Title | Date | Views | Brief Description |
Listening between the notes: personality, listening context, and aesthetic chills in everyday music listening |
2012 |
4988 |
Why do people get chills in response to music? Most people report feeling chills — experienced as goose bumps, shivers down the spine, or hair standing on end — at least sometimes when listening to music, but a small minority of people sa... |
Brain networks underlying figurative language production |
2015 |
2314 |
Metaphor is a common form of figurative language, yet little is known about how the brain produces novel figurative expressions. Related research suggests that dynamic interactions between large-scale brain systems support a range of complex cognitiv... |
Daydreaming Styles and Brain Functional Connectivity |
2018 |
1196 |
"Intrinsic modes of thinking, like daydreaming, are in large part related to more general thinking styles. Through neuroimaging techniques, we are able to identify daydreaming connectivity within brain networks. The brain’s default mode network is ty... |
Towards a network psychometrics approach to assessment: simulations for redundancy, dimensionality, and loadings |
2020 |
1228 |
Research using network models in psychology has proliferated over the last decade. The popularity of network models has largely been driven by their alternative explanation for the emergence of psychological attributes—observed variables co-occur bec... |
Metaphorically speaking: the role of cognitive abilities in the production of figurative language |
2012 |
3707 |
Figurative language is one of the most common expressions of creative behavior in everyday life. However, the cognitive mechanisms behind figures of speech such as metaphor remain largely unexplained. Recent evidence suggests fluid and executive abil... |
The psychology of virtual art gallery experiences |
2024 |
218 |
In answering the question “Where is art?”, this dissertation points towards toward virtual art gallery tools as an important context for study in the psychology of arts and aesthetics. Across three ordinal stages, (1) Developing the Open Gallery for ... |
Mental control of musical imagery: combining behavioral and experience-sampling approaches |
2020 |
265 |
Mental control of musical imagery is a complex, but understudied, process that consists of two components: initiation—whether the musical imagery experience began voluntarily or involuntarily—and management—whether instances of control occur after th... |
A meta-analysis of individual differences in humor production and personality |
2015 |
1969 |
One main area of focus in humor production research is exploring individual differences in humor production ability (i.e., the ability to produce something funny on the spot), particularly via its relationship with personality. The last 40 years of r... |
Understanding inner music: a dimensional approach to musical imagery |
2017 |
1790 |
Inner music—hearing music inside your head that isn’t playing in the environment—is a common experience that takes many forms. Research on inner music, however, has primarily emphasized instances of involuntary, aversive musical imagery, such as “ear... |
Comparing two appraisal models of interest |
2006 |
1793 |
"Interest is an emotion associated with curiosity, exploration, and knowledge-seeking (Fredrickson, 1998; Izard, 1977; Silvia, 2005a, 2005b, 2006; Tomkins, 1962). The first researchers to propose an appraisal structure of interest were Smith and Ell... |
Exploring rejection as an action tendency of negative aesthetic emotions |
2007 |
1600 |
"The present research focused on appraisal theories and emotional responses to art. Using a within-subjects design, Study 1 explored the role of value incongruence, perceived intention, and unpleasantness in the appraisal structures of anger and disg... |
Remotely close associations: openness to experience and semantic memory structure |
2017 |
1671 |
Openness to experience—the enjoyment of novel experiences, ideas, and unconventional perspectives—has shown several connections to cognition that suggest open people might have different cognitive processes than those low in openness. People high in ... |