An Evolutionary Perspective on Humor: Sexual Selection or Interest Indication?
Are people who are funny more attractive? Or does being attractive lead people to be seen as funnier? The answer may depend on the underlying evolutionary function of humor. While humor has been proposed to signal “good genes”, the authors propose that humor also functions to indicate interest in so...
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sg-smu-ink.soss_research-17242016-06-03T10:23:23Z An Evolutionary Perspective on Humor: Sexual Selection or Interest Indication? LI, Norman P. GRISKEVICIUS, Vladas DURANTE, Kristina M. JONASON, Peter K. PASISZ, Derek J. AUMER, Katherine Are people who are funny more attractive? Or does being attractive lead people to be seen as funnier? The answer may depend on the underlying evolutionary function of humor. While humor has been proposed to signal “good genes”, the authors propose that humor also functions to indicate interest in social relationships—in initiating new relationships and in monitoring existing ones. Consistent with this interest indicator model, across three studies both sexes were more likely to initiate humor and to respond more positively and consider the other person to be funny when initially attracted to that person. The findings support that humor dynamics—and not just humor displays—influence romantic chemistry for both men and women, suggesting that humor can ultimately function as a strategy to initiate and monitor social relationships. 2009-07-01T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soss_research/725 info:doi/10.1177/0146167209334786 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/soss_research/article/1724/viewcontent/EvolutionalPerspectiveHumor_2009.pdf http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ Research Collection School of Social Sciences eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University humor physical attractiveness social relationships sexual selection Gender and Sexuality Personality and Social Contexts Social Psychology |
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humor physical attractiveness social relationships sexual selection Gender and Sexuality Personality and Social Contexts Social Psychology LI, Norman P. GRISKEVICIUS, Vladas DURANTE, Kristina M. JONASON, Peter K. PASISZ, Derek J. AUMER, Katherine An Evolutionary Perspective on Humor: Sexual Selection or Interest Indication? |
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Are people who are funny more attractive? Or does being attractive lead people to be seen as funnier? The answer may depend on the underlying evolutionary function of humor. While humor has been proposed to signal “good genes”, the authors propose that humor also functions to indicate interest in social relationships—in initiating new relationships and in monitoring existing ones. Consistent with this interest indicator model, across three studies both sexes were more likely to initiate humor and to respond more positively and consider the other person to be funny when initially attracted to that person. The findings support that humor dynamics—and not just humor displays—influence romantic chemistry for both men and women, suggesting that humor can ultimately function as a strategy to initiate and monitor social relationships. |
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text |
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LI, Norman P. GRISKEVICIUS, Vladas DURANTE, Kristina M. JONASON, Peter K. PASISZ, Derek J. AUMER, Katherine |
author_facet |
LI, Norman P. GRISKEVICIUS, Vladas DURANTE, Kristina M. JONASON, Peter K. PASISZ, Derek J. AUMER, Katherine |
author_sort |
LI, Norman P. |
title |
An Evolutionary Perspective on Humor: Sexual Selection or Interest Indication? |
title_short |
An Evolutionary Perspective on Humor: Sexual Selection or Interest Indication? |
title_full |
An Evolutionary Perspective on Humor: Sexual Selection or Interest Indication? |
title_fullStr |
An Evolutionary Perspective on Humor: Sexual Selection or Interest Indication? |
title_full_unstemmed |
An Evolutionary Perspective on Humor: Sexual Selection or Interest Indication? |
title_sort |
evolutionary perspective on humor: sexual selection or interest indication? |
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Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University |
publishDate |
2009 |
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https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soss_research/725 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/soss_research/article/1724/viewcontent/EvolutionalPerspectiveHumor_2009.pdf |
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