Abstract

In the present study, we examined the eye movement behaviour of children and adults looking at five Van Gogh paintings in the Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam. The goal of the study was to determine the role of top-down and bottom-up attentional processes in the first stages of participants’ aesthetic experience. Bottom-up processes were quantified by determining a salience map for each painting. Top-down processing was manipulated by first allowing participants to view the paintings freely, then providing background information about each painting, and then allowing them to view the paintings a second time. The salience analysis showed differences between the eye movement behaviour of children and adults, and differences between the two phases. In the children, the first five fixations during the free viewing phase were strongly related to visually salient features of the paintings—indicating a strong role for bottom-up factors. In the second phase, after children had received background information, top-down factors played a more prominent role. By contrast, adults’ observed patterns were similar in both phases, indicating that bottom-up processes did not play a major role when they viewed the paintings. In the second phase, children and adults both spent more time looking at regions that were mentioned in the background information. This effect was greater for adults than for children, confirming the notion that adults, when viewing paintings, rely much more on top-down processing than children.

Highlights

  • Even though more and more paintings are available online, an increasing number of people prefer to visit museums to experience and appreciate the original artworks

  • A lot is known about eye movements and art perception in experimental settings

  • In the present study we used “eye movements in natural behaviour” [35] as a way of investigating how children and adults look at actual paintings in a museum setting

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Summary

Introduction

Even though more and more paintings are available online, an increasing number of people prefer to visit museums to experience and appreciate the original artworks. We make multiple eye movements, which may reveal the complex cognitive and perceptual components underlying our aesthetic experience (e.g., [1]). The study revealed that observers focus on different areas of the painting (e.g., people, objects) depending on task instructions and context [2]. In line with these findings, other studies show that participants’ eye movement patterns can be influenced by expertise [3], culture [4], personality traits [5] and the physical salience of features in the painting [6, 7]

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