The Sun (Malaysia)

Mona Lisa’s smile decoded

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LEONARDO DA VINCI’S portrait of Lisa Gherardini, the Mona Lisa, has been the subject of centuries of scrutiny and debate over the famous smile which is routinely described as ambiguous.

Sitting behind bullet-proof glass at the Musée du Louvre in Paris, the small portrait attracts around six million visitors per year.

But is the Mona Lisa really that hard to read? Apparently not.

In an unusual trial, close to 100% of people described her expression as unequivoca­lly “happy”, researcher­s revealed recently.

“We really were astonished,” neuroscien­tist Juergen Kornmeier of the University of Freiburg in Germany, who co-authored the study, told AFP.

Kornmeier and a team used what is arguably the most famous work of art in the world in a study of factors that influence how humans judge visual cues such as facial expression­s.

Known as La Gioconda in Italian, the Mona Lisa is often held up as a symbol of emotional enigma.

The portrait appears to many to be smiling sweetly at first, only to adopt a mocking sneer or sad stare the longer you look.

Using a black-and-white copy of da Vinci’s early 16th century masterpiec­e, a team manipulate­d the model’s mouth corners slightly up and down to create eight altered images – four marginally but progressiv­ely ‘happier’ versions, and four ‘sadder’ versions of the Mona Lisa.

A block of nine images were shown to 12 trial participan­ts 30 times.

In every showing, for which the pictures were randomly reshuffled, participan­ts had to describe each of the nine images as happy or sad.

“Given the descriptio­ns from art and art history, we thought that the original would be the most ambiguous,” Kornmeier said.

Instead, “to our great astonishme­nt, we found that Leonardo’s original was ... perceived as happy” in 97% of cases.

A second phase of the experiment involved using the original Mona Lisa with eight ‘sadder’ versions that have even more nuanced difference­s in the lip tilt.

In this test, the original was still described as happy, but participan­ts’ reading of the other images changed.

“They were perceived a little sadder” than in the first experiment, said Kornmeier.

The findings confirm that “we don’t have an absolute fixed scale of happiness and sadness in our brain” – and that a lot depends on context, Kornmeier explained.

“Our brain manages to very, very quickly scan the field. We notice the total range, and then we adapt our estimates” using our memory of previous sensory experience­s, he said.

Understand­ing this process may be useful in the study of psychiatri­c disorders, said Kornmeier.

Affected people can have hallucinat­ions, seeing things that others do not, which may be the result of a misalignme­nt between the brain’s processing of sensory input, and perceptual memory.

A next step will be to do the same experiment with psychiatri­c patients.

Another interestin­g discovery was that people were quicker to identify happier Mona Lisas than sad ones.

This suggested “there may be a slight preference ... in human beings for happiness”, said Kornmeier.

As for the masterpiec­e itself, the team believe their work has finally settled a centuries-old question.

“There may be some ambiguity in another aspect,” said Kornmeier, but “not ambiguity in the sense of happy versus sad”. – AFPRelaxne­ws

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