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by Nanci Hellmich
Updated September 28, 2022
When a clever joke makes you laugh, your brain is doing at least five different things — sensory processing, perspective taking, assessing incongruous information, finding it funny and then creating a response, says Amit Sood, a professor of medicine at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn., and author of The Mayo Clinic Handbook for Happiness: A Four-Step Plan for Resilient Living.
The three areas of the brain most intimately involved in laughter are regions responsible for cognition, emotions and motor skills, he says.
Take this joke: A teacher asked her students to use the word "beans" in a sentence. "My father grows beans," said one girl. "My mother cooks beans," said a boy. A third student spoke up: "We are all human beans."
The reason it's funny is that it sets you up to think each answer is going to be about the food item, but the incongruity comes when the kid's answer misuses the term "beans."
The cognitive parts of the brain (particularly the inferior frontal and inferior temporal gyrus, but also other areas) help you understand the meaning of the words and find incongruity, he says.
The emotional parts (particularly the medial prefrontal cortex, the amygdala and mesolimbic reward regions) help you find it funny and generate a feeling of mirth, Sood says.
This feeling then is expressed by the motor part (mainly, the primary motor and premotor cortex, both part of the frontal lobe) of the brain that stimulates the muscles of the face, diaphragm and sometimes the whole body, he says.
Research shows that happier people tend to be more creative, have greater motivation and recover faster from neurological illness, Sood says.
The important thing to know about laughter is that it is social, says researcher Robert R. Provine, a neuroscientist and professor of psychology at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County, and author of Curious Behavior: Yawning, Laughing, Hiccupping, and Beyond.
His research shows that laughter occurs 30 times more often in social situations than solitary ones. When people are laughing with each other, they are interacting brain-to-brain, he says.
Usually people chuckle when they are involved in playful interactions with others. It's about relationship more than humor, Provine says. "Only 10 to 15 percent of laughter follows comments that are remotely joke-like."
And it's contagious. Laugh tracks in sitcoms work because they trigger others to chuckle. If you hear "ha-ha-ha," you are likely to join in, Provine says.
To get the most benefit out of laughter, Sood has three suggestions: Laugh with and not just at things; learn to laugh at yourself; and surround yourself with people you trust and love.
• "Creative Days: A Daily Diary Study of Emotion, Personality, and Everyday Creativity," Psychology of Aesthetics, Creativity, and the Arts, November 2015. In this survey of 658 young adults, researchers found that positive emotions such as happiness and enthusiasm were associated with being more creative. Study limitations include the fact that it relied on participants' own ratings of their emotions and that, as a population study, it shows a correlation but does not prove cause and effect. Read a summary of the study. (A fee is required to access the full study.)
• "Understanding the relationship between mood and creativity: A meta-analysis," Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, January 2009. This review of 72 studies found evidence that positive mood can enhance creativity. Read a summary of the study. (A fee is required to access the full study.)
• "Happiness as a Motivator: Positive Affect Predicts Primary Control Striving for Career and Educational Goals," Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, May 2012. In this longitudinal study, researchers examined data from two cohorts with a total sample size of 1,216 teenagers. The researchers found evidence that happiness is associated with being more motivated to invest time and effort in order to achieve one's goals. As a population study, it shows a correlation but does not prove cause and effect. Read a summary of the study. (A fee is required to access the full study.)
• "Associations between positive emotion and recovery of functional status following stroke," Psychosomatic Medicine, May 2008. In this longitudinal study, researchers followed 823 people 55 or older who were at an inpatient medical rehabilitation facility recovering from a stroke. The researchers found that people who reported feeling positive emotions were further along in their recovery after three months, in terms of both motor and cognitive functioning. Read a summary of the study. (A fee is required to access the full study.)
• "Laughing, smiling, and talking: Relation to sleeping and social context in humans," Ethology, January 1989. In this study of 28 people between the ages of 18 and 27, subjects were asked to keep a diary to log every time they laughed over the course of one week. The researchers found that laughter was 30 times more likely to happen in social situations than when the participants were alone. Read a summary of the study. (A fee is required to access the full study.)
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