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Although
laughing is a common activity, the brain's role in laughter is still being
researched.
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Laughter is a physical experience. While there is often an awareness of the cause of our laughter, this awareness usually comes after the laughter itself. The role of the brain in laughter is one that is still not fully understood although there is ongoing research in this area.
Research at the
College of William and Mary in Williamsburg Virginia has traced the pattern
of brainwave activity in response to a joke.
EEG's were taken while subjects
were presented with humorous material. The pattern that was noticed was:
1. The left side of the
cortex analysed the words and
structure of the material.
2. The
frontal lobe which is involved
in social emotional responses springs into action
3. The right hemisphere of the cortex carries out the intellectual analysis
required to understand the joke.
4. Brainwave activity then spreads to the sensory processing area of the
occipital lobe.
5. Stimulation of the motor sections to bring about the physical response.
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"So
you mean that laughter is controlled by many different parts of my brain?"
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So, unlike emotional responses, which are seen to be confined to specific areas of the brain, responses to humorous material and the reaction of laughter take place in many regions of the brain.
Prathiba Shammi,
a
neuropsychologist
has also undertaken some research into the area of the relationship between
laughter and the brain. The research was part of a joint study by the University
of Toronto and Baycrest Centre for Geriatric Care in Toronto. Follow
this link to learn more about this research.
The study involved examining the response to humour by subjects who had experienced brain damage. Patients with damage to the right frontal lobe were unable to identify an ending to a story that turned it in to a joke. While these patients had normal reasoning capacity it seemed that their sense of humor was impaired in some way.
The right frontal lobe is the part of the brain that brings together information from the cognitive parts of the brain with the emotional parts. It is the integration of the emotional with the cognitive that is important in this case.
One other role
the brain plays in the experience of laughter is in the release of
hormones and
neurotransmitters.
Laughter has been shown to cause changes in the
autonomic nervous system
and to alter stress hormones and neurotransmitter levels.
One early suggestion
was that a good laugh could prompt the brain to block the manufacture of
immune suppressors such as
cortisone or speed up the
production of
immune enhancers such as beta-endorphins.
We will examine these further in the next section.