TY - JOUR
T1 - Art for reward's sake
T2 - Visual art recruits the ventral striatum
AU - Lacey, Simon
AU - Hagtvedt, Henrik
AU - Patrick, Vanessa M.
AU - Anderson, Amy
AU - Stilla, Randall
AU - Deshpande, Gopikrishna
AU - Hu, Xiaoping
AU - Sato, João R.
AU - Reddy, Srinivas
AU - Sathian, K.
N1 - Funding Information:
Support from the University of Georgia (HH, VP), the National Institutes of Health (KS, XH), and the Veterans Administration (KS) is gratefully acknowledged. We thank William de l'Aune (Rehabilitation R&D Center of Excellence, Atlanta VAMC) for statistical advice.
PY - 2011/3/1
Y1 - 2011/3/1
N2 - A recent study showed that people evaluate products more positively when they are physically associated with art images than similar non-art images. Neuroimaging studies of visual art have investigated artistic style and esthetic preference but not brain responses attributable specifically to the artistic status of images. Here we tested the hypothesis that the artistic status of images engages reward circuitry, using event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) during viewing of art and non-art images matched for content. Subjects made animacy judgments in response to each image. Relative to non-art images, art images activated, on both subject- and item-wise analyses, reward-related regions: the ventral striatum, hypothalamus and orbitofrontal cortex. Neither response times nor ratings of familiarity or esthetic preference for art images correlated significantly with activity that was selective for art images, suggesting that these variables were not responsible for the art-selective activations. Investigation of effective connectivity, using time-varying, wavelet-based, correlation-purged Granger causality analyses, further showed that the ventral striatum was driven by visual cortical regions when viewing art images but not non-art images, and was not driven by regions that correlated with esthetic preference for either art or non-art images. These findings are consistent with our hypothesis, leading us to propose that the appeal of visual art involves activation of reward circuitry based on artistic status alone and independently of its hedonic value.
AB - A recent study showed that people evaluate products more positively when they are physically associated with art images than similar non-art images. Neuroimaging studies of visual art have investigated artistic style and esthetic preference but not brain responses attributable specifically to the artistic status of images. Here we tested the hypothesis that the artistic status of images engages reward circuitry, using event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) during viewing of art and non-art images matched for content. Subjects made animacy judgments in response to each image. Relative to non-art images, art images activated, on both subject- and item-wise analyses, reward-related regions: the ventral striatum, hypothalamus and orbitofrontal cortex. Neither response times nor ratings of familiarity or esthetic preference for art images correlated significantly with activity that was selective for art images, suggesting that these variables were not responsible for the art-selective activations. Investigation of effective connectivity, using time-varying, wavelet-based, correlation-purged Granger causality analyses, further showed that the ventral striatum was driven by visual cortical regions when viewing art images but not non-art images, and was not driven by regions that correlated with esthetic preference for either art or non-art images. These findings are consistent with our hypothesis, leading us to propose that the appeal of visual art involves activation of reward circuitry based on artistic status alone and independently of its hedonic value.
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U2 - 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2010.11.027
DO - 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2010.11.027
M3 - Article
C2 - 21111833
AN - SCOPUS:78951480368
SN - 1053-8119
VL - 55
SP - 420
EP - 433
JO - NeuroImage
JF - NeuroImage
IS - 1
ER -