The aim of the present study is the location of gelotophobia (fear of being laughed at), gelotophilia (the joy of being laughed at) and katagelasticism (joy of laughing at others) in the five-factor personality model. In the sample of 425 Slovak adults, gelotophobes can be described as introverted neurotics with lower inclination to openness. Personality factors explained 46.7% of the variance in gelotophobia. Gelotophilia is related to extraversion, low neuroticism and low conscientiousness. The personality predictors accounted for 21.3% of the variance in gelotophilia. Katagelasticists could be described by extraversion and low agreeableness and conscientiousness. The explained proportion of the variance in katagelasticism is 37.3%. The e...
Gelotophobia, or the fear of being laughed at, has been described as an inability to enjoy humour an...
Gelotophobia is defined as the fear of being laughed at. Recent empirical studies revealed that it i...
Gelotophobia (the fear of being laughed at) has recently been introduced as an individual difference...
The study examines the personality correlates of gelotophobia (fear of being laughed at), gelotophil...
Gelotophobia is defined as the fear of being laughed at. First empirical studies revealed that it is...
Single case studies led to the discovery and phenomenological description of Gelotophobia and its de...
How people deal with humor and laughter is culturally constructed within a society but each member m...
The aim of this study is to investigate three dispositions relating to ridicule, namely gelotophobia...
The present study investigates humor appreciation of aggressive cartoons in relation to gelotophobia...
This study compares the characteristics and possible causes of gelotophobia (the fear of being laugh...
Abstract In observations from clinical practice, the origin of gelotophobia, the fear of being laugh...
The current paper addresses the measurement of three dispositions toward ridicule and laughter; i.e....
In Ruch and Proyer (Humor: International Journal of Humor Research 21:47-67, 2008a), the fear of bei...
This study explores the associations between concepts of ‘laughing at’ and shame with the addition o...
Gelotophobia is defined as the fear of being laughed at. Empirical studies revealed that it is a val...
Gelotophobia, or the fear of being laughed at, has been described as an inability to enjoy humour an...
Gelotophobia is defined as the fear of being laughed at. Recent empirical studies revealed that it i...
Gelotophobia (the fear of being laughed at) has recently been introduced as an individual difference...
The study examines the personality correlates of gelotophobia (fear of being laughed at), gelotophil...
Gelotophobia is defined as the fear of being laughed at. First empirical studies revealed that it is...
Single case studies led to the discovery and phenomenological description of Gelotophobia and its de...
How people deal with humor and laughter is culturally constructed within a society but each member m...
The aim of this study is to investigate three dispositions relating to ridicule, namely gelotophobia...
The present study investigates humor appreciation of aggressive cartoons in relation to gelotophobia...
This study compares the characteristics and possible causes of gelotophobia (the fear of being laugh...
Abstract In observations from clinical practice, the origin of gelotophobia, the fear of being laugh...
The current paper addresses the measurement of three dispositions toward ridicule and laughter; i.e....
In Ruch and Proyer (Humor: International Journal of Humor Research 21:47-67, 2008a), the fear of bei...
This study explores the associations between concepts of ‘laughing at’ and shame with the addition o...
Gelotophobia is defined as the fear of being laughed at. Empirical studies revealed that it is a val...
Gelotophobia, or the fear of being laughed at, has been described as an inability to enjoy humour an...
Gelotophobia is defined as the fear of being laughed at. Recent empirical studies revealed that it i...
Gelotophobia (the fear of being laughed at) has recently been introduced as an individual difference...