Why Do We Laugh?

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[MUSIC]

So Einstein finally finished that theory about space he's been working on. It's about time, too. Right?

[laughter]

Any of you know how to throw a space party? I guess you just planet!

[laughter]

Celebrity gossip! Oxygen and magnesium are dating. O-Mg!

[laughter]

On the surface, laughter appears to be an unconscious, instantaneous reaction to something

that pleases us rather than displeases us, but laughter is actually much more complicated

than that, and it has surprisingly little to do with the human sense of humor. Now,

I promise for the rest of this video, I'm only going to make science punsperiodically.

[MUSIC]

Laughter is one of those rare and beautiful things shared by people all over Earth, a

human experience that transcends borders of language, geography, and lifestyle.

No one has to teach us to laugh, and people everywhere do it pretty much the same way.

But it’s also really, really strange. [laughing]

Squishing up your face and gnashing your teeth at other people while uncontrollably grunting

and hyperventilating, that’s a very weird thing to do. Youre weird. Were all weird.

Laughing isn’t that different from breathing. We have incredibly fine muscle control over

how we let out breath, it’s what lets us make the intricate and detailed vocal noises

that we call speech.

But while we write out laughter with ha ha ha, it’s not really something we speak.

If I actually laughed likeHA HA HAthen laughter would be even weirder than it

already is, and like I said, plenty weird.

Laughing is this sort ofheh heh hehpercussive air squeezing, maybe the simplest

vocal noise we can make. If we think of talking like playing human bagpipes, constant pressure

and intricate control, then laughing like one of those silly little horns.

Think humans are the only animals that laugh? Not by a long shot. Primates do it, dogs do

a form of laughter, even rats do it. Yes, even rats. The folks from Radiolab got it

on tape.

[sound of rat "laughing"]

In animals, sometimes it’s associated with tickling, sometimes with play, but laughing

is almost always social.

Same goes for us. Humans laugh for a number of reasons, but most of the time it has nothing

to with funny business. Researchers like Robert Provine have found, after listening to hundreds

of people laugh in social situations, less than 1 in 5 chuckles are in response to humor,

and when a joke is involved, the person telling it is far more likely to be the one laughing.

Were also 30 times more likely to laugh with other people around than if were are

alone.

If laughter is a form of communication, then what are we trying to say?

We do it to communicate understanding, to show we like and accept others, to diffuse

awkward situations, and yes, sometimes even to be mean.

On January 30, 1962, at a boarding school in Tanzania, three young girls started giggling.

This laughter spread throughout the school, uncontrollably, and ultimately 95 students

experienced laughing fits- one even laughed for 16 days straight.

As a result of thisomuneepothe school was temporarily closed, but the laughing spread

to the girls home villages, eventually this side-splitting mystery infected hundreds of

people before dying out as suddenly as it began.

Like yawning, laughter is surprisingly contagious, kind of like a behavioral germ. Were much

more likely to catch laughter from people we know, which just goes to show how much

more it is about bonding than humor.

In close relationships, couples who use laughter to cope with stressful situations tend to

stay together longer and report higher satisfaction. Laughing apparently helps us love.

"Laughing exercise for the heart and mind. What you can do? Just laugh. Very easy. Don't

feel shy!"

[laughter]

Laughter is amazingly hard to fake, and our brains are really good at telling the difference.

Listen to these clips and see if you can tell which one is real and which one is fake.

[laughter]

Younger people are less able to tell real laughter from fake laughter, but they are

more susceptible to contagious laughter, which is maybe why it’s easy to make a baby do

this.

[laughter]

But if we are so good at telling real from fake laughter, and laughter is ultimately

a form of communication, then why do we laugh at movies?

[laughter]

In the higher-order parts of our brain, were consciously aware that the actors we are watching are not present with

us, and that they are pretending.

Maybe the fact that we can laugh at what we know to be fake is the ultimate case of suspending

our disbelief, when we watch something on a screen, we really do believe the people

are right there with us, and that we know them, at least in some way.

Maybe we should all try and laugh more, and with each other. It’s not only a way to

feel better, but feel better together.

Stay curious.