AI Article Synopsis

  • Recent studies show that visiting museums can help people feel less stressed and anxious, but this isn't always the same for everyone.
  • * Researchers wanted to understand how looking at art in museums affects how our brains work and makes older people feel better.
  • * In the study, older adults looked at paintings and either thought deeply about them or just looked, and it turned out that really engaging with the art helped reduce their anxiety and stress.

Article Abstract

Recent research suggests that museum visits can benefit psychological well-being by reducing symptoms of stress and anxiety. However, these reported relaxing effects remain inconsistent between studies. Shedding light on the underlying cerebral mechanisms of museum visits might support a better understanding of how it affects psychological well-being. This study aimed to investigate the prefrontal engagement evoked by artwork analysis during a museum visit and to determine if these prefrontal substrates are associated with the museum's effect on psychological well-being in older adults. Nineteen adults aged between 65 and 79, toured a Baroque-style exhibit at the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts for approximately 20 minutes while equipped with a near-infrared spectroscopy system measuring the prefrontal cortex's hemodynamic activity. For each painting, participants received the instruction to either (1): analyze the painting and produce a personal interpretation of its signification () or (2) visualize the painting without any specific thoughts (). Questionnaires measuring stress, anxiety, and well-being were administered before and after the visit. Sixteen older women (71.5 ± 4 years) were included in the analyses. Results showed that, at the group level, the was associated with an increased activation pattern in the left ventrolateral prefrontal region, typically related to attentional processes (not observed in the . The activation associated with the predicted pre-/post-visit reductions in self-reported anxiety and stress in the sample of older women. These observations suggest that the level of engagement of attentional processes during artwork analysis may play a major role in the effect of a museum's visit on self-reported symptoms of anxiety.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10944881PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2024.1263351DOI Listing

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