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Seniors Enjoy a Good Joke but keep it
simple!
Aug. 25,
2003 - Senior citizens still enjoy a good laugh, but dont make the
joke to complicated or we may not get it! Thats what a new study of
humor in older adults has found.
The
Canadian study reports that appreciation and emotional reactiveness to
humor doesn't change with age but the ability to comprehend more
complex forms of humor does diminish in later years.
The
findings are published in the September issue of the Journal of the
International Neuropsychological Society. Lead researcher Dr. Prathiba
Shammi, a psychologist with Baycrest Centre for Geriatric Care,
conducted the study with the supervision of Dr. Donald Stuss,
psychologist and Director of The Rotman Research Institute at Baycrest.
The research was part of Dr. Shammi's doctoral thesis at the
University of Toronto.
Shammi and
Stuss captured world attention in 1999 for their landmark study
(published in the journal BRAIN) showing the 'right' frontal lobe
plays a pre-eminent role in our ability to appreciate humor. They
found that subjects with right frontal damage -- from stroke, tumor or
head trauma -- not only had difficulty getting punch lines, but
preferred slapstick humor.
In this
current study, a second phase of the earlier study, Shammi and Stuss
explored the effects of normal aging on humor comprehension and
appreciation.
Humor
'comprehension' is defined as the ability to cognitively or
intellectually understand humorous material, which may be assessed by
the ability of the responder to select appropriate punch lines to
jokes or provide appropriate logical reasoning as to why a stimulus is
humorous. Humor 'appreciation' is the affective or emotional response
to humorous stimuli (such as smiling, laughing) once the humor has
been cognitively processed and understood at some level.
"The good
news is that aging does not affect emotional responses to humor --
we'll still enjoy a good laugh when we get the joke," says Dr. Shammi.
"This preserved affective responsiveness is important because it is
integral to social interaction and it has long been postulated that
humor may enhance quality of life, assist in stress management, and
help us cope with the stresses of aging."
However,
results from the study also suggest that the ability to comprehend
more complex forms of humor may diminish in our later years. Why? The
cognitive abilities required for humor comprehension include abstract
reasoning, mental flexibility and working memory -- all are complex,
higher mental functions believed to be associated with the frontal
lobes. Biological evidence suggests that the brain's frontal functions
may be the first to deteriorate with aging. While scientists continue
to debate this evidence, it may explain why older adults can have
difficulty understanding more complex forms of humor.
Participants in the study included 20 healthy older adults (average
age 73)and 17 healthy younger adults (average age 28), all
right-handed and conversationally fluent in English. They were asked
to complete three separate humor tests: appreciation of humorous
verbal statements; joke and story completion; and nonverbal cartoon
appreciation.
In the
first test, participants were presented with 21 humorous and seven
neutral written statements and asked to pick out the humorous ones.
Examples of humor statements included: (i) Sign in a tailor shop --
"Please have a fit upstairs"; and (ii) Sign in a hotel -- "Guests are
invited to take advantage of the chambermaid". An example of a neutral
statement included: (i) Sign in a hotel -- "Visitors are requested to
turn off the lights when they leave the room".
In the
second test, participants were asked to select the correct punch lines
for 16 incomplete joke stems. Each joke stem had four different
endings of which only one was the correct (humorous) punch line. The
four different endings included the funny correct ending (FC), the
logical straightforward ending (SF), the slapstick humorous non
sequitur ending (HNS), and the unrelated non sequitur (UNS). For
example: The neighbor approached Mr. Smith at noon on Sunday and
inquired, 'Say Smith, are you using your lawnmower this afternoon?'
'Yes I am,' Smith replied warily. Then the neighbor answered -- 'Fine,
you won't be wanting your golf clubs, I'll just borrow them' (FC);
'Oops!' as the rake he walked on barely missed his face (HNS); 'Oh
well, can I borrow it when you're done, then?' (SF); and 'The birds
are always eating my grass seed' (UNS).
In the
third test, participants looked at 10 different cartoon drawings. Each
cartoon consisted of a series of four similar drawings, only one of
which had a funny detail. Participants were asked to select the
correct funny version.
Researchers found that the older adults performed just as well as
their younger counterparts in the first simple test: differentiating
humorous from neutral verbal statements. However, older adults made
significantly greater errors in the other two more cognitively
challenging tests: selecting the correct punch lines to joke stems AND
selecting the correct funny cartoon from an array of cartoons.
A series
of neuropsychological tests were also administered to assess cognitive
abilities in abstract reasoning, mental flexibility and working
memory. Researchers compared these tests to performance on the humor
tests for the older group only and found a "significant co-relation"
between the decline in these cognitive abilities and a higher error
rate on selecting correct punch lines and funny cartoons.
Despite
these deficits in humor 'comprehension', older adults did not differ
from the young in terms of their affective responses (i.e.
appreciation of humor). They reacted appropriately with a smile or
laugh when they understood the humor. This suggests that, while
cognitive abilities thought to be mediated by dorsolateral frontal
regions related to humor may deteriorate with aging, affective
processing related to orbital and medial prefrontal regions may remain
intact.
The
authors caution against over-interpreting the results of this
preliminary study. Although the results suggest a difficulty with
processing complex humorous material with age, many factors such as
cohort differences in the type of humor preferred, social setting, and
health all contribute to our response to humorous situations.
The study
was funded by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research
Baycrest Center For Geriatric Care is an academic health sciences
centre affiliated with the University of Toronto. |