JAMAICA
BRAZIL
Russia
JAMAICA
BRAZIL
Russia
The study conducted at the University of Granada (Universidad de Granada)
is the first work in Spain stemming from Psychology aimed at measuring
people’s sense of humour to analyse the psychological variables related
to humour.
- The researcher analysed more than 1,500 people between the ages of 18 and 80 and a similar number of men and women.
-
The study concludes that there are no universally good or bad jokes for
both women and men and points out that women have changed their
humorous preferences.
C@MPUS DIGITAL Is it possible to
scientifically measure someone’s sense of humour? Are there universally
good or bad jokes that make people laugh no matter their gender,
profession or cultural background? These are some of the questions
answered by the doctoral thesis Sentido del Humor: Construcción de la Escala de Apreciación del Humor
(Sense of humour: building of the appreciation of humour scale),
carried out by Hugo Carretero Dios, researcher in the Department of
Social Psychology and Methodology of Behavioural Science at the
University of Granada.
This study, directed by researchers
Cristino Pérez Meléndez and Gualberto Buela Casal, is the first work in
Spain stemming from Psychology aimed at measuring people’s sense of
humour to analyse the psychological variables related to humour.
Carretero Dios analysed more than 1,500 people between the ages of 18
and 80 and a similar number of men and women.
This study focused
on the following types of humour: sexual humour, black humour, humour
degrading to men, humour degrading to women, simple humour and complex
humour. The study provided the first scientifically approved evaluation
instrument in Spain to evaluate humour appreciation. Moreover, it
helped to improve other instruments used in other countries.
Generational change
Carretero
Dios observed a generational change in the women’s preferences to the
different types of humour. “There has been change in women’s values and
roles in our society,” says Carretero Dios. “In people over 45-50, we
observed that both men and women laughed more at jokes degrading to
women than those degrading to men”. At the same time, both men and
women showed more rejection to jokes degrading to men.
However,
among the participants between 18-25 years old, the trend was different
and men and women had different reactions. Men laugh more at jokes
degrading to women and reject those degrading to men. By contrast,
women laugh more at jokes degrading to men and reject those degrading
to women. Indeed, this trend is more pronounced in women.
Could
these findings show a change in educational values or even a new
pattern in the roles played by women? According to Carretero Dios,
“humour is useful to study the predominant values of a specific
society, and is also a powerful instrument to show cultural trends
(beliefs, actions, etc). We only need to remember the conflict caused
by the Mohammed cartoons last year, in which humour clashed with
religion.”
Universal humour does not exist
One of the
conclusions of this study was that the different personalities of
people help to differentiate specific humour preferences.
“Consequently, there are no universally good or bad jokes — humour
depends on the person,” says Carretero Dios.
Contrary to what we
would expect, “a particular person’s momentary state of mind in a
humourous situation, such as on hearing a joke, does not imply that the
person finds that particular situation funny,” explains Carretero Dios.
A person’s taste in humour “is rather an intellectual or aesthetic
question, emotion or state of mind being more related to physiological
and behavioural factors of sense of humour than an opinion of what we
think is funny.”
Humour in hospitals
Carretero Dios is the president of the Spanish Cultural Association "Titiritas: Humor y Salud" (Titiritas:
humour and health), which works with hospitals and aims at bringing
humour to these centres to make this context more human and see the
influence of this humour in different parameters. This association has
been awarded best non-profit youth organisation in the Andalusian
region by the city of Granada. Moreover, it receives funding from the
Area of Culture of the Andalusian Institute of Youth. Recently, this
association participated in a study that analysed the impact of humour
on the behaviour of psychiatric patients in an acute unit. This study
was chosen by the American association HumorLab as one of the four most
important studies on an international level on sense of humour in 2006.
The
results of this thesis were recently presented at the International
Humour Conference, sponsored and organised by the International Society
of Humor Studies, the most important scientific association in the
world. The results were also published in prestigious journals such as
the International Journal of Humor Research (the most important
scientific journal in the world on the study of sense of humour),
Psicothema and Análisis y Modificación de Conducta.
Reference:
Prof. Hugo Carretero Dios. Department of Social Psychology and
Methodology of Behavioural Science of the University of Granada. Tel: (+34) 958 246 273 / (+34) 958 246 270. E-mail: hugocd@ugr.es Web: http://www.titiritas.org
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