The effects on mirth responses (i.e. laughter, smiling) to and subjective ratings of humorous cartoons for female subjects in the presence of a silent or laughing confederate were investigated in terms of Social Comparison Theory (Festinger, 1954) versus an Information-processing explanation (Leventhal & Cupchik, 1976). Thirty-nine female undergraduate students were given falsefeedback about their ability to judge cartoon quality and presented with either a laughing or silent confederate. The false-feedback was used to determine the effect of a companion's responsiveness relative to the individual's own level of confidence in ability to judge cartoon quality. Mirth responses and subjective ratings significantly increased in the presence of...
Humor is a social tool that has been documented for hundreds of years with a plethora of studies bei...
Humor-evoking events frequently contain aggressive elements. Sex differences have been found for the...
Although research has added to our understanding of the positive and negative effects of the use of ...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 57-60)The present study examines reactions to brief, narr...
Paul E. McGhee stated that females smile and laugh more than males because they have a stronger need...
It was hypothesized that males will rate female-targeted jokes as more humorous than male-targeted j...
The present study empirically tests a bimodal model of humor appreciation. In this model, individual...
The majority of instructional communication literature has historically focused on the positive outc...
Without an objective metric for identifying how funny humorous material really is, a person may re...
The current work estimated the relative importance of joke and audience characteristics for the occu...
In seven studies (n = 1133), adults tried to create funny ideas and then rated the funniness of thei...
Theoretical frameworks were presented in order that variables contributing to the mirth response cou...
It is the aim of this study to investigate and discover some of the relationship between joke prefer...
Seven experiments were conducted in a mobile laboratory on location in schools. Seven year-old child...
Abstract. The present study empirically tests a bimodal model of humor appreciation. In this model,...
Humor is a social tool that has been documented for hundreds of years with a plethora of studies bei...
Humor-evoking events frequently contain aggressive elements. Sex differences have been found for the...
Although research has added to our understanding of the positive and negative effects of the use of ...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 57-60)The present study examines reactions to brief, narr...
Paul E. McGhee stated that females smile and laugh more than males because they have a stronger need...
It was hypothesized that males will rate female-targeted jokes as more humorous than male-targeted j...
The present study empirically tests a bimodal model of humor appreciation. In this model, individual...
The majority of instructional communication literature has historically focused on the positive outc...
Without an objective metric for identifying how funny humorous material really is, a person may re...
The current work estimated the relative importance of joke and audience characteristics for the occu...
In seven studies (n = 1133), adults tried to create funny ideas and then rated the funniness of thei...
Theoretical frameworks were presented in order that variables contributing to the mirth response cou...
It is the aim of this study to investigate and discover some of the relationship between joke prefer...
Seven experiments were conducted in a mobile laboratory on location in schools. Seven year-old child...
Abstract. The present study empirically tests a bimodal model of humor appreciation. In this model,...
Humor is a social tool that has been documented for hundreds of years with a plethora of studies bei...
Humor-evoking events frequently contain aggressive elements. Sex differences have been found for the...
Although research has added to our understanding of the positive and negative effects of the use of ...