Pelowski Matthew
Department of Basic Research and Research Methods, Faculty of Psychology, University of Vienna Vienna, Austria ; Graduate School of Information Science, Nagoya University Nagoya, Japan.
Front Psychol. 2015 Jul 23;6:1006. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2015.01006. eCollection 2015.
This paper explores a fundamental similarity between cognitive models for crying and conceptions of insight, enlightenment or, in the context of art, "aesthetic experience." All of which center on a process of initial discrepancy, followed by schema change, and conclude in a proposed adjustment or "transformation" of one's self image/world-view. Because tears are argued to mark one of the only physical indicators of this cognitive outcome, and because the process is particularly salient in examples with art, I argue that crying may provide an intriguing marker for empirical study of art experience. To explore this parallel, I offer a review of crying theory as well as of tearful cases with art, pointing out the key cognitive elements. I then introduce an expanded crying model, based upon our recent model of art experience which does consider insight and adjustment or application of the self. I also consider multiple emotional and evaluative factors, which may co-vary with crying response. This theoretical discussion is then applied in three exploratory, survey-based studies conducted within U.K., Japan and U.S. museums, and including what is claimed to be the 20th century's most tear-inducing abstract paintings. Results showed-with cross-cultural consistency-significant relation between "feeling like crying" and a collection of responses posited to indicate a full progression to aesthetic experience, as well as to positive assessment of artwork goodness, beauty, understanding of meaning, and to final reported self reflection and epiphany. I argue that, beyond the question of why we may cry, by considering the implications of what tears may indicate within information processing, feeling like crying may indeed offer a compelling basis for empirically identifying outcomes of perceptual (art) experience.
本文探讨了哭泣的认知模型与顿悟、启迪概念之间,或在艺术语境中的“审美体验”之间的根本相似性。所有这些都以最初的差异过程为中心,随后是图式变化,并以对自我形象/世界观的提议调整或“转变”告终。由于眼泪被认为是这种认知结果的唯一身体指标之一,并且由于这个过程在艺术实例中尤为显著,所以我认为哭泣可能为艺术体验的实证研究提供一个有趣的指标。为了探究这种相似性,我对哭泣理论以及与艺术相关的流泪案例进行了综述,指出了关键的认知要素。然后,我基于我们最近的艺术体验模型引入了一个扩展的哭泣模型,该模型确实考虑了洞察力以及自我的调整或应用。我还考虑了多个可能与哭泣反应共同变化的情感和评价因素。然后,这一理论探讨被应用于在英国、日本和美国博物馆进行的三项基于调查的探索性研究中,这些研究包括据说是20世纪最能引发泪水的抽象画。结果显示——具有跨文化一致性——“想哭的感觉”与一系列被认为表明审美体验完全进展的反应之间存在显著关系,以及与对艺术品的 goodness、美、意义理解的积极评价,以及最终报告的自我反思和顿悟之间存在显著关系。我认为,除了我们为什么会哭泣这个问题之外,通过考虑眼泪在信息处理中可能表明的含义,想哭的感觉确实可能为实证识别感知(艺术)体验结果提供一个令人信服的依据。