Museum objects, aesthetic stimulation and psychological wellbeing in early to middle stages of dementia
Conference paper
Camic, P. and Hulbert, S. 2016. Museum objects, aesthetic stimulation and psychological wellbeing in early to middle stages of dementia.
Authors | Camic, P. and Hulbert, S. |
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Type | Conference paper |
Description | Neuropsychological evidence proposes that touch, a key sense that becomes more important as people age, may invoke a sense of wellbeing through being linked to emotional and motivational systems in the brain. The present study examined the impact of handling museum objects in small groups of participants with dementia (Alzheimer’s (n = 37), vascular (n = 24), frontotemporal (n = 4), mixed-types (n = 13) and HIV-related (n = 2)). The main research question enquired if handling museum objects could enhance wellness, happiness, interestedness, confidence and optimism. Sub-questions investigated the role of aesthetic experience on object handling and sought to understand the relationship between aesthetic experience and wellbeing at 2 different dementia stages. Eighty participants (53 males) (range 54 - 89 years, M = 74.81) took part. Measures: pre post administration of the Canterbury Wellbeing Scales and audio-recorded sessions, the latter subject to content analysis. Parametric tests showed significant improvement in overall wellbeing (t(76) = -9.79, p <.001 d = .77). Participants reported higher levels of wellbeing at Time2 (M = 405.68; S.D. = 76.25) than at Time1 (M = 347.86; S.D. = 74.62). Differences in wellbeing were also demonstrated by testing the effects of gender and dementia stage in a 2 x 2 x 2 mixed-design ANOVA. Content analysis revealed aesthetically ‘unpleasing’ objects produced as many verbally fluid responses as those considered ‘pleasing’. The results confirm that brief interactions with museum objects can impact wellbeing and challenges the common conception that reminiscence-focused activities, rather than those that consider aesthetic experience, should be the norm for art-based dementia activities. |
Keywords | dementia, wellbeing, visual analogue scales, emotion, cognition |
Year | 2016 |
Conference | International Association for Empirical Aesthetics Conference |
Funder | QR Fund, Canterbury Christ Church University |
Publication process dates | |
Deposited | 29 Nov 2016 |
Output status | Published |
Publication dates | |
Online | 30 Aug 2016 |
Accepted author manuscript |
https://repository.canterbury.ac.uk/item/87z10/museum-objects-aesthetic-stimulation-and-psychological-wellbeing-in-early-to-middle-stages-of-dementia
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