Increase in humor when primed about death?
"For their study, Long and Greenwood subdivided 117 students into four
experimental groups. These groups were confronted with the topics of
pain and death while completing various tasks. Two of the test groups
were exposed unconsciously to words flashed for 33 milliseconds on a
computer while they completed tasks -- the first to the word "pain," the
second to the word "death." The remaining two groups were prompted in a
writing task to express emotions concerning either their own death or a
painful visit to the dentist. Afterward, all four groups were
instructed to supply a caption to a cartoon from The New Yorker.
These cartoon captions were presented to an independent jury who knew
nothing about the experiment. The captions written by individuals who
were subconsciously primed with the word death were clearly voted as
funnier by the jury. By contrast, the exact opposite result was obtained
for the students who consciously wrote about death: their captions were
seen as less humorous.
Based on this experiment, the researchers conclude that humor helps
the individual to tolerate latent anxiety that may otherwise be
destabilizing. In this connection, they point to previous studies
indicating that humor is an integral component of resilience."
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