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How Neuroscience Helps Answer


        the Question: What Is Beauty?






        If someone asked you what’s beautiful, you might       Thus, neuroaesthetics is the study of how the brain
        tell them about a flower, or about a person you’re close   experiences beauty. Scientists that research the brain,
        with, a painting you like, or even a building in your city. If   neuroscientists, take advantage of developments in
        that person then asked you, “Why is that beautiful?,” you’d   technology to investigate how people perceive beauty.
        probably find that harder to answer. We all experience   In one study, researchers used magnetic resonance imaging
        beauty differently, and we’re drawn to different types of   (MRI) to look at a person’s brain activity when they listened
        things. But why?                                       to music. The researchers found that the more a person

        The questions of what beauty is and why we all experience   liked a song, the more activity there was in a particular
        it differently were discussed as far back as ancient Greece.   pathway in their brain (called the mesolimbic striatum).3
        The philosopher Plato asked, “What is beauty?” in Hippias   Neuroscientists have also looked at how professional
        Major, which he wrote in 390 B.C.1 Since then, many people   artists experience things differently than novices. In one
        have tried to understand beauty better. In 1757, the   experiment, researchers found that established artists were
        Scottish philosopher David Hume said that maybe some   not better at making sense of some kinds of basic visual
        people, like artists and art critics, were better at perceiving   information than novices; in other words, something else
        beauty because others have been biased by experiences   is responsible for the more experienced artists’ ability to
        which taint their view of beauty.2 These debates and   create their artworks.4 In another, art students perceived
        questions are still with us today. Whenever you disagree   things mostly the way non-art students did, but changes
        with a movie review, enjoy reading a novel or short story,   in the art students’ brains were related to their increased
        debate a friend about how good a singer is, or admire a   creativity and artistic skills.
        painting, you are making a small judgment about what is   Neuroscientists have increased our understanding of what
        beautiful and why.                                     beauty is and how we experience it, but a lot of questions
        As technology developed over the years, scientists became   remain. In the future, scientists may be able to understand
        able to understand more about what people find beautiful   how to create songs or paintings that are even more
        and why. This scientific field is called “neuroaesthetics.”   beautiful than the ones we have now; they might know
        “Neuro” means relating to nerves or the brain; aesthetics   why humans are drawn to beauty in nature, like mountains
        (pronounced es-THEH-tiks) is the philosophy of beauty.   and flowers; they might even know how to use art more
                                                               effectively as therapy to help sick people get better. In
                                                               the meantime, when you find yourself liking a particular
                                                               song or finding one painting prettier than another, you
                                                               can appreciate the beauty of both the art and the amazing
                                                               brain that, together, are creating the experience.
                                                                                                                                            Electrical lines and streetlights depicted as firing neutrons illuminate an American neighborhood in
                                                                                                                                                                   a moment of silence on Blackout Tuesday.
                                          By Calen Smith
                                                                                                                                    “
                                          Research Assistant                                                                               Imagine what your mind looks like when you sympathize with the
                                          University of Utah
                                                                                                                                          pain of others. It is fascinating that we, as humans, are created for


                                                                                                                                           solidarity regardless of culture. Through this work of art, I hope to
        1  Plato. (1986). Plato’s Hippias major. Bryn Mawr, Pa.: Thomas Library, Bryn Mawr College.                                     community. We are all capable of feeling empathy. We can experience
        2  Hume, D. (1757). Of the standards of taste. Essays Moral, Political, and Literary (pp. 226-249). Liberty Classics: https://philpapers.org/rec/HUMOTS.
        3  Salimpoor, V., den Bosch, I., Kovacevic, N., McIntosh, A., Dagher, A., Zatorre, R. (2013). Interactions Between the Nucleus Accumbens and Auditory   bring consolation to everyone that has been negatively affected by
         Cortices Predict Music Reward Value. Science. 340 (6129), pp 216-219. DOI: 10.1126/science.1231059.                                      ongoing racial injustice amid the COVID-19 pandemic.
        4  Perdreau, F., & Cavanagh, P. (2013). Is artists’ perception more veridical? Frontiers in Neuroscience. 7(6). https://doi.org/10.3389/fnins.2013.00006                                                    ”
        5  Schlegel, A., Alexander, P., Fogelson, S., Li, X., Lu, Z., Kohler, P...... Meng, M. (2015). The artist emerges: Visual art learning alters neural structure and                           —Laili Xie, Research Assistant
         function. NeuroImage. 105. 440- 51. DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2014.11.014                                                                                                              University of California, San Diego
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