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Originally published November 10 2005

Humor study finds women are more analytical in their approach to jokes

by Mike Adams, the Health Ranger, NaturalNews Editor

Dr. Allan L. Reiss of the Stanford University School of Medicine led a study that observed differences between male and female responses to humor, and the researchers believe their findings could impact the way depression is treated.



"The long trip to Mars or Venus is hardly necessary to see that men and women often perceive the world differently," a research team led by Dr. Allan L. Reiss of the Stanford University School of Medicine reports in Tuesday's issue of Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. But they were surprised when their studies of how the male and female brains react to humor showed that women were more analytical in their response, and felt more pleasure when they decided something really was funny. "Women appeared to have less expectation of a reward, which in this case was the punch line of the cartoon," said Reiss. The funnier the cartoon the more the reward center in the women's brain responded, unlike men who seemed to expect the cartoons to be funny from the beginning, the researchers said. The new insight could improve understanding of such conditions as depression, the researchers said. "The bottom line is that I think it contributes to the foundation of understanding individual differences in humans," Reiss said. These included the left prefrontal cortex, which the researchers said suggests a greater emphasis on language and executive processing, and the nucleus accumbens, or NAcc, which is part of the reward center. Arnie Cann, a psychology professor at the University of North Carolina, Charlotte, commented: "Given the findings in the current study, that women appear to use more executive functions, it could be that they are more engaged in scrutinizing the humor to decide if it fits their views on what is acceptable humor. Once they decide the humor is OK, they could be experiencing a relief-like response." That would fit in with the finding that women experience more reward from the joke, said Cann, who was not part of Reiss' research team.


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