How is visual information linked to aesthetic experience, and what factors determine whether an individual finds a
particular visual experience pleasing? We have previously shown that individuals’ aesthetic responses are not
determined by objective image features but are instead a function of internal, subjective factors that are shaped by a
viewers’ personal experience. Yet for many classes of stimuli, culturally shared semantic associations give rise to similar
aesthetic taste across people. In this paper, we investigated factors that govern whether a set of observers will agree in
which images are preferred, or will instead exhibit more “personalized” aesthetic preferences. In a series of experiments,
observers were asked to make aesthetic judgments for different categories of visual stimuli that are commonly evaluated
in an aesthetic manner (faces, natural landscapes, architecture or artwork). By measuring agreement across observers,
this method was able to reveal instances of highly individualistic preferences. We found that observers showed high
agreement on their preferences for images of faces and landscapes, but much lower agreement for images of artwork and
architecture. In addition, we found higher agreement for heterosexual males making judgments of beautiful female faces
than of beautiful male faces. These results suggest that preferences for stimulus categories that carry evolutionary
significance (landscapes and faces) come to rely on similar information across individuals, whereas preferences for
artifacts of human culture such as architecture and artwork, which have fewer basic-level category distinctions and
reduced behavioral relevance, rely on a more personalized set of attributes.
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