Authors
Ulrich Kirk, Martin Skov, Mark Schram Christensen, Niels Nygaard
Publication date
2009/3/1
Journal
Brain and cognition
Volume
69
Issue
2
Pages
306-315
Publisher
Academic Press
Description
Several studies have demonstrated that acquired expertise influences aesthetic judgments. In this paradigm we used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to study aesthetic judgments of visually presented architectural stimuli and control-stimuli (faces) for a group of architects and a group of non-architects. This design allowed us to test whether level of expertise modulates neural activity in brain areas associated with either perceptual processing, memory, or reward processing. We show that experts and non-experts recruit bilateral medial orbitofrontal cortex (OFC) and subcallosal cingulate gyrus differentially during aesthetic judgment, even in the absence of behavioural aesthetic rating differences between experts and non-experts. By contrast, activity in nucleus accumbens (NAcc) exhibits a differential response profile compared to OFC and subcallosal cingulate gyrus, suggesting a dissociable role …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
U Kirk, M Skov, MS Christensen, N Nygaard - Brain and cognition, 2009