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Rolf Reber

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Nationality
  
Swiss

Fields
  
Residence
  
Norway

Name
  
Rolf Reber

Institutions
  

Rolf Reber wwwuibnositesw3uibnofilesw2rereberjpg

Born
  
17 May 1959 (age 64) Basel, Switzerland (
1959-05-17
)

An interview with rolf reber author of critical feeling how to use feelings strategically


Rolf Reber (born 17 May 1959) is professor of psychology at the University of Oslo.

Contents

Rolf Reber Reber Rolf Pax Forlag

Rolf Reber is known for his research on processing fluency, especially the processing fluency theory of aesthetic pleasure he developed together with Norbert Schwarz from the University of Michigan and Piotr Winkielman from the University of California at San Diego. The core assumption of the theory is that an audience draws aesthetic pleasure from the fact that an object can be processed easily, especially if a viewer remains unaware of the source of this processing ease. This theory resolves an apparent contradiction between the uniformity of musical preferences in infants and the cultural differences of musical tastes in adults. Infants prefer consonant melodies because newborns share biological mechanisms that make them process consonance in music more easily than dissonance. When children grow up, they are exposed to the music of their culture, explaining why individuals from different cultures have different musical tastes. In addition, research found that processing fluency influences both affect and the judged truth of statements, suggesting that ease of processing is a common underlying experience in both perceived beauty and judged truth. This observation fits anecdotal observations that mathematicians and scientists sometimes use beauty of a theorem as an indication for its truth, an idea that has been explored in more recent work. Processing fluency and its effects can help explain the "Aha"-experience. The processing fluency theory of aesthetic pleasure has influenced work in psychology, philosophy, marketing, and finance. An extension of the processing fluency theory takes account of the fact that many artworks are difficult to process. Nevertheless, audiences interpret these artworks in a meaningful way and like them.

Rolf Reber An Interview with Rolf Reber author of Critical Feeling

More recently, Rolf Reber and his collaborators have developed and explored Example Choice, an instructional technique designed to increase relevance and student interest in the learning of abstract principles in mathematics and science. Students are given examples from different topics that all address the same underlying principle, and a student has to choose the example that interests him or her most. The chosen example is then used to explain the formal principle. This technique is supposed to connect the formal principle to students’ interest. Research has shown that students become more interested and spend more time learning the principle when they can choose an example than when they are given an example.

Rolf Reber is author of the book Critical Feeling that introduces the concept of critical feeling which extends the notion of critical thinking and two popular science books in German, among them Kleine Psychologie des Alltäglichen (A brief psychology of everyday life) which has been translated into Norwegian, Korean and Chinese.

Rolf Reber Critical Feeling Psychology Today

Rolf reber 60 life is a circus




References

Rolf Reber Wikipedia