Review: Discover: Funny peculiar: the truth about why we laugh: Plato saw it as a tool to topple the mighty. It often accompanies gruesome acts of cruelty. Most of us will use it to win friendship and love. So what lies behind the ‘spontaneity’ of laughter? Robert Provine, in an extract from his book, Curious Behaviour, explores the psychology of a GSOH

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About the author:

Rober Provine is a neuroscientist and Professor of Psychology at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County. He has been studying the development and evolution of the nervous system and behavior. His well-known book Laughter: A Scientific Investigation was selected as one of The 25 Books to Remember from 2000 by the New York Public Library, and his articles are awarded in The Best American Science Writing 2006 and The Best American Nonrequired Reading 2006. He is a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science and the Association for Psychological Science.


Summary:

Laughter epidemics are universal. In 1962, for example, an outbreak of contagious laughter in Tanzania rapidly rose and spread across the school to the communities around it. This epidemic caused at least 14 schools to close and afflicted approximately 1,000 people. This lasted for two and a half years and this madness was caused solely by school girls laughter in one of their classes.

Like such, laughter is very common and contagious. Madan Kataria of Mumbai, who recognized such characteristics of laughter created Laughter Yoga, in which people simply engaged in laughter exercises to seek better fitness and a good time. Through this, Kataria discovered that “laughing for no reason” eventually leads to real, contagious laughter.

The “canned laughter” that has a similar idea to Kataria’s discovery, became widely accepted in the entertainment industry since the mid-1900s. Canned laughter, a laugh track to compensate for the absent live studio audience, yielded increase of audience laughing and audience’s rating of the humorousness of the materials.Similar to Plato and Aristotle, many people in power (politicians) feared such power of laughter may lead to the overthrow of the order and lead to corrupting the organized society.

Although laugh, quite a lot of times, is seen as a positive feature of the society, there exists a dark side. Laughter, when used at the wrong time and/or to the wrong person could endanger one into violence and insult. Also, laughter, which can give the feeling of acceptance and bonding can sometimes be used to mock or jeer one.

However, universally, laughing is used as a positive form of communication between people. The laughter was found to arise 30 more times when one was around others than when they were isolated. Also, spending more time and interacting with others showed a much positive result for laughing. Although many people think that laughter rise from joes or humor, fewer than 20% of pre-made comments were thought to be funny and instead “mutual playfulness” in group feeling and “positive emotional tone” marked the most natural social setting for laughter to arise.

Also, interestingly, gender plays a role in laughter. On average, men tend to be the laugh getters while women tend to be the audiences. “Women sought humor more than twice as often as they offered it” while men found women who responded to their humor with laughs more attractive and were more willing to provide the laughing factors.


Full Text:

Consider the bizarre events of the 1962 outbreak of contagious laughter in Tanganyika (now Tanzania). What began as an isolated fit of laughter in a group of 12-to 18-year-old schoolgirls rapidly rose to epidemic proportions. Contagious laughter propagated from one individual to the next, eventually infecting adjacent communities. Like an influenza outbreak, the laughter epidemic was so severe that it required the closing of at least 14 schools and afflicted about 1,000 people. Fluctuating in intensity, it lasted for around two and a half years. A psychogenic, hysterical origin of the epidemic was established after excluding alternatives such as toxic reaction and encephalitis.

(Copyright , Guardian Newspapers Limited, Sep 02, 2012)

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