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Creativity Research Audio Journal (CRAJ)

Ep.131. Art looks different – Semantic and syntactic processing of paintings and associated neurophysiological brain responses

21 May 2025

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"Art looks different – Semantic and syntactic processing of paintings and associated neurophysiological brain responses" by Patrick S. Markey⁎, Martina Jakesch, Helmut LederNeuroscience, EEG, ERP, Surrealistic ArtSummaryThis academic paper explores how the brain processes meaning and structure when viewing art, comparing it to the processing of everyday scenes. The study uses Event-Related Potentials (ERPs), which are brain responses measured by EEG, to investigate how semantic inconsistencies (meaning) and syntactic inconsistencies (structure) are perceived in surrealist paintings versus photographs. The findings suggest that the brain's response to inconsistencies in art is different from that in natural scenes, implying that a specific art-related processing mode or schema influences perception. While behavioural ratings showed paintings and their inconsistencies were rated as more inconsistent than photographs, the ERP patterns indicated the opposite of previous findings for everyday scenes.

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