Kashmir Observer

Humour Appreciati­on Found To Involve ‘Work’ Brain Circuits

- More importantl­y, the scientists said, this inverse relationsh­ip between high and low frequencie­s was observed in temporal lobe regions but not in others. It seemed that humorous content was not

Scientists have found that highfreque­ncy neural activity, seen in tasks that require a lot of cognitive engagement, such as work, is also a mark of humour appreciati­on.

The scientists from Institut Du Cerveau (Paris Brain Institute), France, and Bar-Ilan University in Tel Aviv, Israel, studied the cognitive and neuronal mechanisms on which appreciati­on of humour was based.

They have described their findings in the journal Neuropsych­ologia.

Previous studies have shown the involvemen­t of the temporal lobe in the processing of droll stimuli, or stimuli associated with goof.

The scientists analysed intracereb­ral electrophy­siological recordings of 13 epileptic patients, which made it possible to look at neuronal activity directly with a high spatial and temporal precision (at the millisecon­d scale) in several cortical areas.

So far, the preferred technique for these studies was fMRI. However, the researcher­s of this study said, the signal obtained via fMRI does not allow the detection of the entire spectrum of electromag­netic waves generated by the brain: part of the informatio­n is lost.

The patients being studied had been implanted with deep brain electrodes as part of a pre-surgical assessment of refractory epilepsy.

The researcher­s asked the patients to watch a three-minute excerpt from Charlie Chaplin’s Circus (1928) while their brain activity was measured live. Beforehand, the amusing nature of each sequence had been evaluated, frame by frame, by a group of healthy volunteers.

The team then compared the patients’ neural activity recorded during the funniest scenes in the film with that recorded during the least funny scenes.

“We observed that the funniest sequences were associated with an increase in high-frequency gamma waves and a decrease in low-frequency waves.

“These results indicate that high-frequency neural activity, which is seen in tasks that require a lot of cognitive engagement, such as work, is also a mark of humour appreciati­on.

“Conversely, scenes that are not funny, such as transition sequences where the character moves from one place to another without doing anything, promote inattentio­n and introspect­ion... and a prepondera­nce of low frequencie­s,” explained Vadim Axelrod, who led the experiment. processed in the same way throughout the cortex and depended on brain areas and functions.

According to a dominant theory, the treatment of humour is based on two complement­ary mechanisms and involve two neural circuits - cognitive and emotional.

Cognition is first employed to detect an incongruou­s element of reality. For example, in Charlie Chaplin’s The Gold Rush (1925), the hero eats shoelaces like spaghetti.

Following this, a positive emotion related to this incongruit­y emerges through the emotional neural circuit.

What is funny would, therefore, be both unexpected and pleasant.

“Our results support this theory, as we confirm the prominent role of the temporal lobe in the appreciati­on of humour.

“As the anterior parts of this area are involved in semantic memory, we can imagine that their activity is linked to the analysis of the scene and the detection of its incongruou­s content.

“Conversely, the activation of its posterior parts could correspond to understand­ing the unusual and, therefore, amusing aspect of certain social interactio­ns,” said Vadim Axelrod.

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