Three major strands structure our approach:
- The neural basis of emotion, in particular joy, sadness, and fear.
- Aesthetic aspects of emotional experiences, in particular
- the supposed paradox of "pleasant sadness"
- the aesthetic experience of tension-resolution patterns - Neural commonalities between the emotional and aesthetic experience of music and literature beyond the neurocognitive analogies observed so far
The project uses functional magnetic resonance imagining (fMRI) as a method to identify neural correlates of cognitive and affective processes, and peripheral-physiological measures (such as heart rate) to further specify biological effects of emotional and aesthetic experiences. Personality measures on emotional competencies and their impairment are used to specify relations between emotional personality and aesthetic experience.
Results will provide information about the neural basis of affective and aesthetic processes, the psychological and neural signature of "aesthetic emotions" and the affective and aesthetic experience of music and language.

