BBC News
Scientists
are getting a glimpse of how jokes
are processed by the human brain.
Brain
scans show that puns and other types
of joke are deciphered in different
regions.
But
to actually appreciate a joke, and
have a good laugh, requires the
use of a central pathway in the
brain.
The
finding could explain why some people
lose their sense of humour following
damage to a particular part of the
brain.
To
investigate the biology of humour,
researchers based at York University
in Toronto, Canada, and the Institute
of Neurology in London, UK, carried
out brain scans on 14 volunteers
while their subjects listened to
jokes.
'Funniness'
scale
They
chose two types of joke: so-called
semantic jokes, such as "What
do engineers use for birth control?...Their
personalities" and puns like
"Why did the golfer wear two
sets of pants?...He got a hole in
one".
Laughing
was discouraged while scanning was
in progress but afterwards each
volunteer rated the jokes on a funniness
scale of one to five.
Separate
regions of the brain process different
jokes
Areas
of the brain known to be involved
in the processing of language were
active while the subjects processed
semantic jokes.
Different
areas of the brain, involved in
speech production, lit up when the
subjects deciphered puns.
But
for both types of jokes, the authors
found activation in an area of the
brain called the medial prefrontal
cortex, which controls reward-related
behaviour.
Furthermore,
activation in this region correlated
with the subjects' funniness ratings.
The
authors conclude that separate systems
in the brain process different types
of jokes. But the pleasure associated
with "getting" a joke
involves shared circuitry, they
say.
The
research, published on Sunday in
the journal Nature Neuroscience,
throws light on the biological nature
of humour, and could explain why
some types of brain damage affect
humour appreciation.
Humour
has a complex role in thought, communication
and social interactions, and it
may be unique to humans.