Skip to content

Humor develops from aggression caused by male hormones

Humour appears to develop from aggression caused by male hormones, according to a study published in this week’s Christmas issue of the BMJ.

Professor Sam Shuster conducted a year long study observing how people reacted to him as he unicycled through the streets of Newcastle upon Tyne. What began as a hobby turned into an observational study after he realized that the huge number of stereotypical and predictable responses he received must be indicative of an underlying biological phenomenon.

The study was an observation of people’s reactions to a sudden unexpected exposure to a new phenomenon - in this case unicycling, which at the time few had seen. He documented the responses of over 400 individuals, and observed the responses of many others.

Over 90% of people responded physically, for example with an exaggerated stare or a wave. Almost half responded verbally – more men than women. Here, says Professor Shuster, the sex difference was striking. 95% of adult women were praising, encouraging or showed concern. There were very few comic or snide remarks. In contrast, only 25% of adult men responded as did the women, for example, by praise or encouragement; instead 75% attempted comedy, often snide or combative as an intended put-down.

Equally striking, he says, was the repetitive and predictable nature of the comments from men; two thirds of their ‘comic’ responses referred to the number of wheels - “Lost your wheel?”, for example.

Professor Shuster also noticed the male response differed markedly with age, moving from curiosity in childhood (years 5-12) – the same reaction as young girls, - to physical and verbal aggression in boys aged 11-13 who often tried to get him to fall off the unicycle.

Responses became more verbal during the later teens, turning into disparaging ‘jokes’ or mocking songs. This then evolved into adult male humour – characterized by repetitive, humorous verbal put-downs concealing a latent aggression. Young men in cars were particularly aggressive. Professor Shuster notes that this is the age when men are at the peak of their virility. The ‘jokes’ were lost with age as older men responded more neutrally and amicably with few attempts at a jovial put-down.

The female response by contrast, was subdued during puberty and late teens – normally either apparent indifference or minimal approval. It then evolved into the laudatory and concerned adult female response.

The idea that unicycling is intrinsically funny does not explain the findings, says Professor Shuster, particularly the repetitiveness, evolution and sex differences. Genetics may explain the sex difference but not the waxing and waning of the male response.

He says the simplest explanation for this change is the effect of male hormones such as testosterone, known collectively as androgens, which induce virility in men.

Particularly interesting for the evolution of humour is, he says, the observations that initial aggressive intent seems to become channeled into a verbal response which pushes it into a contrived, but more subtle and sophisticated joke, so the aggression is hidden by wit. The two then eventually split as the wit takes on an independent life of its own.

From http://www.bma.org

December 21, 2007

Comments

science humor

December 22, 2007 by Norm Sperling (not verified), 1 year 48 weeks ago
Comment id: 26557

"Funniest Scientific T-Shirt" Contest Extended to December 31st

The Journal of Irreproducible Results (which San Shuster contributes to) invites entries for anything from a T-shirt, from any branch of science, medicine, or engineering, from any source. Nothing rated "X", please. Tell the source of the T-shirt (as much as known). Recollections of old T-shirts are acceptable. You do not have to send the T-shirts themselves; sketches or written descriptions are OK. Photos are better, but will be judged for the funniness of the T-shirt, not the figure of its wearer.

Wishful thinking category: We also invite entries for "Ought to be on a T".

Entrants must be from Earth or its immediate vicinity. JIR's judging, however arbitrary and capricious, will be final. Winners will be featured in the magazine, anthologies, and www.jir.com, and receive a 3-year subscription.

Entries must be received on paper (or cloth) at JIR\T, 413 Poinsettia Avenue, San Mateo, California 94403, by December 31, 2007.

Best wishes,
Norm Sperling, Editor
nsperling@california.com

Really?

December 21, 2007 by Craig Huey (not verified), 1 year 48 weeks ago
Comment id: 26545

Wouldn't it be more probable that humor is a result of social programming that condemns unwarranted aggression? The men of mating age would most likely see the new phenomenon as a challenge to their status because the response from women was mostly positive and supportive. The humor might have been a socially acceptable means of issuing a challenge in an openly hostile manner to a competing male who has surprised them by introducing a new means of attracting female attention. If the same study were performed by a female I think you would see a difference in reaction based on gender.

Post new comment



About us

Science Blog was started in August 2002. It lives, breathes and eats press releases from research organizations around the globe. Most of what you read here are press releases from the outfits named in the stories themselves. Got a news story you think belongs here? Let's talk. The other half of the equation is blog posts from readers like you. So if you have an interest in science, please register and join others like you in an ongoing, vibrant dialog about what makes the world tick. Meantime, please take a minute to read our Privacy Policy and Site Disclaimer.