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      Descriptive and evaluative judgment processes: behavioral and electrophysiological indices of processing symmetry and aesthetics.

      Cognitive, Affective & Behavioral Neuroscience
      Adult, Cerebral Cortex, physiology, Cognition, Computer Graphics, Concept Formation, Data Display, Esthetics, psychology, Evoked Potentials, Female, Humans, Judgment, Male, Mental Processes, Pattern Recognition, Visual, Visual Perception

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          Abstract

          Descriptive symmetry and evaluative aesthetic judgment processes were compared using identical stimuli in both judgment tasks. Electrophysiological activity was recorded while participants judged novel formal graphic patterns in a trial-by-trial cuing setting using binary responses (symmetric, not symmetric; beautiful, not beautiful). Judgment analyses of a Phase 1 test and main experiment performance resulted in individual models, as well as group models, of the participants' judgment systems. Symmetry showed a strong positive correlation with beautiful judgments and was the most important cue. Descriptive judgments were performed faster than evaluative judgments. The ERPs revealed a phasic, early frontal negativity for the not-beautiful judgments. A sustained posterior negativity was observed in the symmetric condition. All conditions showed late positive potentials (LPPs). Evaluative judgment LPPs revealed a more pronounced right lateralization. It is argued that the present aesthetic judgments engage a two-stage process consisting of early, anterior frontomedian impression formation after 300 msec and right-hemisphere evaluative categorization around 600 msec after onset of the graphic patterns.

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