It felt fluent, and I liked it: subjective feeling of fluency rather than objective fluency determines liking.
Abstract
According to the processing-fluency explanation of aesthetics, more fluently processed stimuli are preferred (R. Reber, N. Schwarz, & P. Winkielman, 2004, Processing fluency and aesthetic pleasure: Is beauty in the perceiver's processing experience? Personality and Social Psychology Review, Vol. 8, pp. 364-382.). In this view, the subjective feeling of ease of processing is considered important, but this has not been directly tested in...
Paper Details
Title
It felt fluent, and I liked it: subjective feeling of fluency rather than objective fluency determines liking.
Published Date
Apr 1, 2013
Journal
Volume
13
Issue
2
Pages
280 - 289
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Notes
History