Androgenetic alopecia (AGA) is a prevalent cause of hair loss with complex pathophysiologic mechanisms that pose challenges for effective treatment. Despite various therapeutic approaches yielding ...only partial results, regenerative treatments, such as platelet-rich plasma (PRP), have gained popularity. However, the lack of standardized PRP practices, encompassing product preparation and application, has been a significant concern. This article aims to contribute to fill this gap by presenting a comprehensive overview of PRP practices at a large academic center. Through detailing our protocols, this work not only contributes to the understanding of AGA treatment but also emphasizes the crucial aspect of treatment standardization in the context of PRP therapy. By providing a practical representation of our institutional PRP practices, we aim to contribute to the ongoing discourse on refining and implementing standardized protocols, fostering reproducibility, and improving clinical outcomes in the management of AGA.Androgenetic alopecia (AGA) is a prevalent cause of hair loss with complex pathophysiologic mechanisms that pose challenges for effective treatment. Despite various therapeutic approaches yielding only partial results, regenerative treatments, such as platelet-rich plasma (PRP), have gained popularity. However, the lack of standardized PRP practices, encompassing product preparation and application, has been a significant concern. This article aims to contribute to fill this gap by presenting a comprehensive overview of PRP practices at a large academic center. Through detailing our protocols, this work not only contributes to the understanding of AGA treatment but also emphasizes the crucial aspect of treatment standardization in the context of PRP therapy. By providing a practical representation of our institutional PRP practices, we aim to contribute to the ongoing discourse on refining and implementing standardized protocols, fostering reproducibility, and improving clinical outcomes in the management of AGA.
What Are Aesthetic Emotions? Menninghaus, Winfried; Wagner, Valentin; Wassiliwizky, Eugen ...
Psychological review,
03/2019, Letnik:
126, Številka:
2
Journal Article
Recenzirano
Odprti dostop
This is the first comprehensive theoretical article on aesthetic emotions. Following Kant's definition, we propose that it is the first and foremost characteristic of aesthetic emotions to make a ...direct contribution to aesthetic evaluation/appreciation. Each aesthetic emotion is tuned to a special type of perceived aesthetic appeal and is predictive of the subjectively felt pleasure or displeasure and the liking or disliking associated with this type of appeal. Contrary to the negativity bias of classical emotion catalogues, emotion terms used for aesthetic evaluation purposes include far more positive than negative emotions. At the same time, many overall positive aesthetic emotions encompass negative or mixed emotional ingredients. Appraisals of intrinsic pleasantness, familiarity, and novelty are preeminently important for aesthetic emotions. Appraisals of goal relevance/conduciveness and coping potential are largely irrelevant from a pragmatic perspective, but in some cases highly relevant for cognitive and affective coping. Aesthetic emotions are typically sought and savored for their own sake, with subjectively felt intensity and/or emotional arousal being rewards in their own right. The expression component of aesthetic emotions includes laughter, tears, and facial and bodily movements, along with applause or booing and words of praise or blame. Aesthetic emotions entail motivational approach and avoidance tendencies, specifically, tendencies toward prolonged, repeated, or interrupted exposure and wanting to possess aesthetically pleasing objects. They are experienced across a broad range of experiential domains and not coextensive with art-elicited emotions.
To improve human well-being, there is increasing awareness of elevating aesthetic benefits by landscape design, planning, and management. However, which landscape features and attributes may be ...associated with aesthetic value of an urban landscape, human aesthetic preference, and landscape practices is still not clear yet. We proposed a comprehensive aesthetic assessment approach to realise the determination of landscape aesthetic indicators, integration of objective indicators and subjective preferences, and validation of estimations. The approach was based on a four-level landscape aesthetic indicator system from the bottom features up to attributes (landscape naturalness, landscape complexity, plant species diversity, water surface, water clarity, and bank naturalness), component qualities, and finally overall quality. Fourteen metrics that could provide objective visual and spatial characters and ecological implications were identified and quantified to indicate landscape aesthetic features. Landscape aesthetic attributes, vegetation and waterbody component qualities, and overall quality were estimated by integrating objective indicators and human subjective preferences. The approach was applied to a case study of four subareas along an artificially restored riparian buffer in Beijing, China. The results showed that the modelled overall aesthetic quality was determined by both vegetation (accounting for 53%) and waterbody. The higher vegetation quality depended on the higher plant abundance, more vegetation patches, and more vegetation patch types; the higher waterbody quality depended on the clearer water and larger water surface. Compared with other features, vertical vegetation configuration, diversity of patch type and patch shape, and shrub species diversity had greater contribution to the attributes of naturalness, complexity, and plant species diversity, respectively. The modelled vegetation aesthetic attributes were directly validated using the surveyed perceptions, and the modelled vegetation and waterbody aesthetic qualities were indirectly validated by correlating with the main recreational activities. The approach is confirmed to be able to address the questions on determination, integration, and validation of landscape aesthetic indicators in some way. Thus, the approach is expected to be used for other landscapes to offer a framework for landscape practices to improve aesthetic value and cultural service.
In spite of the recent advancements of deep learning based techniques, automatic photo aesthetic assessment still remains a challenging computer vision task. Existing approaches used to focus on ...providing a single aesthetic score or category (“good” or “bad”) of photograph, rather than quantifying “goodness” or “badness”. The existing algorithms often ignore the importance of different attributes contributing to the artistic quality of the photograph. To obtain the human-interpretability of aesthetic score of photo, we advocate learning the aesthetic attributes alongwith the prediction of the general aesthetic score. We propose a multi-task deep CNN, that collectively learns aesthetic attributes alongwith a general aesthetic score for the photograph. To understand the mathematical representation of the attributes in the proposed model, a visualization technique is proposed using back propagation of gradients. These visualization of attributes correspond to the location of objects in the images in order to find out which part of an image “triggers” the classification outcome, thus providing the insights about the model's understanding of these attributes. This paper proposes an aesthetic feature vector based on the relative foreground position of the object in the image. The proposed aesthetic features outperform the state-of-art methods especially for Rule of Thirds attribute.
Abstract
My aesthetic judgements seem to make claims on you. While some popular accounts of aesthetic normativity say that the force of these claims is third-personal, I argue that it is actually ...second-personal. This point may sound like a bland technicality, but it points to a novel idea about what aesthetic judgements ultimately are and what they do. It suggests, in particular, that aesthetic judgements are motions in the collective legislation of the nature of aesthetic activity. This conception is recommended by its ability to explain some important but otherwise recondite features of aesthetic practice and, more importantly, by allowing us to ground the normativity of aesthetic judgement in the familiar normativity of practice. It also offers a more systematic way of understanding the rivalry between the ideals of aesthetic universality and diversity.
What is aesthetic appreciation? In this paper, I approach this question in an indirection fashion. First, I introduce the Kantian notion of moral worthy action and an influential analysis of it. ...Next, I generalise that analysis from the moral to the aesthetic domain, and from actions to affects. Aesthetic appreciation, I suggest, consists in an aesthetically worthy affective response. After unpacking the proposal, I show that it has non-trivial implications while cohering with a number of existing insights concerning the nature of appreciation and the constraints to which it is subject. In closing, I note some limitations on the analogy between aesthetic appreciation and morally worthy action.
In this paper I distinguish between different kinds of failures of aesthetic judgements with a view to exploring a form of failure that involves the outright omission of aesthetic judgement. Such ...omissions come to pass when an object of attention could or ought to have been experienced and judged aesthetically but where such an experience or judgement simply failed to arise, and can be traced back to at least three kinds of reason: (1) lack of aesthetic quality; (2) lack of appropriate ontological status; and (3) lack of aesthetic prominence. I shall examine some aspects of this kind of failure and argue that a missed opportunity to experience an object of attention’s aesthetic character is a missed opportunity to engage with that object’s aesthetic potential where such potential, although not always accessible to us, can nonetheless retroactively be said to pertain to the object in a meaningful sense also under experientially unfavourable conditions. This warrants talk of rehabilitation to some degree.