2018
DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2018.00199
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Is an Ideal Sense of Humor Gendered? A Cross-National Study

Abstract: To explore lay conceptions of characteristics of an ideal sense of humor as embodied in a known individual, our study examined elicited written narratives by male and female participants from three different countries of origin: United States, Iran, and Turkey. As reported in an earlier previous study with United States-based participants (Crawford and Gressley, 1991), our study also found that the embodiment of an ideal sense of humor was predominantly a male figure. This effect was more pronounced for male t… Show more

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Cited by 18 publications
(8 citation statements)
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References 26 publications
(36 reference statements)
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“…Since females tend to respond more emotionally to given events ( Fischer et al, 2018 ), it could explain why females in our study showed a compensating tradeoff between warmth and competence, while men did not. In addition, the humor/gender literature suggests that men and women may react differently to humor communications ( Tosun et al, 2018 ), and the purpose of humor seems to shift between genders ( Chan, 2016 ). Humor is usually regarded as a predominately masculine trait ( Hooper et al, 2016 ); men use humor as a tool to reinforce social order and sustain the status quo .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Since females tend to respond more emotionally to given events ( Fischer et al, 2018 ), it could explain why females in our study showed a compensating tradeoff between warmth and competence, while men did not. In addition, the humor/gender literature suggests that men and women may react differently to humor communications ( Tosun et al, 2018 ), and the purpose of humor seems to shift between genders ( Chan, 2016 ). Humor is usually regarded as a predominately masculine trait ( Hooper et al, 2016 ); men use humor as a tool to reinforce social order and sustain the status quo .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We maintain that this is an oversight, predominantly when examining the issue of gender. The ideas that male and female behavior will be interpreted differently were expressed 25 years ago (e.g., Crawford and Gressley, 1991 ) and are still maintained today ( Tosun et al, 2018 ). For example, Cooper K.M.…”
Section: Studymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Wu et al (2016) also find that, compared to women, men tend to use unfriendly and aggressive humour. More recently, Tosun et al (2018) also find that male figures were more likely considered as the ones embodied an "ideal" sense of humour.…”
Section: Gender and Humourmentioning
confidence: 93%
“… Note: PRH = perceived related humor, TSRQ = teacher–student relationship quality, ENG = engagement, SH = sense of humor, **p < .01. Control variables: We added two control variables (gender and age) based on the consideration that both are related to a personal sense of humor [ 19 , 56 ] as well as the perceived quality of the relationship between students and teachers [ 35 , 57 ]. Both variables are coded: female (1), male (2), <20 yo (1), 20–25 yo (2), and above 25 yo (3).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%