Abstract

Ambiguity is often associated with negative affective responses, and enjoying ambiguity seems restricted to only a few situations, such as experiencing art. Nevertheless, theories of judgment formation, especially the “processing fluency account”, suggest that easy-to-process (non-ambiguous) stimuli are processed faster and are therefore preferred to (ambiguous) stimuli, which are hard to process. In a series of six experiments, we investigated these contrasting approaches by manipulating fluency (presentation duration: 10ms, 50ms, 100ms, 500ms, 1000ms) and testing effects of ambiguity (ambiguous versus non-ambiguous pictures of paintings) on classification performance (Part A; speed and accuracy) and aesthetic appreciation (Part B; liking and interest). As indicated by signal detection analyses, classification accuracy increased with presentation duration (Exp. 1a), but we found no effects of ambiguity on classification speed (Exp. 1b). Fifty percent of the participants were able to successfully classify ambiguous content at a presentation duration of 100 ms, and at 500ms even 75% performed above chance level. Ambiguous artworks were found more interesting (in conditions 50ms to 1000ms) and were preferred over non-ambiguous stimuli at 500ms and 1000ms (Exp. 2a - 2c, 3). Importantly, ambiguous images were nonetheless rated significantly harder to process as non-ambiguous images. These results suggest that ambiguity is an essential ingredient in art appreciation even though or maybe because it is harder to process.

Highlights

  • In our everyday lives we are often confronted with ambiguous information, coming from manifold sources and present in various sensory domains

  • If the individual CI of each participant’s d’ includes 0, the detection performance is not significantly better than chance

  • The present study empirically provides some new insights to the role of ambiguity in the arts

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Summary

Introduction

In our everyday lives we are often confronted with ambiguous information, coming from manifold sources and present in various sensory domains. The visual fine arts are a domain for which ambiguity was discussed as an essential feature and as a source of pleasurable aesthetic experiences [1,2,3]. This seems to contradict those theories about formation of preference that claim that easy-toprocess (fluent) stimuli are most preferred [4,5,6,7]. Using reproductions of surrealistic artworks and modified, manipulated versions the present study aims to investigate which of these contrasting theories explain aesthetic judgments for ambiguous and non-ambiguous artistic images

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