Perceptual fluency effects in judgments of creativity and beauty: creative objects are perceived fluently yet they are visually complex |
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Authors: | Bo T. Christensen Linden J. Ball Rolf Reber |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Marketing, Copenhagen Business School, Copenhagen, Denmarkbc.marktg@cbs.dkhttps://orcid.org/0000-0001-6005-9408;3. School of Psychology, University of Central Lancashire, Preston, UKhttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-5099-0124;4. Department of Psychology, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway |
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Abstract: | ABSTRACTPerceptual fluency typically has a positive influence on aesthetic evaluations of beauty, but few studies have examined its influence on creativity evaluations. Creativity has two facets, originality and quality. If creativity judgments involve estimating product originality, such judgments may be associated with perceptual disfluency, while product quality may be associated with perceptual fluency. We examined the relationship between perceptual fluency and judgments of creativity and beauty across seven experiments. Creativity judgments were affected by most perceptual fluencysources. We observed a highly-fluent-is-beautiful-and-creative relation when testing repeated exposure and figure-ground contrast. Prototypicality displayed a high-fluency–is-beautiful relation, with creativity judgments unaffected. Visual complexity displayed a consistent disfluent-is-creative effect, with mixed results for beauty. For creativity (but not beauty) evaluations, increased saliency of visual complexity led to discounting fluent-is-creative effects, supporting the hypothesis that there are at least two fluency pathways to creativity judgments that take both originality and quality into account. |
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Keywords: | Perceptual fluency evaluation judgment creativity beauty |
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