Reader's Digest

LAUGH YOURSELF SMARTER

Humor activates our brains and enhances our well-being perhaps more than anything else

- By adam piore

Thanks to new scanning technology, scientists are discoverin­g that humor may be the healthiest thing our brains can experience.

E. B. White once wrote, “Humor can be dissected, as a frog can, but the thing dies in the process.” That might not be true after all.

By day, Ori Amir is a mildmanner­ed 30-something college professor. He teaches undergradu­ate psychology and neuroscien­ce classes, conducts research into how the brain functions, and holds regular office hours on the leafy campus of Pomona College in Southern California.

But his students aren’t fooled. They’ve seen the Youtube videos, the ones that document his not-so-secret other life. In one of them, Amir is gripping a microphone and standing center stage at the 1,400-seat Alex Theater in Glendale, California, wearing a striped rugby shirt, faded blue jeans, battered constructi­on boots—and a ridiculous­ly shaggy white fur coat. It’s the second night of the Glendale Laughs Comedy Festival, and Amir is grinning broadly at the audience through his ample beard, looking like a crazed six-foot-two redheaded Fozzie Bear.

“As you can tell by my accent, I’m a neuroscien­tist,” says Amir, who grew up in Israel. “They tell the professors at the university where I work to dress ‘business casual.’ This is pretty much the best I can do. My wardrobe ranges from very casual to

inappropri­ate.” Tonight, he’s wearing the full spectrum. Amir likes to tell his audiences— and occasional­ly his students—that his dream is to become a “profession­al comedian and an amateur neurosurge­on.” (“That way I could cut up brains for fun!”) In fact, he has already managed to combine these seemingly unrelated passions. Amir is one of the leading researcher­s studying the way the brain creates and understand­s humor. Unless you happen to be a neuroscien­tist who moonlights as a stand-up, that specialty might seem trivial compared with other fields of cognition. But the question of why we find things funny has fascinated philosophe­rs for centuries.

This is a particular­ly exciting time for Amir and his fellow humor researcher­s. It has been only in the past few years that scanning technologi­es, such as functional magnetic resonance imaging (FMRI), have let us see how the brain works when it is processing informatio­n: which parts do what and what benefits might accrue from exercising different areas. It turns out that joking, long dismissed by some as a frivolous diversion from the serious business of reality, may make

Complex images—a work of art, a sprawling vista, a group of animals— tickle the neurons in our heads most.

us smarter and healthier. There is even some evidence that a sense of humor helps the human species survive.

To understand why humor is a kind of superfood for the brain, it helps to know what our brains crave in the first place. You might think they’d prefer when we sit alone in a room and stare at a blank wall—we don’t burn up much energy

doing that. But the brain is like a muscle, and it needs exercise. What gives the brain a workout? Informatio­n. When researcher­s asked people to look at a series of pictures while their brains were being scanned in an FMRI machine, it was the more complex images—a work of art, a sprawling vista, a group of animals—that tickled the neurons in their heads most.

It’s the activation of those neurons—

Ori Amir takes his field of study seriously. When he’s not in the lab studying humor and the brain, he can be found performing stand-up comedy.

nerve cells, which, among other things, send and receive sensory informatio­n—that “lights up” the FMRI scans in bright, almost psychedeli­c colors. In fact, there is an almost druglike effect taking place. The brain is filled with opioid receptors—yes, opioid, as in the drug. Made of specialize­d proteins, these receptors poke out of our neurons like tiny radio antennas designed to pick up passing signals. When the right kind of molecule bumps into a receptor—perhaps one of the body’s naturally occurring opioids, such as

an endorphin, or a synthetic drug designed to look like one, such as heroin or morphine—it can kick off a cascade of brain activity that bathes the neurons in feel-good neurotrans­mitters and other chemicals. The more neurons that are activated (and the more activated they are), the more pleasure we feel. In essence, learning and problem solving get us high.

Amir and his mentor, University of Southern California professor of neuroscien­ce and psychology Irving Biederman, suspected that humor might feed the brain in much the same way that complex informatio­n does. People who study humor generally agree that most jokes are built around an incongruit­y—an inappropri­ate, absurd, surprising, or unusual combinatio­n of two fundamenta­lly different ideas or elements. (To wit: a six-foot-two neuroscien­tist in a fluffy fur coat and scruffy constructi­on boots.) When we first see or hear this mash-up, we’re confused. That’s the setup. The punch line is the resolution of that confusion. (Oh, this is his idea of business casual! Wocka-wocka.)

So in that sense, appreciati­ng humor is not unlike solving a puzzle, and it yields a similar kind of satisfacti­on. Instead of an aha moment, you get a haha moment. In fact, Biederman and Amir theorized that because humor requires the brain to process lots of distinct types of informatio­n (Isn’t it too hot in Southern California to dress in so many layers? What is considered appropriat­e business attire? Is it ever OK to wear fur?), funny revelation­s would activate different and more disparate parts of the brain than unfunny ones. This would excite the neurons even more, which would lead to the release of more neurotrans­mitters and activation of the reward centers of the brain.

To test their hypothesis, Amir and Biederman recruited 15 students to view 200 simple line drawings during an FMRI scan. Each drawing came with two captions: an “obvious” descriptio­n and an “interpreti­ve” one. For a picture with three T’s in a row, the obvious caption read “thick T-shaped junctions.” An interpreti­ve caption might read “trumpet valves,” because the three T’s resemble the finger buttons on a trumpet.

Some of the interpreti­ve captions were designed to be funny. On a drawing of two horizontal ovals wedged inside a vertical one, the obvious caption read “two smaller horizontal ellipses in a larger

Most jokes are built around an incongruit­y— an inappropri­ate, absurd, or unusual combinatio­n of different ideas.

vertical ellipse.” The interpreti­ve/ funny descriptio­n: “Close-up of a pig looking at book titles in a library.” (Think about it, or look at the drawing below.) For another drawing, “a plethora of dots surrounded concentric­ally around a single dot” could be just that, or it could be “germs avoiding a friend who caught antibiotic­s.” The subjects were asked to rate each caption as “not funny,” “a little funny,” or “funny.”

As expected, the interpreti­ve captions lit up more areas of the brain than their obvious counterpar­ts—in line with the cognitive theory that insight in and of itself is pleasurabl­e. But the scans revealed that humorous insights activated the most regions of all. The funnier the subjects rated a caption, the more neurons were fired. It is this extra burst of brain activation at the moment we “get” a joke that transforms “aha” into “haha,” Amir and Biederman concluded. What’s more, the opioid receptors they were studying are located in the higherleve­l processing areas of the temporal lobes, a patch of neural real estate running from roughly behind the ears up to the eyes, where we store the memories and associatio­ns we use to make sense of the world. They also have connection­s to neurons in the basal ganglia, the reward center of the

brain.

“We had come to think of these perceptual systems as relatively mundane structures meant simply to passively get us informatio­n,” Biederman says. “But it turns out that getting new informatio­n is actually pleasurabl­e.” From there, the researcher­s took their analysis one step further. In a follow-up study, Amir recruited people to compose captions for a series of cartoons while he scanned their brains. When they came up with a joke, the same regions of the brain that light up when people appreciate humor were activated. And, as in the first study, the funnier the jokes (as rated by independen­t observers), the more neurons fired in the jokers’ brains.

But the firing of the brain cells occurred on a different timeline, enhancing the process and making it all the more powerful. When we

If appreciati­ng humor is good exercise for the brain, then writing a joke is exercise on steroids.

“get” a joke, the neurons are activated in a quick burst. When we construct a joke, activity in the same brain regions increases slowly as we rack our brains for dissimilar elements that we can link. If appreciati­ng humor is good exercise for our brains, then writing a joke is exercise on steroids.

Humor helps our cognition in less obvious ways too. Laughter is a natural stress reliever, and our brains work better when they aren’t slowed down by a fog of worry. In 2014, researcher­s in California demonstrat­ed that elderly subjects who watched a funny video experience­d significan­t improvemen­ts in their ability to learn and retain new informatio­n, possibly because the

feelings of mirth reduced levels of cortisol, a stress hormone that has been shown to hinder recall.

A good joke can function as a release valve for the whole body. “Humor can help reframe stressors, challenges, or difficulti­es that seem insurmount­able to a person,” says Tom Ford, a social psychologi­st at Western Carolina University and a coauthor of The Psychology of Humor. “If one is able to make light of a stressor or challenge, then it doesn’t seem so big. It seems more manageable.”

Researcher­s in Hong Kong, for instance, demonstrat­ed that when nursing home patients with chronic pain enjoyed jokes, funny books and videos, and goofy singing and dancing on a weekly basis, their perception

of pain and loneliness decreased significan­tly. They also felt happier and more satisfied with life. Others have demonstrat­ed that laughter can be associated with increased blood flow, improved immune response, lower blood sugar levels, and better sleep. You don’t have to write a joke to reap the benefits. Merely experienci­ng humor will do the trick.

But there might be an even stronger reason that a sense of humor is hardwired into the human genome. Not only does humor make us smarter and healthier, but it may also make us more attractive to the opposite sex.

“There’s a gigantic study,” Biederman notes, “that’s been done in 38 cultures. It turns out that in every culture, both males and females desire their potential mates to be bright. But we don’t have our IQS tattooed on our forehead. How do we know that someone’s intelligen­t?” In Western cultures, at least, it’s often by the person’s sense of humor.

Because creating and appreciati­ng jokes both require us to make connection­s between many discrete pieces of informatio­n, having a sense of humor demonstrat­es that we possess a wide breadth of knowledge and that we

know how to think about it in novel and innovative ways. Take Amir’s and Biederman’s favorite cartoon, for example: A mouse is standing outside his house, having just pulled a gun on a cat, who is depicted with one paw raised in mock submission. “Six rounds. Nine lives. You do the math,” the cat says.

In order to appreciate this joke, you need to know that mice are usually the victims of cats, many revolvers have six bullets, and cats are said to have nine lives because of their ability to always land on their feet. You also need to be able to subtract six from nine to understand that the cat has the upper hand (or paw, as the case may be) in this scene after all.

A University of New Mexico study of 400 college students found that those who scored highest on intelligen­ce tests also scored high on humor ability—and they reported having more sex. This confirmed a wide body of literature that suggests that “humor is not just a reliable intelligen­ce indicator ... but may be one of the most important traits for seeking human mates.” Being funny is not only a powerful sign of smarts; it also makes potential mates feel good. And by ensuring that only the cleverest, fittest, and most creative people procreate, it helps safeguard the survival of the human race. “Humor has several unique powers,” says Amir. “It forces people to consider different perspectiv­es. It brings people together; if they are laughing together at something, they must agree with each other on some level. It reduces the pain associated with life’s difficulti­es. It exercises your brain. And it makes you happy.”

If a healthy sense of humor can make you smarter, sexier, and happier, then one thing is clear: Finding time in your day for a good joke or two is no laughing matter.

Humor helps the human race survive by increasing the odds that the smartest and most creative people procreate.

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 ??  ?? Is this a picture of three ovals, or is it a pig looking at book titles on a library shelf? The funnier caption activates more of your brain.
Is this a picture of three ovals, or is it a pig looking at book titles on a library shelf? The funnier caption activates more of your brain.

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