Is it hardwired into our brains to find dendritic patterns unattractive or even repelling on some level?
A) On a scale of 1 to 10 (1=shriek out loud and recoil in horror when viewing; 10=I love ‘em so much I painted a big ol’ dendrite on the front of my house) how appealing or unappealing do you find dendritic patterns?
B) Assuming a majority of responses to B) are 1-5 what do you think might account for us finding dendritic patterns to be inherently unpleasant?
I find them interesting enough in situ. Tree branches, rivers, blood vessels, etc. I’d probably find one painted on a house a little peculiar but not repelling. I guess I’ll give them a 7 or 8 – neat in their own way but nothing I’m seeking out or creating artificially just to look at one.
What makes you think they are “inherently unpleasant” to even a significant minority of people, much less “hardwired into our brains”? I can’t find any info online to support your premise and the answers here so far tend toward the opposite…
I think it’s self evident that most people don’t find trees inherently unpleasant (which after all are the namesake of “dendritic patterns”) so the premise fails on the slightest inspection. And the fact that we commonly use dendritic patterns for decoration also serves to refute this.
It’s possible that patterns that resemble mold or fungus could be thought repellent, but as a general case that’s clearly not true.
I’ll go with the exact opposite–we are barely out of the trees, we should be programmed to think of them as homey. I think that you are in a much more exclusive club than you thought you were, OP.
My buddy just made a kitchen table where he used a high voltage transformer to burn random dendritic electrical patterns into the tabletop. Looks pretty great if you ask me. I’m going to say high score, 7-9.
Precisely this fact, that we are used to see trees so much that we have the pattern more or less imprinted on our retinas, might, however, make distinctly different patterns, such as straight lines and angles, stand out in comparison. For better or worse, obviously; but in any case, we are more likely to notice them.