"Aesthetic Cognition and Cognitive Aesthetics"
Internationale Tagung des Instituts für Kunstgeschichte und des
Themenverbundes "Sehen und Verstehen" der Universität Regensburg.
Donnerstag bis Samstag, 30 September -2. Oktober 2010, 9.00 - 19.00 Uhr
Die Tagung findet statt im Historischen Museum, Dachauplatz 2-4, 93047
Regensburg.
Die Tagung wird gefördert durch die Vielberth-Stiftung.
Brain research describes perception as generated by "electric activity in
neural networks". However, perception, cognition and aesthetics can also be
understood as different forms of human brain function in a
historical-cultural context. While the pictorial turn has raised the general
awareness that images are more than just sources, symbols or illustrations,
research still is lacking with respect to their specific functions and
cognitive performance. Between fact and artefact, images are not
illustrations but are rather constructions of reality.
As instruments in the service of art and science, images demand cognitive
analysis within an interdisciplinary dialogue between philosophy,
psychology, art history and information technology. Is it possible to
explain aesthetics and artistic knowledge with the modern scientifi c
approach used to study visual perception? As part of the interdisciplinary
research initiative "Perceiving and Understanding" this conference will deal
with these interdisciplinary issues.
TAGUNGSPROGRAMM
30 September 2010 ( T h u r s d a y )
COGNITIVE
13.30 Opening and Welcome: Thomas Strothotte (President of the University of
Regensburg)
Introduction: Mark W. Greenlee / Christoph Wagner
Chair: Christoph Wagner (Regensburg)
14.00 Klaus Sachs-Hombach (Chemnitz) Mind, Language and Image
15.00 Dieter Mersch (Potsdam) Visual Epistemology. On the 'Logic' of Iconic
Showing
16.30 Søren Kjørup (Bergen) Saying by Showing: On Depiction and Other Speech
Acts
Chair: Rainer Hammwöhner (Regensburg)
17.30 Christoph Baumberger (Zürich) Art and Understanding. A Defense of
Aesthetic Cognitivism
18.30 Göte Nyman (Helsinki) Visual Experience as a Complex Problem:
Measuring the Perception and Interpretation of Visual Quality
19.30 Informal get together
1 October 2010 ( F r i d a y )
AISTHESIS
Chair: Petra Jansen (Regensburg)
9.00 Bettina Bläsing (Bielefeld) Expertise in Dance: Mind, Movement and
Motor Skills
10.00 Guido Orgs (London) Watching Dance: Visual, Sensorimotor and Aesthetic
Processes
11.00 Mark W. Greenlee (Regensburg) What can Research on Multisensory
Integration and Synaesthesia tell us about Aesthetic Perception?
12.00 Oliver Elbs (Basel) Mapping Shifts (Droodles): Solving a
neuroestheticianŒs first problem
Chair: Mark W. Greenlee (Regensburg)
14.00 Joachim Denzler / Christoph Redies (Jena) Statistical Regularities in
Aesthetic Images
15.00 Claus-Christian Carbon (Bamberg) On the Dynamics and Adaptivity of
Aesthetic Appreciation
16.30 Nicholas Wade (Dundee) Squaring the Circle
Chair: Christoph Wagner (Regensburg)
17.30 Nicola Mößner (Aachen) Photographic Evidence and the Problem of
Theory-Ladenness
18.30 John Onians (Norwich) Towards a Historical Cognitive Aesthetics: a
Case Study in the Neuroarthistory of the Twentieth Century
2 October 2010 ( S a t u r d a y )
AESTHETICS
Chair: Christian Wolff (Regensburg)
9.00 Kristóf Nyíri (Budapest), Gombrich on Image and Time Revisted
10.00 Christoph Wagner (Regensburg) The »Oculus Imaginationis« and the
Implicit
Representation of Movement
11.00 Raphael Rosenberg / Caroline Fuchs (Wien) Eye Movements and the
Composition of Paintings
12.00 Christian Wolff (Regensburg) Empirically judging the aesthetics of
interactive systems a first approach
Concluding DisProf. Dr. Christoph Wagner (Chair of Art History)
christoph.wagnerpsk.uni-regensburg.de
Prof. Dr. Mark Greenlee (Chair for Experimental Psychology)
mark.greenleepsychologie.uni-regensburg.de
Informationen auch unter
http://www-kunstgeschichte.uni-r.de/
http://www.zentrum-bildwissenschaft.de
Quellennachweis:
CONF: Aesthetic Cognition and Cognitive Aesthetics (Regensburg,30 Sep-2 Oct10). In: ArtHist.net, 27.09.2010. Letzter Zugriff 24.11.2025. <https://arthist.net/archive/32904>.