both test and retest blocks. The view group, however, passively watched the videos in the test block, reporting only an overall aesthetic judgment at the end of each clip. In the retest block, the view group reported both continuous and overall judgments. When comparing the two groups, we found that the task of making continuous ratings did not influence overall ratings or agreement across participants. In addition, the degree of temporal variation in continuous ratings over time differed substantially by observer (from slower “integrators” to “fast responders”), but less so by video. Reliability of continuous ratings across repeated exposures was in general high, but also showed notable variance across participants. Together, these results show that temporally extended stimuli produce aesthetic experiences that are not the same from person to person, and that continuous behavioral ratings provide a reliable window into the temporal dynamics of such aesthetic experiences while not materially altering the experiences themselves.

Highlights

  • Pleasing experiences, such as looking at a painting, listening to a piece of music, or watching a movie or dance performance, develop dynamically in time

  • Little is known regarding the temporal processes giving rise to these experiences such as how much time is necessary for an aesthetic experience to develop or how these component processes interact in time to produce an aesthetic experience

  • We investigated the degree to which dynamic visual stimuli lead to more similar aesthetic experiences in different individuals

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Summary

Introduction

Pleasing experiences, such as looking at a painting, listening to a piece of music, or watching a movie or dance performance, develop dynamically in time. These experiences involve complex processes generated by the interactions between perception, attention, decision making, affect and emotion–and, an individual observer’s background knowledge [1,2]. Average looking times for artworks in museums are reported to be around 20 seconds, with large variations across people and artworks [6,7,8] It takes time for an aesthetic judgment to develop; for example, making a judgment on whether something is beautiful takes longer than making a perceptual judgment on whether something is symmetric [9]

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