The Independent

That was too corny, dad – next time, try opening a can

Canned laughter makes ‘dad jokes’ funnier, scientists find

- PHOEBE WESTON SCIENCE CORRESPOND­ENT

Adding canned laughter to the punchline of “dad jokes” makes them seem funnier, a study has revealed.

Canned laughter is often used in sitcoms to signpost witticisms and make people feel they are part of an audience.

Research suggests that using this device, first introduced in the Sixties and Seventies, makes scriptwrit­ers’

efforts more likely to elicit a chuckle from those watching in real life.

Not only does hearing laughter make the joke appear funnier, but the more spontaneou­s it is the more amusing the punchline becomes, say the University College London researcher­s. This suggests there is inherent joy in hearing a natural laugh.

Lead researcher Sophie Scott said: “What this study shows is that adding laughter to a joke increases the humour value, no matter how funny or unfunny the joke is. This has been adopted in shows like Friends, which are recorded in front of an audience, with the real laughter amplified during editing for particular jokes that had been well received.”

Researcher­s asked people to rate how funny they found 40 jokes which were accompanie­d by no laughter, short canned (recorded) laughter and short spontaneou­s (or real-life) laughter. The jokes – which were read out by a profession­al comedian – were intentiona­lly cringewort­hy.

They included the following rib-ticklers:

What does a dinosaur use to pay the bills? Tyrannosau­rus cheques

What’s orange and sounds like a parrot? A carrot

What do you call a man with a spade on his head? Doug

Scientists establishe­d baseline ratings of how funny the jokes were perceived to be using a scale from one (not funny) to seven (hilarious), according to the paper published in Current Biology. They then presented the jokes to 48 people who were considered neurotypic­al and 24 individual­s who had autism. Both groups gave higher funniness ratings for jokes paired with canned laughter than with no laughter at all. Jokes accompanie­d by spontaneou­s laughter rated highest of all.

Professor Scott said: “Historical­ly, TV and radio programmes were always recorded in front of a live studio audience: this allowed those watching and listening to feel part of the performanc­e. However, as the audience reaction was natural, certain ‘comedy’ programmes which weren’t overtly funny wouldn’t get a long laugh, so TV and radio producers increasing­ly added canned laughter to prompt an audience reaction.”

The only difference between the groups was that those with autism gave all the 40 dad jokes an increased funniness rating when laughter was added. The difference could be down to the fact that neurotypic­al adults think “dad jokes” are uncool or childish and as a result may choose not to laugh. Scientists say this suggests that comedy and laughter are more accessible to people with autism than first thought.

In children, previous research has shown that enjoyment of a cartoon is typically enhanced by laughter tracks, although autistic children do not respond in the same way. Researcher­s now want to find out the ways in which laughter influences brain activity in response to jokes.

Professor Scott said: “We want to do a brain-scanning study so we can see how the laughter influences joke perception in the brain, and whether this is the same for everyone.”

 ?? (Getty) ?? ‘Friends’, recorded in front of an audience, had laughs amplified during editing
(Getty) ‘Friends’, recorded in front of an audience, had laughs amplified during editing

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