International Association of Empirical Aesthetics
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Established | 1965 |
|---|---|
| Focus | Aesthetic experience |
President | Oshin Vartanian |
| Website | iaea-aesthetics.org |
The International Association of Empirical Aesthetics (IAEA) is a psychological organization founded to scientifically investigate the nature of aesthetic experience and aesthetic behavior. The group has members in over 25 countries. IAEA was founded at the first international congress in Paris in 1965 by Daniel Berlyne, Robert Francés, Carmelo Genovese, and Albert Wellek.
Although IAEA has been active for half a century, the domain of experimental aesthetics is much older. It is the second-oldest branch of scientific psychology, traditionally dating from 1876, the year Gustav Theodor Fechner (1801-1887) published his Vorschule der Aesthetik (Preschool of Aesthetics). Fechner, who also is credited with founding psychophysics, established methods for examining aesthetic response to a variety of visual forms, including an exploration of the venerable Golden Section hypothesis. Since the inception of IAEA in 1965, research on empirical aesthetics has continued to progress, with many pioneers prominent in its membership: witness, for instance, such classic books such as Daniel Berlyne's (1971) Aesthetics and Psychobiology, Colin Martindale's (1990) The Clockwork Muse: The Predictability of Artistic Change, or a variety of more recent contributions from IAEA's current members.[citation needed]