Abstract

Researchers have made consistent claims that people do not have an awareness of their humor competence and that the vast majority of people claim to have an above-average sense of humor. In this study, we examined whether people’s self reports of humor competence matched an independent measurement of sense of humor. We also investigated participants’ self-reported personality characteristics to see if they attributed to themselves the same characteristics that participants in earlier research attributed to hypothetical others that shared their level of humor competence. Participants completed the Multidimensional Sense of Humor Scale (MSHS) and inventories based on the Big Five model of personality. The results revealed that participants had a realistic view of their humor competence. Their self-perceived humor competence correlated reliably with their scores on the MSHS. In addition, they characterized themselves on the personality inventories in the way that previous research participants evaluated others. Participants’ self-reports matched the stereotypes they had of imaginary others for extraversion and neuroticism, but not for agreeableness and openness. The findings suggest that people hold implicit theories of the link between humor and personality and apply it reliably both to themselves and to others. Results are discussed in terms of the need to study humor as multidimensional construct and in light of expectations of evolutionary theory.

Highlights

  • Researchers have made consistent claims that people do not have an awareness of their humor competence and that the vast majority of people claim to have an aboveav erage sense of humor

  • Either the Multidimensional Sense of Humor Scale (MSHS) is a better measure of funniness as people characterize it, or sense of humor (SoH) is a more global construct that goes beyond the factors of the MSHS

  • The tw o most interesting and important findings in this research are that (a) people do know their lev el of humor competence and w ill report it w ith reasonable accuracy and (b) people attribute some traits to themselv es that they attribute to a hypothetical other w ho possesses the same lev el of humor competence as they do

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Summary

Procedure

Participants reported to the laboratory and completed the study in groups either on a computer or on paper. They sat in nonadjacent seats to minimize the likelihood that responses w ould be influenced by others w ho might see how they rated themselv es on the v arious characteristics. After completing informed consent forms, they rated themselv es on measures of neuroticism, extrav ersion, agreeableness, and openness. Subsequent to those ratings, participants completed the Multidimensional Sense of Humor Scale, rated themselv es on the 36 adjectiv es that differed in control and desirability

Subjective and Objective Measures of Humor
Comfort w ith Humor
Personality Characteristics and Humor
Low M edium High
Total MSHS Score
Findings
Discussion
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