5. Who are these guys?
Peter McGraw is an associate
professor of marketing and psychology
at the University of Colorado Boulder.
He directs the Humor Research Lab
(aka HuRL) and co-authored
The Humor Code.
Caleb Warren is an assistant
professor of marketing at Texas A&M,
where he studies what makes
things funny and what makes
things cool.
6. Definition
Humor is a psychological
response characterized by:
• an emotion - amusement
• a judgment – that is funny
• a behavior - laughter
7. Rewards
Humor is:
- attractive
- pleasurable
- entertaining
"
Humor benefits:
- relationships (Wanted:
Good Sense of Humor )
- coping
- creativity
- eases criticism
8. Humor can hurt people (e.g., bullying)
Failed humor attempts can create negative emotions
And Gilbert Gottfried loses his job as the Aflac duck.
Risks
9. Are you a nerd? Read a few of our papers: #1, #2, and #3,
and check out the paper by Thomas Veatch that inspired us.
The Benign Violation Theory
10. Violations threatens a person’s well-being,
identity, or normative belief structure
They likely originated as threats to physical
well-being, but because of evolution, now
include violations of culture, language, and logic.
Violation condition
11. Humorists see
violations in comedy
“Comedy is a
man in trouble.” "
- Jerry Lewis
“The secret source of humor
is not joy but sorrow; there
is no humor in heaven.”"
- Mark Twain
“Humor
is reason
gone mad.”
- Groucho Marx
12. Threats to physical well-being are a nearly universal
source of humor. Even babies and non-human animals
laugh when physically threatened in a safe and playful
manner.
Physical violations
13. Threats to a person or a group of people’s pride,
dignity, or sense of self.
Identity violations
14. Thing that breaks a social or cultural norm (given
the person generally accepts the norm as valid)
“Man marries pillow”
Cultural violations
15. Breaking a communication or linguistic norm (e.g.,
sarcasm, unusual accents, grammar errors, etc.)
Communication violations
17. In order to be humorous, a violation needs
to seem acceptable, okay, or sensible.
Benign condition
18. m
It is easier to see a violation as benign if there are
no harmful consequences (yet).
Benign: Harmless
19. m
It is easier to see a violation as benign if it happened a
long time ago, afflicts someone else, or isn’t real.
Hypothetical violation
Benign: Distance
20. m
It is easier to see a violation as benign if the behavior
follows another norm, custom, or rule.
More benign
Benign: Alternative norm
Less benign
21. m
It is easier to see a violation as benign if you personally
don’t care about the person or the norm that the
violation threatens.
More benign
(for Americans)
Benign: Commitment
Less benign
(for Americans)
22. In order to experience humor, people have to see both
the violation and benign interpretations simultaneously.
Simultaneity
23. Why this is funny
(to some people)
Punching your mom is a violation, but it is benign because
it is coming from a place of love (plus a kid wrote it).
24. Wrong use of “best pick up line,” but
okay because it is technically correct.
Why this is funny
(to some people)
25. Why this is funny
(to some people)
It’s wrong to clean your mother’s vagina, but
it’s okay because the phone said it by accident.
26. Is a benign violation when
done by someone you trust.
Is purely benign when you
try to tickle yourself.
Is purely a violation when
a creepy stranger tickles you.
Case:
Tickling
27. Sarcasm involves
saying one thing but
meaning the opposite,
thus violating a
common
conversational norm.
When successful, the
person making the
comment is able to
communicate a benign
intention through other
cues like an obviously
exaggerated tone.
Case:
Sarcasm
28. Slapstick creates painful
circumstances (violation) that
are not painful(benign), at
least for the observer.
The victim is not actually hurt
(it is often just an act) or the
viewer does not care
about the victim’s
well-being (or both).
Case:
Slapstick
29. Realizing that something that seems threatening is
actually okay transforms a potentially negative
experience into a positive one (akin to relief).
Why humor is
a positive experience
30. Why we laugh
Laughter likely originated as a primitive form of
communication signaling that an apparent threat
is benign.
32. m
Situations that fail to be funny either depict a violation
that is not benign, or depict a benign situation that has
no violation.
Purely benign
(not funny – boring)
Purely a violation
(not funny – offensive)
How humor attempts fail
33. Benign violations depend on physical vulnerabilities,
identity, values, culture, language, and understanding
of logic.
A baby farting at a fancy dinner is
normal to the baby, hilarious to
the rambunctious older brother,
and embarrassing to the mother
who wants to make a good
impression on others.
Individual &
cultural differences
35. JudgedMoreHumorous(%)
Greater distance
reduces the threat of a
severe violation
helping make it a
benign violation.
But greater distance
also removes the
threat of a mild
violation, making
it purely benign.
Time doesn’t make
everything funnier
38. Because violations underlie humor,
it can be used to bully and exclude people.
“Comedy is a man in trouble. – Jerry Lewis
The dark side of comedy
39. People facing great suffering, from Holocaust victims
to prisoners of war, found humor to be an important
way to cope.
Finding a way to laugh at your troubles by
transforming violations into benign violations
can help you feel better.
"Humor does not diminish the pain - it makes
the space around it get bigger.“ - Allen Klein
The coping benefits of comedy
40. Visit the Humor Research Lab’s
benign violation theory
page.
Watch a video - or two
- or three
Check out:
The Humor Code:
A Global Search for
What Makes Things Funny
Want to learn more?
41. • Sales"
• Social media"
• Customer service"
• Training"
• Innovation"
• Negotiations"
• Employee engagement"
• Change management"
Coming soon:
Applications to business