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Brain, Beauty, and Art
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Table of Contents

Foreword. Where have we been and where are now? A Chatterjee, E Cardlillo

Frameworks
1. An early framework for a cognitive neuroscience of visual aesthetics. A Chatterjee
2. Bringing it all together: neurological and neuroimaging evidence of the neural underpinnings of visual aesthetic. M Nadal, CJ Cela-Conde
3. But, what actually happens when we engage with art? M Pelowski, H Leder
4. Naturalizing aesthetics. Steven Brown
5. Moving towards emotions in the aesthetic experience. C Di Dio and V Gallese
6. The aesthetic triad. O Vartanian and A Chatterjee
7. How neuroimaging is transforming our understanding of aesthetic taste. M Skov
8. The cognitive neuroscience of aesthetic experience. M Nadal and M Pearce

Beauty
9. Facial beauty and the medial orbitofrontal cortex. JP O'Doherty, RJ. Dolan
10. Beautiful people in the brain of the beholder. A Chatterjee
11. The mark of villainy: the connection between appearance and perceived morality. F Hartung
12. A quest for beauty. T Jacobsen
13. Scene preferences, aesthetic appeal and curiosity: revisiting the neurobiology of the infovore. EA Vessel, X Yue, I Biederman
14. Kinds of beauty and the prefrontal cortex. T Pegors
15. Expertise and aesthetic liking. M Skov & U Kirk
16. Social meaning brings beauty: neural response to the beauty of abstract Chinese characters. X He and W Zhang

Art
17. The contributions of emotion and reward to aesthetic judgment of visual art. O Vartanian
18. Embodiment and the aesthetic experience of images. V Gallese, D Freedberg, M Alessandra Umiltà
19. The role of left dorsolateral prefrontal cortices in aesthetic valuation. E Munar & CJ Cela-Conde
20. The role of the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex in aesthetic appreciation. M Nadal, Z Cattaneo, and CJ Cela-Conde
21. Is artistic composition in abstract art detected automatically? C Menzel, G Kovács, GU Hayn-Leichsenring, C Redies
22. The contribution of visual area V5 to the perception of implied motion in art and its appreciation. M Nadal and Z Cattaneo
23. Art Is Its own reward. S Lacey, K Sathian
24. Imaging the subjective. EA Vessel, GG Starr
25. Cultural neuroaesthetics of delicate sadness induced by Noh masks. N Osaka
26. Towards a computational understanding of neuroaesthetics. K Iigaya and JP O'Doherty
27. Artists, artworks, aesthetics, cognition. WP Seeley
28. Aesthetic liking is not only driven by object properties, but also by your expectations. M Skov, U Kirk
29. Finding mutual interest between neuroscience and aesthetics: a brush with reality? AJ Parker
30. What can we learn about art from people with neurological disease? A Chatterjee

Music
31. Chills, Bets, And Dopamine: a journey Into music reward. L Ferreri, J Riba, R Zatorre, A Rodriguez-Fornells
32. Why does music evoke strong emotions? Testing the endogenous opioid hypothesis. DJ Levitin and LA Fleming
33. Music in all its beauty: adopting the naturalistic paradigm to uncover brain processes during the aesthetic musical experience. E Brattico and V Alluri
34. Investigating musical emotions in people with unilateral brain damage. AM Belfi, A Pralus, C Hirel, D Tranel, B Tillmann*, A Caclin*

Language and Literature
35. The neurocognitive poetics model of literary reading 10 years after. AM Jacobs
36. The power of poetry. E Wassiliwizky, W Menninghaus
37. Pictograph portrays what it is: neural response to the beauty of concrete Chinese characters. X He and W Zhang

Dance
38. Movement, synchronization, and partnering in dance. S Brown
39. Dance, expertise and sensorimotor aesthetics. B Calvo-Merino
40. An eye for the impossible: exploring the attraction of physically impressive dance movements. ES Cross
41. The mind, the brain and the moving body: dance as a topic in cognitive neuroscience. B Blaesing, B Calvo-Merino
42. Training effects on affective perception of body movements. LP Kirsch, ES Cross

Architecture
43. The neuroaesthetics of architecture. O Vartanian
44. Architectural styles as subordinate scene categories. DB Walther
45. Architectural affordances: linking action, perception, and cognition. Z Djebbara, K Gramann
46. Architectural design and the mind. A Coburn

Afterword. Where are we now and where are we going? A Chatterjee, E Cardlillo

About the Author

Anjan Chatterjee is a Professor of Neurology, Psychology, and Architecture and the founding Director of the Penn Center for Neuroaesthetics. He wrote The Aesthetic Brain: How we evolved to desire beauty and enjoy art and co-edited: Neuroethics in Practice: mind, medicine, and society, and The Roots of Cognitive Neuroscience: behavioral neurology and neuropsychology. He has received the Norman Geschwind Prize in Behavioral and
Cognitive Neurology and the Rudolph Arnheim Prize for contribution to Psychology and the Arts. He is or has been in the editorial board of several journals focused in neuroscience, neurology, ethics, and aesthetics. He is a founding member
of the Board of Governors of the Neuroethics Society, the past President of the International Association of Empirical Aesthetics, and the past President of the Behavioral and Cognitive Neurology Society

Eileen Cardillo, DPhil is a cognitive neuroscientist and Associate Director of the Penn Center for Neuroaesthetics. She received her B.S. in Biological Psychology at the College of William & Mary and her doctorate in Experimental Psychology while a Rhodes Scholar at the University of Oxford. Before joining the PCfN, Eileen completed her postdoctoral training at the University of California San Diego and the University of Pennsylvania, with an emphasis on neuropsychological studies of
cognition. Her research interests include metaphor, contemplative practice, and the cognitive, affective, and health impacts of aesthetic experiences

Reviews

For anyone wishing to learn about the basic constructs and findings of the new field of experimental neuroaesthetics, this is a must-read book and one destined to advance the field. Each chapter is a gem-a brief and highly readable commentary on a pioneering article in which the author(s) of the article explain their motivating hypotheses and reflect on where the field was then, where it is going, and where it should be going.
*Ellen Winner, Professor Emerita, Boston College, and author of How Art Works: A Psychological Exploration (OUP, 2019) and An Uneasy Guest in the Schoolhouse: Art Education from Colonial Times to a Promising Future (OUP, 2022)*

A landmark publication for a burgeoning, new discipline, Brain, Beauty, and Art offers much of interest for the scholar, scientist, and general reader on a subject of enduring fascination to us all. Edited by pioneers in the field of neuroaesthetics, this comprehensive volume brings together the most important and consequential research while also providing a compelling account of why the love of beauty in all of the forms is an essential part of what it means to be human.
*Daniel H Weiss, President and CEO, The Metropolitan Museum of Art*

Dr. Chatterjee is a pioneer in neuroaesthetics - not only because of his enduring and cutting-edge body of academic research, but also because of his ability to bring together experts from disparate fields, build on their own findings and insights, and weave a cohesive and compelling narrative on the field. His latest book, Brain, Beauty, and Art, offers the world's most comprehensive view on this burgeoning field, including what it is, how it affects human behavior, and why it matters. After reading his book, I'm sure you'll agree it matters now more than ever!
*Pauline Brown, Former Chair of LVMH North America & Author of Aesthetic Intelligence*

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