Sunday, August 12, 2012

Eric Kandel on the Intersection Between Neuroscience, Psychoanalysis and Art

Freud ca. 1900, from Wikimedia commons


The famous neuroscientist and Nobel Prize laureate Eric Kandel has written a new book on how science, psychoanalysis and art converged in Vienna around the 1900s and set in motion an exciting new integrative approach to understanding  the human mind and soul. The book is entitled "The Age of Insight: The Quest to Understand the Unconscious inArt, Mind, and Brain, from Vienna 1900 to the Present" and an excerpt of the book has been released:

Beauty does not occupy a different area of the brain than ugliness. Both are part of a continuum representing the values the brain attributes to them, and both are encoded by relative changes in activity in the same areas of the brain. This is consistent with the idea that positive and negative emotions lie on a continuum and call on the same neural circuitry. Thus, the amygdala, commonly associated with fear, is also a regulator of happiness.
For every evaluation of emotion, from happiness to misery, we use the same fundamental neural circuitry. In the case of art, we evaluate a portrait’s potential for providing new insights into another person’s psychological state. This discovery, by Ray Dolan and his colleagues at University College London, was based on a set of studies in which volunteers viewed faces whose expression of sadness, fear, disgust, or happiness was gradually changed from low to high intensity.

Continue reading the excerpt from the book here here.... 

No comments:

Post a Comment