A Study on the Aesthetic Preference of Bamboo Weaving Patterns Based on Eye Movement Experiments

Bamboo weaving is an intangible cultural heritage in China. Exploring people’s aesthetic preferences for bamboo weaving patterns to better serve the design of bamboo architectural decoration can help promote the upgrading of traditional crafts. This study explored the differences between genders in...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inBuildings (Basel) Vol. 13; no. 6; p. 1558
Main Authors Wu, Chunjin, Min, Yuchen, Fei, Benhua, Song, Shasha
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Basel MDPI AG 01.06.2023
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Summary:Bamboo weaving is an intangible cultural heritage in China. Exploring people’s aesthetic preferences for bamboo weaving patterns to better serve the design of bamboo architectural decoration can help promote the upgrading of traditional crafts. This study explored the differences between genders in the oculomotor indicators in different bamboo weaving patterns through an eye-movement experimental study combined with a subjective questionnaire to explore whether different genders have aesthetic preferences for people’s pictures of bamboo weaving patterns. The results showed that both males and females preferred less visually striking and softer corrugated patterns, with males paying more attention to the more ‘angular’ hexagonal and triangular patterns, while females were more interested in the more regular and uniform brickwork and diagonal patterns.
ISSN:2075-5309
2075-5309
DOI:10.3390/buildings13061558