Psychological benefits Humor style and psychological outcomes There are two
adaptive styles of humor and two
maladaptive styles of humor. Affiliative and self-enhancing humor are the two adaptive styles. The defining feature of affiliative humor is humor that is used to strengthen interpersonal relationships or ease tensions within those relationships. Self-enhancing humor involves the use of a humorous outlook on situations in life as a coping tool. In this instance, humor is used to mitigate stress without targeting others or the self in a hurtful way. The two maladaptive humor styles are aggressive humor, which uses sarcasm and other humor styles to target or put down others and self-defeating humor, which uses self-deprecating tactics for the enjoyment of others. Martin et al. (2003) found that higher levels of adaptive humor are related to psychological well-being in terms of lower levels of depression and higher self-esteem. Self-defeating humor contrasts with the adaptive types, and is associated with poorer psychological health. Building on maladaptive and adaptive styles, a study by Doingi et al. (2023-11-30) also distinguishes between two humor styles, known as light and dark. Light humor attempts to ease tension and is light-hearted and fun. Dark humor is cynical and attains to more aggressive themes, similar to maladaptive humor. In the study, light humor styles were associated with positive mental health and lower reports of depression, anxiety, and stress. On the other hand, dark humor tended to have higher links to psychological distress. These findings pointed to the fact that not all humor can function the same way for mental health. Kuiper and McHale (2009) found support for humor styles being mediators between self-evaluation and psychological well-being. Simply put, rather than humor styles directly affecting psychological well-being, they are involved with how people self-evaluate, which results in different amounts of psychological well-being. Psychological school adjustment is also associated with humor style use, with a positive correlation of affiliative humor and school adjustment and a negative correlation of self-defeating humor and school adjustment. In a study examining humor as an intervention, random assignment to a humor group, a social group, and a non-intervention control group was used. A standardized manual and booklet were used in the intervention group, and results showed that the humor group demonstrated significant increases in emotional well-being. Importantly,
self-efficacy, positive affect, optimism, and perceptions of control were found to go up while other negative measures decreased. Crawford & Caltabiano (2011) found support for humor as an intervention which may increase positive aspects of emotional well-being. Humor skills of the intervention group were targeted through the use of a manual. Humor increased several measures of well-being including self-efficacy, positive affect, optimism, and perception of control, even more than a "social group" control or a non-intervention control group. The exposure to humor and humor skills training was also found to decrease certain negative aspects of emotional well-being, including perceived stress, certain depressive symptoms, and anxiety.
Benefit vs. detriment of humor Adaptive components of humor show facilitative effects on psychological well-being. Maladaptive styles that were self-focused showed detrimental effects, while maladaptive styles that did not focus on self were unrelated to personal well-being. Self-deprecating humor is the specific component of maladaptive humor that results in decreased psychological well-being, while both of the adaptive styles of humor (affiliative and self-enhancing) are associated with positive psychological outcomes, such as greater self-esteem, lower depression and anxiety levels, and greater endorsement of
self-efficacy. It is important to note that the relevant psychological states may have preceded the humor style rather than vice versa.
Physical health benefits Humor research includes investigations into the positive benefits of humor, sense of humor, and laughter on physical health. In recent decades, humor research has seen a surge in publications in part because of
Norman Cousins and his claims that he became cured from ankylosing spondilitis due to a daily regimen which included humor and laughter. According to the U.S. Department of Veteran Affairs, laughter can produce physiological changes such as reduces hormone levels, activation of rewards pathways in the brain, and increased circulation. These effects often lead to relaxation and improved mood. Regular engagement with humor may also support physical and psychological well being in the long run.
Mental Health Benefits Humor research has positive benefits on mental health. Similarly, humor research helps people to ease their suffering from pains like anxiety and depression. Furthermore, It will add joy, ease anxiety and stress. One thing that guaranteed laughing can help ease their suffering is to laugh every day or find anything that can keep your brain from any negative contact. For instance, those negative contact can be physical, and emotional abuse. Laughter is an approach to strengthen your immune system as well as alleviate stress hormones and raise your immune cells. This includes making your brain and blood flow to be stress-free, making your mental state at ease and allowing to be more yourself. In recent years, study has demonstrated that humor is a way to help boost moods from stress and anxiety to happiness due to the fact that laughing helps to alleviate blood pressure that triggers the release of hormones and also to relieve anxiety. In addition, this is why humor plays a huge part for patient who has either depression or anxiety because it provide your physical body to be healthy and improves your mental state as well.
Humor and immune response Positive affect is theorized to influence physical health by means of the
immune system. The immune system could be influenced positively by humor in a number of ways. The possibilities include simple immunoenhancement, stress moderation, or both. The pleasant experience of humor is thought to positively influence affect so that stress is moderated. The antibody secretory immunoglobin A (S-IgA) is associated with both positive and negative affect states, with negative states decreasing effectiveness and positive states increasing effects of the antibody. Levels of immune response can be predicted by the number of desirable events (and presumably mood) which occur in preceding days to the immune assessment. However, there is also evidence that significant mood changes in either direction can induce an increase in immune response. Laughter as an overt behavior is also associated with immune response, specifically
NK cell activity, which are part of the body's immune response.
Glucocorticoids are lower in subjects who laughed while watching a humorous video, and glucocorticoids decrease NK cell activity, so humor theory posits this pathway as a possible mechanism for humor as a benefit to immune responses. However, it is unclear whether these effects on this specific immune response measurement have long-term effects with clinical significance. Using humor as a coping style is a way which these long-term effects on the immune system may be enacted. In one study, levels of S-IgA and the use of humor as a coping style were positively correlated, although the saliva sampling procedure of this study was subsequently called into question.
Humor and stress Humor is thought to play a role in the levels of
stress that people experience, both in the short-term and long-term. Watching a humorous video for 20 minutes can significantly lower stress levels, on a level comparable to 20 minutes of exercise. Since watching a video is more widely feasible than exercising for 20 minutes for large portions of the population, humor researchers hope that the acute anxiety-alleviating effects of humor can be used in a therapeutic setting. Although acute benefits of humor may be obtained, this does not guarantee any long term benefits. as well as in anecdotes such as Norman Cousins' recovery story. Though not all studies have shown support for the pain-reducing effect of humor, humor and comedy stimuli do have effects on pain tolerance and perception, particularly when pain is assessed after the humor stimuli is completed. Based on the measures of most studies examining pain, it is difficult to tell if simply consuming humorous material is sufficient for pain reduction, or if actual laughter is a necessary component. Further, some studies that used negative affect control groups found that pain thresholds also increased for people experiencing unsettling stimuli, such as a clip from a horror movie. So, humor does have an effect on pain, but it is unclear what exact behavioral requirements are necessary as well as if humor has an effect greater than other emotionally salient experiences.
Issues in humor research and physical health Even though the positive benefits of humor have been lauded by popular media and have found support among scientific research, the field of humor research also has received criticism. The scientific support for the physical benefits of humor are somewhat sparse, and the findings from the existing research have been called into question in some cases. Humor is assessed differently based on the theories which underpin the research, such as whether humor is a stable personality trait or not. Because of the non-standard measurements of humor in research, it is difficult to tell whether researchers are measuring the same thing across studies. Sense of humor, internal humor response, and laughter can all be targeted to measure humor, but are not necessarily interchangeable. Martin (2001) critiques several studies for not measuring laughter along with their self-report humor measures. Aside from theoretical issues, the methods of some key humor research was also called into question by Martin. For example, the immune response sampling techniques of some humor research may have not been reliable because of how baseline immune levels were set. According to Martin (2001), within the nine studies assessing S-IgA levels in response to humor, three did not have control groups, five had control groups which involved a documentary viewing where interest was not assessed, and only one study had a negative affect control. Proper use of control groups is among the major issues within humor research. Some experimental findings are encouraging, but no firm conclusions involving humor and physical health where controls were not used correctly can be drawn. Thus, there is only partial support of immune effects of humor.this is it.
Humor in marriage In 2002, a study was conducted on the functions of humor in close relationships. The study examined three types of humor: •
positive humor, describing positive aspects of humor, such as humor appreciation, attractiveness, and closeness •
negative humor, describing humor used to express aggression, or humor used in a manipulative manner •
instrumental humor, measuring the extent to which the person uses humor to avoid tension or tries to smooth over negative feelings Positive humor is expected to be related to intimacy and marital satisfaction. This relation was true for the wives, but not for the husbands. This suggests that whether or not husbands use positive humor, it has nothing to do with how closely they feel to their partner or their marital satisfaction. Research suggests that instrumental humor is negatively related to marital satisfaction and is an indicator of potential future marital deterioration. Results showed that husbands acknowledged using instrumental humor in their relationship in relation to demand-withdrawal, in which the wife demands and the husband withdraws. Wives, on the other hand, did not acknowledge the use of instrumental humor in this communication pattern. This seems to indicate that men more often withdraw than women, in this case, with the use of humor. Negative humor was not related to any of the other humor measure in the study. This makes sense considering that put-downs or hurtful humor does not tend to lead to laughter or humor appreciation. Negative humor items in the questionnaire given to the participants described expressing
negative emotion. Negative humor somewhat correlated with demand-withdrawal for husbands and wives. This humor can be a form of passive aggressiveness where the one using the humor is not taking responsibility for the put-down or hurtful joke, and in doing so, avoiding, or withdrawing from, conflict. ==Measuring responses to humor==