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Laterality
Asymmetries of Brain, Behaviour, and Cognition
Volume 19, 2014 - Issue 5
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Original Articles

Dynamic stimuli: Accentuating aesthetic preference biases

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Pages 549-559 | Received 05 Oct 2013, Accepted 20 Jan 2014, Published online: 17 Feb 2014
 

Abstract

Despite humans' preference for symmetry, artwork often portrays asymmetrical characteristics that influence the viewer's aesthetic preference for the image. When presented with asymmetrical images, aesthetic preference is often given to images whose content flows from left-to-right and whose mass is located on the right of the image. Cerebral lateralization has been suggested to account for the left-to-right directionality bias; however, the influence of cultural factors, such as scanning habits, on aesthetic preference biases is debated. The current research investigates aesthetic preference for mobile objects and landscapes, as previous research has found contrasting preference for the two image types. Additionally, the current experiment examines the effects of dynamic movement on directionality preference to test the assumption that static images are perceived as aesthetically equivalent to dynamic images. After viewing mirror-imaged pairs of pictures and videos, right-to-left readers failed to show a preference bias, whereas left-to-right readers preferred stimuli with left-to-right directionality regardless of the location of the mass. The directionality bias in both reading groups was accentuated by the videos, but the bias was significantly stronger in left-to-right readers. The findings suggest that scanning habits moderate the leftward bias resulting from hemispheric specialization and that dynamic stimuli further fluent visual processing.

This work was supported by a grant to Lorin J. Elias from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council.

This work was supported by a grant to Lorin J. Elias from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council.

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