Evaluation of Aesthetic Pleasure in Schizophrenia Spectrum Disorders, Using the Eye-Tracking Methodology

Aesthetic perception plays a significant role in social behavior. The ability to recognize and perceive beauty is important for social situations in that it can create different expectations about human behavior. It has been hypothesized that the aesthetic experience is characterized by emotional an...

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Veröffentlicht in:Psychology of aesthetics, creativity, and the arts creativity, and the arts, 2023-02, Vol.17 (1), p.16-28
Hauptverfasser: Pino, Maria Chiara, Di Dio, Cinzia, Pacitti, Francesca, Rossi, Rodolfo, Vagnetti, Roberto, Le Donne, Ilenia, Marchetti, Antonella, Mazza, Monica
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container_end_page 28
container_issue 1
container_start_page 16
container_title Psychology of aesthetics, creativity, and the arts
container_volume 17
creator Pino, Maria Chiara
Di Dio, Cinzia
Pacitti, Francesca
Rossi, Rodolfo
Vagnetti, Roberto
Le Donne, Ilenia
Marchetti, Antonella
Mazza, Monica
description Aesthetic perception plays a significant role in social behavior. The ability to recognize and perceive beauty is important for social situations in that it can create different expectations about human behavior. It has been hypothesized that the aesthetic experience is characterized by emotional and hedonic responses to the stimuli. People with schizophrenia are characterized by the presence of negative symptoms, such as anhedonia, which affect daily social functioning. We explored the idea that the presence of anhedonia and an impairment in the subjective experience of pleasure in people with schizophrenia could play a key role, affecting their ability to experience and perceive aesthetic pleasure and, consequently, negatively affecting their social behavior. We evaluated the ability to perceive aesthetics aesthetic perception ability in people with schizophrenia (schizophrenia group, SG) compared to a control group (CG), using the golden beauty behavioral task, which requires subjects to judge the proportions and aesthetics of masterpieces of classical art. Gazing behavior was also recorded while performing the task using eye-tracker methodology. Our results showed that the SG did not present different behaviors between stimuli types, while the CG evaluated canonical sculptures as more pleasant and fixed them longer. The SG's subjective aesthetic experience of canonical stimuli seems to be affected by their awareness of cognitive issues, evaluated by the Subjective Scale to Investigate Cognition in Schizophrenia (SSTICS), and thus these dimensions could be important aspects of their altered aesthetic experience.
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We evaluated the ability to perceive aesthetics aesthetic perception ability in people with schizophrenia (schizophrenia group, SG) compared to a control group (CG), using the golden beauty behavioral task, which requires subjects to judge the proportions and aesthetics of masterpieces of classical art. Gazing behavior was also recorded while performing the task using eye-tracker methodology. Our results showed that the SG did not present different behaviors between stimuli types, while the CG evaluated canonical sculptures as more pleasant and fixed them longer. 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subjects Aesthetics
Anhedonia
Eye movements
Female
Human
Male
Pleasure
Schizophrenia
Social Behavior
Social Cognition
Task
Visual arts
Visual Tracking
title Evaluation of Aesthetic Pleasure in Schizophrenia Spectrum Disorders, Using the Eye-Tracking Methodology
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