Cognitive and emotional demands of black humour processing: the role of intelligence, aggressiveness and mood

Humour processing is a complex information-processing task that is dependent on cognitive and emotional aspects which presumably influence frame-shifting and conceptual blending, mental operations that underlie humour processing. The aim of the current study was to find distinctive groups of subjects with respect to black humour processing, intellectual capacities, mood disturbance and aggressiveness. A total of 156 adults rated black humour cartoons and conducted measurements of verbal and nonverbal intelligence, mood disturbance and aggressiveness. Cluster analysis yields three groups comprising following properties: (1) moderate black humour preference and moderate comprehension; average nonverbal and verbal intelligence; low mood disturbance and moderate aggressiveness; (2) low black humour preference and moderate comprehension; average nonverbal and verbal intelligence, high mood disturbance and high aggressiveness; and (3) high black humour preference and high comprehension; high nonverbal and verbal intelligence; no mood disturbance and low aggressiveness. Age and gender do not differ significantly, differences in education level can be found. Black humour preference and comprehension are positively associated with higher verbal and nonverbal intelligence as well as higher levels of education. Emotional instability and higher aggressiveness apparently lead to decreased levels of pleasure when dealing with black humour. These results support the hypothesis that humour processing involves cognitive as well as affective components and suggest that these variables influence the execution of frame-shifting and conceptual blending in the course of humour processing.

[1]  Paul Lagassé,et al.  The Columbia encyclopedia , 2000 .

[2]  A. Feingold,et al.  Psychometric intelligence and verbal humor ability , 1991 .

[3]  J. Suls Chapter 4 – A Two-Stage Model for the Appreciation of Jokes and Cartoons: An Information-Processing Analysis , 1972 .

[4]  C. McCauley,et al.  More aggressive cartoons are funnier. , 1983, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[5]  C. Baldick The concise Oxford dictionary of literary terms , 1990 .

[6]  J. McConatha,et al.  The Relation of Humor to Depression and Personality , 1993, Psychological reports.

[7]  D. Stuss,et al.  Humour appreciation: a role of the right frontal lobe. , 1999, Brain : a journal of neurology.

[8]  Preferences for sick versus nonsick humor , 1998 .

[9]  T. Odlin Women, Fire, and Dangerous Things: What Categories Reveal about the Mind , 1988 .

[10]  W. Ruch The sense of humor : Explorations of a personality characteristic , 1998 .

[11]  Geoffrey P. Miller,et al.  Humor ability reveals intelligence, predicts mating success, and is higher in males. , 2011 .

[12]  Elizabeth Walter Shelly,et al.  Humor processing in children: Influence of temperament, age and IQ , 2013, Neuropsychologia.

[13]  D. Zillmann,et al.  Disgust in humor: Its appeal to adolescents , 1997 .

[14]  K M Heilman,et al.  Auditory affective agnosia. Disturbed comprehension of affective speech. , 1975, Journal of neurology, neurosurgery, and psychiatry.

[15]  R. D. Young,et al.  The Relation of Intelligence and Task Difficulty to Appreciation of Humor , 1978 .

[16]  Seana Coulson,et al.  Semantic Leaps: FRAME-SHIFTING , 2001 .

[17]  W. Ruch,et al.  A temperament approach to humor , 1998 .

[18]  Seana Coulson,et al.  Frame-shifting and Sentential Integration , 2007 .

[19]  Wayne Maxwell The use of gallows humor and dark humor during crisis situations. , 2003, International journal of emergency mental health.

[20]  F. J. Prerost Locus of control and the aggression inhibiting effects of aggressive humor appreciation. , 1983, Journal of personality assessment.

[21]  S. Freud,et al.  Jokes and Their Relation to the Unconscious , 1905 .

[22]  T. Herzog,et al.  Joke cruelty, emotional responsiveness, and joke appreciation , 2000 .

[23]  Manfred Sader Psychologie der Persönlichkeit , 1980 .

[24]  J. Bowker,et al.  Does Humor Explain Why Relationally Aggressive Adolescents are Popular? , 2014, Journal of youth and adolescence.

[25]  Edgar Erdfelder,et al.  G*Power 3: A flexible statistical power analysis program for the social, behavioral, and biomedical sciences , 2007, Behavior research methods.

[26]  G. Lakoff Women, fire, and dangerous things : what categories reveal about the mind , 1989 .

[27]  G. Lakoff,et al.  Women, Fire, and Dangerous Things: What Categories Reveal about the Mind , 1988 .

[28]  P. Ekman,et al.  The expressive pattern of laughter , 2001 .

[29]  E. H. Bogart,et al.  Laughter and electroencephalographic activity , 1997 .

[30]  S. Coulson,et al.  Hemispheric asymmetries and joke comprehension , 2005, Neuropsychologia.

[31]  F. Strack,et al.  The influence of mood on the intensity of emotional responses: Disentangling feeling and knowing , 2001 .

[32]  T. Herzog,et al.  The prediction of preference for sick humor , 1994 .

[33]  S. Freud Jokes and their relation to the unconscious (1905). Appendix: Franz Brentano's riddles , 1971 .

[34]  W. Grodd,et al.  Neural correlates of laughter and humour. , 2003, Brain : a journal of neurology.