Department of Psychology, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN, USA.
J Vis. 2022 Jun 1;22(7):1. doi: 10.1167/jov.22.7.1.
Visual arts require the ability to process, categorize, recognize, and understand a variety of visual inputs. These challenges may engage and even influence mechanisms that are also relevant for visual object recognition beyond visual arts. A domain-general object recognition ability that applies broadly across a range of visual tasks was recently discovered. Here, we ask whether experience with visual arts is correlated with this domain-general ability. We developed a new survey to measure general visual arts experience and use it to measure arts experience in 142 individuals in whom we also estimated domain-general object recognition ability. Despite our measures demonstrating high reliability in a large sample size, we found substantial evidence (BF01 = 9.52) for no correlation between visual arts experience and general object recognition ability. This suggests that experience in visual arts has little influence on object recognition skills or vice versa, at least in our sample ranging from low to moderately high levels of arts experience. Our methods can be extended to other populations and our results should be replicated, as they suggest some limitations for the generalization of programs targeting visual literacy beyond the visual arts.
视觉艺术需要处理、分类、识别和理解各种视觉输入的能力。这些挑战可能会涉及甚至影响到视觉艺术以外的视觉物体识别相关的机制。最近发现了一种广泛适用于各种视觉任务的领域通用的物体识别能力。在这里,我们想知道视觉艺术经验是否与这种领域通用能力相关。我们开发了一个新的调查来衡量一般的视觉艺术经验,并在 142 名个体中使用它来衡量艺术经验,我们也在这些个体中估计了领域通用的物体识别能力。尽管我们的测量在大样本量中表现出了很高的可靠性,但我们发现了大量的证据(BF01=9.52)表明视觉艺术经验与一般物体识别能力之间没有相关性。这表明,在我们的样本中,从低到中等水平的艺术经验,视觉艺术经验对物体识别技能的影响很小,或者反之亦然。我们的方法可以扩展到其他人群,我们的结果应该被复制,因为它们表明,针对视觉素养的计划除了视觉艺术之外,在推广方面存在一些局限性。