Laughter is employed in social interaction to construct meaning, identities, and relationships. Although studies have begun to examine humour within the medical workplace, none have employed observational methods to study laughables/laughter within the learning triad of the bedside teaching encounter (BTE). This paper focuses on this gap by exploring the novel question: How do students, patients, and doctors construct and co-construct power, identity and gender through laughter within BTEs? In this paper, we focus on the disaffiliative function of laughables/laughter across BTEs. Most of the laughables presented can be construed as teases: fallibility, frustration, cynicism and/or sexual teasing; and this teasing was accompanied by a compet...
Laughter is a fundamental human phenomenon. Yet there is little educational research on the potentia...
This dissertation describes a series of studies testing the role of laughter in spontaneous conversa...
This book examines what speakers try to achieve by producing ‘laughter-talk’ (the talk preceding and...
Laughter is employed in social interaction to construct meaning, identities, and relationships. Alth...
This article aims to challenge the perception that in medical encounters laughter is an interactiona...
As personified in jokers, fools and clowns, humour is an integral part of human history [44]. Humour...
As personified in jokers, fools and clowns, humour is an integral part of human history [44]. Humour...
Human laughter has long been a subject of scholarly interest, but counter to commonly held assumptio...
In this chapter we build on our previous research on laughter as an interactional resource that is r...
Humosexually Speaking - Laughter and the Intersections of Gender investigates the social function of...
This chapter brings instances of humour and laughter into relief using a corpusof authentic institut...
This chapter examines the use of laughter in the context of prenatal screening (PS) for Down’s syndr...
Background Humour is a complex, dynamic phenomenon that mainly occurs in social situations between ...
As Coser (1962) demonstrated in her landmark hospital study, a humor is one of the great tools of re...
Humour research in healthcare has tended to focus on rehearsed as opposed to spontaneous humour. Thi...
Laughter is a fundamental human phenomenon. Yet there is little educational research on the potentia...
This dissertation describes a series of studies testing the role of laughter in spontaneous conversa...
This book examines what speakers try to achieve by producing ‘laughter-talk’ (the talk preceding and...
Laughter is employed in social interaction to construct meaning, identities, and relationships. Alth...
This article aims to challenge the perception that in medical encounters laughter is an interactiona...
As personified in jokers, fools and clowns, humour is an integral part of human history [44]. Humour...
As personified in jokers, fools and clowns, humour is an integral part of human history [44]. Humour...
Human laughter has long been a subject of scholarly interest, but counter to commonly held assumptio...
In this chapter we build on our previous research on laughter as an interactional resource that is r...
Humosexually Speaking - Laughter and the Intersections of Gender investigates the social function of...
This chapter brings instances of humour and laughter into relief using a corpusof authentic institut...
This chapter examines the use of laughter in the context of prenatal screening (PS) for Down’s syndr...
Background Humour is a complex, dynamic phenomenon that mainly occurs in social situations between ...
As Coser (1962) demonstrated in her landmark hospital study, a humor is one of the great tools of re...
Humour research in healthcare has tended to focus on rehearsed as opposed to spontaneous humour. Thi...
Laughter is a fundamental human phenomenon. Yet there is little educational research on the potentia...
This dissertation describes a series of studies testing the role of laughter in spontaneous conversa...
This book examines what speakers try to achieve by producing ‘laughter-talk’ (the talk preceding and...