Abstrakt: |
Aesthetic experiences have the potential to promote learning and creativity by enhancing the ability to understand complexity and to integrate novel or disparate information. Offering a theoretical framework for understanding the cognitive benefits of aesthetic experiences, this paper argues they are the necessary outcome of human learning, in which natural objects or artworks are evaluated in a multi-dimensional preference space shaped by Bayesian prediction. In addition, it contends that the brain-states underlying aesthetic experiences harness configurations of the apex three transmodal neural systems--the default mode network, the central executive network, and the salience network--that may offer information-processing advantages by recruiting the brain's high-power communication hubs, thus enhancing potential for learning gain. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |