Introduction: Art and the brain: From pleasure to well-being

Prog Brain Res. 2018:237:xxvii-xlvi. doi: 10.1016/S0079-6123(18)30032-3.

Abstract

Empirical aesthetics in general, and neuroaesthetics in particular, have been very much influenced by Berlyne's psychobiological program. For him, aesthetic appreciation involved the brain's reward and aversion systems. From this point of view, art constitutes a set of potentially rewarding stimuli. Research has certainly made great advances in understanding how the process of artistic valuation takes places, and which brain circuits are involved in generating the pleasure we obtain from artistic practices, performances, and works. But it also suggests that pleasure is not the only effect of the arts. The evidence rather suggests that the arts have other cognitive and emotional effects which are closely related to human psychobiological health and well-being. These are: (1) attentional focus and flow, (2) affective experience, (3) emotion through imagery, (4) interpersonal communication, (5) self-intimation, and (6) social bonding. These effects are beneficial and contribute to the individual's biopsychological health and well-being. The fact that artistic practice has these effects helps explain why the arts are so important to human life, and why they developed in the first place, i.e., as ways to foster these effects. Therefore, a biopsychological science of the arts is emerging, according to which the arts can be conceptualized as an important system of external self-regulation, as a set of activities that contribute to our homeostasis and well-being.

Keywords: Emotion; Homeostasis; Pleasure; Self-regulation; The arts; Well-being.

Publication types

  • Editorial
  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Art*
  • Brain / physiology*
  • Esthetics*
  • Humans
  • Neurosciences*
  • Pleasure*