Abstract

Despite its pervasiveness in popular culture, there remains much to be learned about the psychological and physiological processes that underlie our experience of humor. In the present study, we examined the temporal profile of verbal humor elicitation using psychophysiological measures of heart rate (HR) and facial electromyography (EMG). Consistent with recent prior research on cardiovascular changes to perceived humor, we found that HR acceleration was greater for jokes relative to non-jokes, and was positively related to the level of perceived humor elicited by these jokes. In addition, activity recorded from the zygomaticus major muscle that controls smiling was found to be greater for jokes relative to non-jokes. To link these physiological changes to the psychological processes that govern humor comprehension, we took the initial inflection point of the zygomatic EMG response as a marker for the onset of humor comprehension, and used this marker to probe the pattern of cardiovascular activity at this time-point. We estimated the onset of the humor response to occur during the initial HR deceleration phase, and found that jokes relative to non-jokes elicited a decreased HR response at this time-point. This result questions the previously forwarded notion that the psychological “moment of insight” that signals the start of the humor response is always associated with heightened cardiovascular activity. This discrepancy is discussed in relation to possible differences in the cognitive processes required to comprehend different forms of humor. At a broader level, our results also demonstrate the advantages of combining different psychophysiological measures to examine psychological phenomena, and illustrate how one such measure can constrain the interpretation of others.

Highlights

  • Humor is a ubiquitous phenomenon in our daily lives

  • The current study sought to examine the temporal profile of verbal humor elicitation and its accompanying physiological changes by combining measures of cardiovascular functioning with facial EMG recordings of the zygomatic and corrugator muscles

  • The heart rate (HR) response time-locked to punchline onset for both jokes and non-jokes was characterized by an initial deceleration phase that did not differ in magnitude across stimulus category, but was found to begin earlier, and was shorter in duration for jokes relative to non-jokes

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Summary

Introduction

Humor is a ubiquitous phenomenon in our daily lives. From TV shows, to radio commercials, to social interactions, there are few facets of life that are devoid of it. Most cognitively-oriented theoretical models of humor posit that joke comprehension involves three primary stages–the first being an initial setup stage, during which a particular meaning or theme is established, followed by a second incongruity discovery stage, during which the meaning-based expectancy created during the setup phase is violated, and a resolution stage, during which this conflict in meaning is resolved through a re-interpretation process in which an alternate sense or meaning is derived [1,2,3] This latter stage has been likened to a problem solving process, the end result of which is a “moment of insight” that corresponds to the time at which the intended meaning is realized, and marks the onset of the humor response

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