3 Takeaways - Why We Laugh: The Many Shapes and Forms of Laughter with Neuroscientist Sophie Scott (#99)
Episode Date: June 28, 2022Laughter, it turns out, is not primarily a response to humor. Neuroscientist Sophie Scott CBE shares why we laugh, how it works and the many sins it covers. We explore how laughter bonds us, where it... breaks us, and the ways we use it. We should all bring a greater sense of understanding and intention to our laughter. Sophie Scott is a neuroscientist and professor at UCL whose research focuses on the science of laughter. Â
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Welcome to the Three Takeaways podcast, which features short, memorable conversations with the world's best thinkers, business leaders, writers, politicians, scientists, and other newsmakers.
Each episode ends with the three key takeaways that person has learned over their lives and their careers.
And now your host and board member of schools at Harvard, Princeton, and Columbia, Lynn Thoman.
Hi, everyone. It's Lynn Thoman. Welcome to another
episode. Today, I'm excited to be with neuroscientist Sophie Scott. She studies the
science of laughter. It turns out that everything we think we know about laughter is wrong.
Laughter is not even primarily a response to humor. I'm excited to learn more. Welcome,
Sophie, and thanks so much for our
conversation today. Hello, and thank you very much for inviting me. Why is laughter worth taking
seriously? I think because it's probably one of the more important emotional expressions that we
use socially. If you ask people about what makes them laugh, they'll talk about comedy and
jokes and humor. But if you actually look at people, what they do is they laugh when they're
in company. Laughter is a social behavior. You are 30, three zero times more likely to laugh if
there's somebody else with you than if you're on your own. And you'll laugh more if you know those
people and you'll laugh more if you like those people. And that's why you shouldn't think of it
as an expression of amusement, actually, because most of the time laughter has got nothing whatsoever to do with jokes.
It's a social joy. It's a joy that you experience when you're with other people.
So I think you can think of laughter as being an expression of a sort of playful,
socially delightful joy. It's something you experience when you're with other people.
Now that might be on a screen or it might be in real life, but there has to be that sense of a social connection for it to start happening. It's
possible to laugh on your own. It's just much less likely. So I think from that perspective,
it's really worth valuing laughter and taking laughter seriously because it's an emotion.
It's an emotional expression, but it's one that lives in social interactions. And that makes it very, very interesting because unlike emotions like, say, fear and disgust or surprise.
I was once walking down the street and slipped on some ice.
I didn't completely fall over, but I slipped enough.
I completely produced an involuntary vocalization of surprise.
Oh, like that. Absolutely involuntary.
And there's nothing social about that at all
that was just an emotion yeah i was just being driven off because i don't know quite where this
is going but something's happening which laughter doesn't work that way laughter primarily as i say
you do find that people laugh when they're on their own but it's much much less likely it is
primarily happening in these social interactions and it's happening in a highly communicative way
as well as a sort of basic emotional expression way. So people will use laughter to show that
they know and they're affiliated with the people that they're talking to.
And also it's worth taking seriously because it works. We will use laughter for lots of
different reasons, but a really important reason why humans will use laughter is to
reduce stress. And it's very effective at that. As long as
everybody joins in, if you share laughter together, you will feel better together.
We can actually use it to negotiate a better mood together, which makes it a very important emotion.
Sophie, if you want people to laugh, what do you do?
It's interesting because there's no one thing that everybody finds funny. And that's like a,
almost like a truism for humor. There is no one
joke everybody finds funny. There's no one comedian everybody finds funny. Even slapstick humor,
which is much more broad in its reach, there'll be somebody somewhere going,
that's not funny. My brother died that way. There's no one thing. So I don't try to get
people laughing nowadays when I'm doing things in the lab. I don't bother trying to use humor at all. What we use are videos of normally television presenters who get the giggles while they're broadcasting and they have to keep talking because they're on air.
And that's actually very effective because that just leans into the fact that laughter is highly contagious.
A lot of the laughter we produce is happening just because we've heard or seen somebody else laughing.
And if you watch a video of somebody desperately trying to do a broadcast while they're really trying not to laugh, the laughter keeps coming through.
There's strong clues that that's spontaneous laughter, that is authentic laughter.
But also they're desperately trying to cover it up, which makes it almost funnier than if they just started laughing.
So that works very, very well to get people laughing. And it doesn't require you to find
anything funny and it doesn't require you to know any of the people involved. So a lot of the ones
we use are actually from the US. So the people in the UK don't know who those people are, but they
still laugh when they start laughing. So interesting. Are people who laugh a lot happier? Very, very hard to know. So everybody underestimates how often they laugh.
There aren't many studies on this, but every study that has said it got people to give a rating of how often they laugh.
And then actually observes them, finds that everybody is underreporting their laughter.
It's like we don't remember it almost. So it's difficult because you can't rely on people's self-report. We've been developing a questionnaire about laughter
and we found that the single biggest factor that sort of varies across certainly adults in the UK
and in China about laughter is how much people think they laugh. So it is a big thing that people
think about their laughter and how much they do or don't laugh a lot. But we can't find any predictive value of that.
So there's no relationship that we found so far between how much people think they laugh and how much they actually do laugh.
But I think the other thing that's true is if you remember that laughter doesn't happen randomly.
Laughter happens when you're in certain social situations and people won't laugh if they're feeling really uncomfortable
even if they're with other people and they won't laugh if they're feeling very kind of exposed
or like they're on show so one of the easiest ways to get people to stop laughing is to get
them into the lab and say now laugh they just don't do it they won't do it so i think it's
possible that people who are happier laugh more it's also possible that people who laugh more
are happier the direction of causality
is probably more like a virtuous circle, both affects the other. But all of it's only possible
because of the people that you're laughing with. That's going to be affecting your mood as well.
I can remember when I was a child, my father was a salesman and he was very good at using
laughter socially. He was funny and people liked him because he was funny and he would make people
laugh. He was a funny, witty man.
But I used to genuinely worry that people were buying, he sold carpets.
I was really worried that people would end up buying more carpets than they
wanted to because he was making them laugh.
Don't worry about this.
But I noticed even from a young age that he laughed completely differently
when he was with his friends, mostly female friends,
but he had a handful
like most people do you don't have all that many really close friends and he laughed totally
differently when he was with his close friends it was almost kittenish there was none of that kind
of dominating controlling the room sort of element to his laughter he was just delighted at being with
his friends and i think everyone sort of has that you're laughing with a lot of different people but
you're laughing really intensely and in a really relaxed way, I think, or not with just anybody. And I think that's again where some
of the power of laughter comes because if you think of laughter as being a really effective
way of making and maintaining social bonds, and that's again, one of the things you find about
laughter, wherever you find it, it's often playing this role. Do people in conversation mirror each
other in laughter also?
I think they do. If you think about contagion as being like that, so contagion, behavioral contagion, it's actually quite common in social animals.
So if you look at a behavior like yawning, yawning is very, very common in animals.
Many animals yawn, but lots of animals also yawn contagiously.
So they yawn just because they have seen or heard another conspecific yawning.
And it's a social signal.
It's a sign of affiliation.
And you find it in humans.
You find it in dogs and chimps.
You find it in turtles and budgerigars.
So that's really, really widespread.
And there are quite a lot of behaviors that work this way.
So blinking is quite contagious.
Coughing is contagious.
Scratching is contagious.
And it's pretty complex.
So if you look at orangutans, they scratch contagiously.
And actually, it's a sign of anxiety in the orangutan.
So if an orangutan is scratching itself, that means it's anxious.
And if another orangutan picks up that, it mirrors back that scratching, they're basically indicating, oh yeah, I know what you mean. This isn't great. So you have this whole world of sort of contagious behaviours and they tend to have this affiliative element to them. And it's also true for laughter. However, humans are the only animals where contagious laughter has been shown so other animals laugh but they don't laugh
contagiously they don't just catch a laugh which makes it very interesting and partly also because
it's something we learn to do so contagious behaviors are not things we're born doing
babies don't blink unless they need to refresh their eyes they don't yawn when somebody else
yawns they don't laugh when somebody else laughs. So we teach babies to do these contagious behaviors. And then that becomes a very, actually, it's a very important
aspect of social interactions. The ability to mirror laughter back at each other very effectively
is a great way for laughter to spread in a group of people. And it's also a great way of,
if you think about it, it's having this very important affiliative role. It's a great way of
sort of getting that affiliative mirroring running in a
very unconscious way. People very rarely notice that they're doing it. If you ask them why they're
doing it, they will come up with a reason. They'll say, well, that was funny. But in fact, it wasn't,
it was just contagion. So if laughter helps develop social ties and connections,
are there people that use laughter transactionally? if you think of that use of laughter to
sort of show to regulate emotions so to deal with stressful situations that's actually quite a common
use of laughter in we don't worry about it when it works but it can be a way that some people will
laugh to deal with sometimes with situations that are quite serious when the roger i'm going to say his name wrong that man at fox who was had been a serial harasser
of female colleagues they made the film bombshell about it and then in 2016 lots of women started to
tell their stories and he had quite a formal way of sort of propositioning women and the number of
women who said when he'd proposition them that they'd laughed and they were laughing to try and de-escalate that situation to say I know you
don't mean it I know that you're just kidding and to give him a plausible out like I was just
messing around but of course he can say oh they're laughing they're fine they're enjoying it there's
a real complexity there that people's interpretation of laughter is as important
as the intention somebody has with their laugh it can be something that people will also use to try
and cover up other things that are more serious lie to you for example and use the laughter as a
cloak to say well none of this matters this is all just fun so definitely that's possible and i
think it's like a hall of mirrors laughter the complexity of it in terms of both why it's being produced
and how it is perceived is very, very non-fixed.
Just because you want to laugh to be interpreted in a positive way
doesn't mean to say somebody necessarily will do so.
So I had a horrible situation at work, just horrible,
when a colleague rang up, a colleague with whom I already had quite a difficult relationship.
Not someone I knew well, but I relied on facilities associated with this person.
So I had to keep them sweet. And they called up to complain about something.
And while they were calling up to complain, someone in the room with me started laughing and nothing I could say could prevent
them from believing that not only had I offended them and they were complaining about it, but now
we were all laughing at them. Now they were anticipating negativity. They were not in a
good mood with me, but that's not why the laughter happened. In fact, the laughter was me looking at
a student going, what have you done? Like seriously, what's going on here? And the student
laughed because she was embarrassed.
But it didn't matter. It didn't matter what I said. So the complexity is manifold. It's complex
in terms of why we produce it. And it's complex in terms of how somebody perceives it and how
they choose to interpret it. For spontaneous laughter, how does that affect both the person laughing and any listener?
I suspect probably one of the nice things about spontaneous laughter, because you feel really
good when you've been laughing anyway, but spontaneous laughter, you do, it sounds like
the sun coming out and it feels wonderful. You do get big physiological changes when you laugh
full stop, but particularly if you start laughing hard like a real spontaneous laugh so you get a change in the uptake of the body's naturally circulating painkillers which
are endorphins and that's why you feel buzzy and good when you've been laughing it's exactly the
same as anything you might do after exercise which is when you also get an endorphin hit you get a
runner's high when you've been laughing you also get a reduction in
adrenaline and that's so that and then actually that endorphin buzz you get from any kind of
laughter even really fakes laughter it seems to be to do with how you're engaging your rib cage
but you also get a change in adrenaline adrenaline is that fight or flight hormone that makes your
heart start racing and you're scared. And that is lower after you've
been laughing than it was before you were laughing. While you're actually laughing,
it tends to go up because you're doing quite a lot of work. It's quite stressful for your
heart when you're laughing. You also get a reduction in cortisol associated with laughter.
Cortisol is a stress hormone. It's what wakes you up in the morning. It's why waking up in
the morning can sometimes feel a bit grim. And it's also the hormone that runs at high levels when you are feeling stressed and you sleep badly and your appetite goes over and you don't feel right.
That's cortisol at work.
High levels of cortisol running chronically is not good for your mental health.
It's not good for your physical health.
It has a slower lag than adrenaline, which works really quickly.
So it works much more slowly, cortisol,
but you find cortisol levels drop off when people have been laughing. So you're feeling less
stressed, you're feeling more relaxed. That is wonderful. So we should all laugh more.
Definitely, definitely. In high stress situations or jobs like police officers or doctors and nurses in hospitals. Is laughter different? Is there more
laughter to de-stress? There does seem to be. So this has been studied less about laughter,
but more about jokes. But of course, the jokes are an attempt to get laughter going.
What you find in high stress professions like the police or the fire service or medics or nurses, you tend to find that there are professional
jokes, things around which people joke. So in the UK, apparently one of the things that the police
laugh about in the UK is the fire service. They make jokes about the fire service and presumably
vice versa. And they also will make jokes about the things that they have to deal with, which can make their humor seem very dark.
But actually, I think that's doing several things all at once.
So it's giving people a reason to laugh together.
You're doing a high stress job in a team.
You're going to improve your sense of bonding by getting a chance to laugh together.
You are going to be able to deal with some of the stressful things you have to deal with by
expressly laughing at it you are going to feel better together by laughing at things you are
keeping other people out you're excluding people with the darkness of the thing you're laughing at
and the really specific job related aspects of that it's i don't think that's random it's meant
to be a bit shocking to other people
because this is actually, you're the team that has to work together. They are the outsiders.
They don't understand. There's been a couple of cases. There is a literature describing this.
And over the past couple of years, there's been a number of cases in the UK where WhatsApp groups
between police officers have been made public and revealing awful things,
like some horrible crime scene
where two sisters were killed in a park
in the middle of London,
in a very public place.
And it was a very, very horrible thing.
And one of the police officers
who had to stand guard over the scene
took inappropriate photographs
and put them on the WhatsApp group of this crime scene.
I absolutely guarantee you
they were trying to be funny. It doesn't make it funny, but I'm certain that's what the intent was.
And that's one of the reasons why it was so shocking. I'm not saying it's right at all,
but that's, I think, an extreme example of this, what you find in high stress jobs,
which often is this very dark sense of humor, which is still aimed at getting laughter,
but also really in an exaggerated
way, keeping other people out. Before I ask for the three takeaways you'd like to leave the
audience with, is there anything else that's important about laughter that you would like
to mention? What should I have asked you that I did not? People always want to know if it's
different between men and women. And pretty much everything I've talked about here is the same for men and women the different kinds of laughter the way that we
hear laughter the effects of laughter on the body the ways that we use laughter socially
the only thing that comes up a bit is that everybody laughs more contagiously with someone
they know than someone they don't know. Male and female familiarity absolutely rules for contagious laughter.
I think women may have learned to use laughter
as perhaps a way of managing situations with unfamiliar men
who can be something of a little bit of a mixed bag.
Sophie, this has been great.
What are the three takeaways you'd like to leave the audience with today?
Well, they are all about laughter and they do.
Some of it I probably already said.
And the first one is laughter is never neutral. And that's why it can sometimes be something that
alarms you or amuses you, but it always has meaning. And your brain is always trying to
work out that meaning. It's a very good tell about when things feel a little bit off, if laughter is
wrong or if laughter is absent. So I think that's an
important thing to remember. I would say, listen to your own laughter. Who do you laugh with?
Who makes you laugh? Who doesn't make you laugh? If you know someone who seems to laugh in a really
irritating way, I bet you don't like them. Because actually, it's you not joining in with the laughter
as often as anything and you're
not laughing along to that kind of relationship so listen to your laughter and i think value your
laughter it's often because laughter maybe it feels childlike it feels trivial it doesn't feel
sort of civilized and sophisticated and comedies never win oscars and people who are comedians are
always sort of assumed to be improvising on the spot
rather than incredibly polished artists.
But actually laughter really matters.
In your day-to-day life,
it's probably one of the most important things
you do in your day is the time
when you're just chatting to colleagues with a cup of coffee
and having a laugh about something
that happened in a meeting.
That feels like wasted time,
but it's actually probably
some of the most important time in your day.
So value your laughter.
Make time for it.
That's wonderful advice.
Thank you, Sophie.
This has been terrific.
It's an absolute pleasure.
Lovely to meet you.
Thank you.
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