This article is from the WebMD Feature Archive

Font Size
A
A
A

Why We Laugh

Laughter is more complicated -- and bizarre -- than you might think.
By R. Morgan Griffin
WebMD Feature
Reviewed by Louise Chang, MD

Whether it's the giggling of your child or the enthusiastic hollers of a talk show's studio audience, we hear laughter every day. Nothing could be more common. But just because it's common doesn't make laughter any less strange.

For instance, the next time you're at the movies enjoying some comedy blockbuster, listen hard to the laughter around you. Why are all these strangers, in unison, exploding into such weird, gasping, grunting noises? Their laughs may suddenly stop seeming familiar, and more like the inhuman chatter of birds or the screeches of monkeys at the zoo.

Once you start looking at laughter as behavior, it can lead to some odd questions. Why do we do it? Do animals laugh? And why do we expect that any decent James Bond villain will cackle diabolically when revealing his plan for world domination? What's so funny?

To answer these and other mysteries of laughter, WebMD delved into the surprisingly contentious world of laughter research.

Why Do We laugh?

The answer may seem obvious: We laugh when we perceive something funny. But the obvious answer is not correct, at least most of the time.

"Most laughter is not in response to jokes or humor," says Robert R. Provine, a professor of psychology and neuroscience at the University of Maryland Baltimore County. Provine should know. He has conducted a number of studies of laughter and authored the book Laughter: a Scientific Investigation. One of his central arguments is that humor and laughter are not inseparable.

Provine did a survey of laughter in the wild -- he and some graduate students listened in on average conversations in public places and made notes. And in a survey of 1,200 "laugh episodes," he found that only 10%-20% of laughs were generated by anything resembling a joke.

The other 80%-90% of comments that received a laugh were dull non-witticisms like, "I'll see you guys later" and "It was nice meeting you, too." So why the laughs?

Provine argues it has to do with the evolutionary development of laughter. In humans, laughter predates speech by perhaps millions of years. Before our human ancestors could talk with each other, laughter was a simpler method of communication, he tells WebMD.

It's also instinctual. "Infants laugh almost from birth," says Steve Wilson, MA, CSP, a psychologist and laugh therapist. "In fact, people who are born blind and deaf still laugh. So we know it's not a learned behavior. Humans are hardwired for laughter."

But perhaps because laughter is so ancient, it's much less precise than language.

"Laughter isn't under our conscious control," says Provine. "We don't choose to laugh in the same way that we choose to speak." If you've ever had an inopportune laughing fit -- in a lecture, during a high school play, or at a funeral, for instance -- you know that laughter can't always be tamed.

1 | 2 | 3 | 4

men's health newsletter

Health information tailored to the needs of men. Sign up today to receive WebMD's popular Men's Health newsletter.

Man's Best Friend

Is your dog's behavior normal?

webMD Video

Show or hide information about video: Male Orgasms: How They Change   Male Orgasms: How They Change

48x48_marks_less_ejaculate.jpg

Men's Health expert Sheldon Marks,MD, describes how orgasms change as men age.

Watch Video: Male Orgasms: How They Change (opens in a new window)

Show or hide information about video: Are Men Obsessed With Their Genitals?   Are Men Obsessed With Their Genitals?

Show or hide information about video: Testicular Self-Exam: What to Look For   Testicular Self-Exam: What to Look For

Show or hide information about video: Gym Smarts: Free Motion (Chest)

  Gym Smarts: Free Motion (Chest)

Show or hide information about video: Awesome Abs   Awesome Abs

Advertise on Fox News Channel, FOXNews.com and FOX News Radio Jobs at FOX News Channel. Internships at FOX News Channel (now accepting Fall interns).
Terms of use. Privacy Statement. For FOXNews.com comments write to foxnewsonline@foxnews.com; For FOX News Channel comments write to comments@foxnews.com
© Associated Press. All rights reserved.
SMARTMONEY ® © 2006 SmartMoney. SmartMoney is a joint publishing venture of Dow Jones & Company, Inc. and Hearst SM Partnership. All Rights Reserved.
All quotes delayed by 20 minutes. Delayed quotes provided by ComStock.
Historical prices and fundamental data provided by Hemscott, Inc.
Mutual fund data provided by Lipper. Mutual Fund NAVs are as of previous day's close.
Earnings estimates provided by Zacks Investment Research.
Upgrades and downgrades provided by Briefing.com.
This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. © 2006 FOX News Network, LLC. All rights reserved. All market data delayed 20 minutes.