Parkinson’s disease and changes in the appreciation of art: A comparison of aesthetic and formal evaluations of paintings between PD patients and healthy controls

Jon O. Lauring (Corresponding author), Matthew Pelowski, Eva Specker, Tomohiro Ishizu, Steven Haugbol, Barbara Hollunder, Helmut Leder, Johan Stender, Ron Kupers

Publications: Contribution to journalArticlePeer Reviewed

Abstract

Highlights
•Parkinson’s disease (PD) has been connected to a burst of artistic creativity.
•PD patients’ perception and evaluation of art is compared against healthy controls.
•No evidence for PD-related differences in liking or beauty ratings.
•PD patients showed significantly higher ratings on assessed “emotionality.”
•This is potentially related to the tie between PD, DA pathways, and emotion/reward.

Abstract
Parkinson’s disease (PD) is a progressing neurodegenerative disease predominantly involving the loss of dopamine producing neurons with hallmark symptoms of motor disorders and cognitive, motivational, emotional, and perceptual impairments. Intriguingly, PD can also be connected—often anecdotally—with a sudden burst of artistic creativity, motivation, or changed quality/style of produced art. This has led to growing empirical interest, promising a window into brain function and the unique neurological signature of artists. This topic also fits a growing interest from researchers in other areas, including Alzheimer’s or other dementia, which have suggested that specific changes in art production/appraisal may provide a unique basis for therapy, diagnosis, or understanding of these diseases. However, whether PD also shows similar impacts on how we perceive and evaluate art has never been systematically addressed. We compared a cohort of PD patients against age-matched healthy controls, asking participants to rate paintings using scales of liking and beauty and terms pertaining to artworks’ formal and conceptual qualities previously designed to provide a rubric for symptom identification. We found no evidence for PD-related differences in liking or beauty. However, PD patients showed higher ratings on assessed “emotionality,” potentially relating to the tie between PD, dopamine pathways, and emotion/reward.
Original languageEnglish
Article number103597
Number of pages16
JournalBrain and Cognition
Volume136
Early online date3 Sep 2019
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Nov 2019

Austrian Fields of Science 2012

  • 501014 Neuropsychology
  • 501026 Psychology of perception
  • 302052 Neurology

Keywords

  • Parkinson’s disease
  • Art viewing
  • Aesthetic appraisal
  • Brain damage
  • Emotion
  • Perception
  • DEFAULT MODE NETWORK
  • MUSIC
  • Parkinson's disease
  • RECOGNITION
  • ARTISTIC CREATIVITY
  • SUBJECTIVE EMOTIONAL EXPERIENCE
  • SUBTHALAMIC NUCLEUS
  • NONMOTOR SYMPTOMS
  • PRODUCTIVITY
  • DEEP-BRAIN-STIMULATION
  • PLEASURE

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