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Psychology%20and%20Humor

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Title: Psychology%20and%20Humor


1
Psychology and Humor
  • by Don L. F. Nilsen and
  • Alleen Pace Nilsen

2
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3
What is normal?
4
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5
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6
Emotions Anger Fear
7
Real Fear
8
Surprise Skepticism
9
Curiosity
10
Love
11
Sadness
12
Desire
13
Smugness
14
Anticipation Birds Snakes
15
Coffee-Induced Emotions
16
Android Emotions
17
Happiness
18
Happiness
  • The Happiness Machine
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch_popup?vlqT_dPApj9U

19
Surprise
20
Emotions Narcicism Sexy Face
21
Goofiness (Allen Klein)
22
But the important thingis balance
23
Modern Humans
  • Scholars separate modern humans from primitive
    humans by giving them these three
    characteristics
  • Homo Erectus (upright human)
  • Homo Sapiens (thinking human)
  • Homo Ridens (laughing human)

24
The Id, the Super Ego, and Tendentious Jokes
  • Willibald Ruch says that the Id is a reflection
    of our desires and drives.
  • The Super Ego is a reflection of society and
    parental influence. The Super Ego forces not to
    do things that are socially unacceptable. It
    doesnt allow allow the direct expression of
    sexual and hostile impulses.
  • Ruch concludes that individuals repressing their
    sexuality or aggression should show a preference
    for sexual and aggressive jokes.

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26
Traits, States, and BehaviorsSeriousness vs.
Playfulness
  • TRAITS A serious person wants to function
    exclusively in the bona fide mode of
    communication. This is not true for a playful
    person.
  • STATES We can be in a serious or pensive mood,
    or a silly mood.
  • BEHAVIORS We can tell a joke or clown
    around.

27
States
  • Playful Mood Cheerful, Hilarious
  • Serious Mood Earnest, Pensive, Sober
  • Bad Mood Sadness, Melancholy, Ill-Humor

28
Moods (States)
  • Willibald Ruch says that an ill-humored person,
    like a serious one, may not want to be involved
    in humor. However person in a sad mood may not
    be able to do so even if he or she would like to.
  • While the sad person is not antagonistic to a
    cheerful group, the ill-humored one may be.
  • Bad mood is also associated with certain forms of
    humor, such as mockery, irony, cynicism, and
    sarcasm.

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30
Salience
31
Types of Humor
  • Ruch says that Affiliative Humor involves the
    tendency to say funny things, to tell jokes, and
    to engage in spontaneous witty banter.
  • Self-Enhancing Humor is a coping mechanism.
  • Aggressive Humor involves sarcasm, teasing,
    ridicule, derision, put-downs or disparagement.
  • Self-Defeating Humor is when people allow
    themselves to be the butt of other peoples
    jokes.

32
Non-Enjoyment Smiles Differ in Appearance
  • Ruch says that people smile for a variety of
    reasons, for example, when they are
  • enjoying a disgusting or frightening film,
  • masking negative emotions of sadness, anger, or
    fear,
  • flirting,
  • feeling sadistic pleasure,
  • embarrassed,
  • complying to something contemptuous,
  • have mixed emotions,
  • feel under social pressure.

33
Children Smiling
34
Ruch has described various Humor Styles.
Think about comedians you know. Tell us about a
comedian who fits the description on the left vs.
someone who fits into the right column.
Socially Warm vs. Reflective vs. Competent vs. Earthy vs. Benign vs. Socially Cold Boorish Inept Repressed Mean-Spirited
35
Laughter
  • Robert Provine says that most laughter is not a
    response to jokes or other formal attempts at
    humor.
  • Salvatore Attardo adds that laughter may be
    caused by all sorts of non-humorous stimuli
    including tickling, laughing gas, and
    embarrassment.
  • It can also be triggered by watching or hearing
    other people laugh, which is why sound tracks
    were invented to help radio audiences get into a
    laughing mood.

36
  • Tom Mullica Smoking Magic Card Trick
  • http//maggiesfarm.anotherdotcom.com/archives/1725
    1-Theres-A-Card-Trick-In-There-Somewhere.-Lets-Smo
    ke-It-Out.html

37
Laughter
38
  • People also laugh when they are in social
    situations that make them feel anxious, ignorant,
    or apologetic. It could be a sign of false
    bravado by people being teased who want to show
    they can take a joke.
  • People never get the giggles, and seldom laugh,
    when they are alone. We are complimenting
    someone on e-mail if we tell them, You made me
    laugh out loud. In reality, we are more likely
    to have smiled.
  • Jodi Eisterhold has discussed the principle of
    least disruption, which enjoins speakers to
    return to a serious mode as soon as possible.
    Nevertheless, public speakers like to make the
    audience laugh because it is an invitation to
    come closer in an emotional sense.

39
LAUGHTER VS. SMILING
  • Because smiles can sometimes evolve into laughs
    and laughs can taper off into smiles, some people
    think that laughter is merely a form of
    exaggerated smiling.
  • However, smiles are more likely to express
    feelings of satisfaction or good will, while
    laughter comes from surprise or a recognition of
    an incongruity.
  • Furthermore, laughter is basically a public event
    while smiling is basically a private event.

40
Perspective
41
Different PhilosophersHave Different Points of
View
42
PHILOSOPHERS STATEMENTS ABOUT LAUGHTER
  • Throughout time, philosophers have made many
    statements about laughter that are not true of
    smiling.
  • Each one has defined laughter in a different way
    as shown in this chronological listing.
  • THOMAS HOBBES Laughter is the sudden glory
    arising from the sudden conception of some
    eminency in ourselves, by comparison with the
    infirmity of others. Leviathan, 1651

43
  • IMMANUEL KANT Laughter is an affection arising
    from a strained expectation being suddenly
    reduced to nothing. The Critique of Judgment,
    1790
  • WILLIAM HAZLITT The essence of the laughable is
    the incongruous, the disconnecting one idea from
    another, or the jostling of one feeling against
    another. Lecture on the Comic Writers, Etc. of
    Great Britain, 1819.
  • ARTHUR SCHOPENHAUER The phenomenon of laughter
    always signifies the sudden apprehension of an
    incongruity between a conception and the real
    object. The World as Will and Idea, 1844

44
  • Henri Bergson Something mechanical encrusted on
    the living causes laughter. Laughter, 1900
  • Sigmund Freud Laughter arises from the release
    of previously existing static energy. Jokes and
    Their Relation to the Unconscious, 1905

45
Psychology, Magic and Selective Attention
  • COLOR-CHANGING CARD TRICK
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vasxUtX8Hyd4feature
    related
  • Selective Attention Test 1
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vvJG698U2Mvo
  • Selective Attention Test 2
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vubNF9QNEQLA

46
James Agee classified laughter into six
categories
  • Incipient or Inner, Inaudible Laugh
  • Loud and Unrestrained
  • THE HOWL
  • THE YOWL
  • THE SHRIEK
  • THE OLYMPIAN LAUGH
  • THE SIMPER
  • THE SMIRK

47
TICKLING
  • People who laugh from being tickled are not
    necessarily put in a more receptive mood for
    enjoying the humor in jokes because laughing from
    being tickled occurs in a part of the brain
    different from where laughter that is
    intellectually stimulated occurs.
  • People cannot tickle themselves because the
    cerebellum in the lower back of the brain somehow
    sends an interfering message to the part of the
    brain that controls laughter.

48
FINAL CONTRAST OF LAUGHTER AND SMILING
  • Anthony Chapman did a study in which he compared
    the actions of a group of children who knew they
    were being observed with a group who did not know
    they were being observed.
  • The children who knew they were being watched
    laughed four times as often as did those in the
    other group.
  • However, they smiled only half as much.

49
A PARADOX
  • Chapman concluded that laughter can be good or
    bad, depending on the situation.
  • But he also concluded that humor is both the
    cause for laughter, and the result of laughter.
  • This is why in peoples minds, humor and laughter
    are so closely associated.

50
Dark Psychology by banksy
51
(No Transcript)
52
New Yorker Cartoonists Therapy Session
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vWdts_HG7e2Y

53
Mary Kay Morrison
54
Elliott Oring
55
Willibald Ruch
56
A Rorschach Joke
  • PSYCHIATRIST What does this picture remind you
    of?
  • PATIENT
  • Sex.

57
  • PSYCHIATRIST
  • And this picture?
  • PATIENT
  • Sex.

58
  • PSYCHIATRIST
  • And this picture?
  • PATIENT
  • Sex.

59
  • PSYCHIATRIST
  • And these pictures?
  • PATIENT
  • Sex.

60
  • PATIENT
  • What are you writing down.
  • PSYCHIATRIST
  • That you have many sexual fantasies?
  • PATIENT
  • Why me? Youre the guy with all of the dirty
    pictures.

61
Motivation Profit vs. PurposeWhy Facebook,
Google, Internet, Skype, Southwest Airlines and
Wikipedia are so Successful
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vu6XAPnuFjJcfeature
    relmfu
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