We have all experienced the "aha" Moment when a joke suddenly
makes sense, and scientists have long tried to figure out what happens
in our brain during that crucial split second. Now a researcher at the
University of Michigan <http://www.umich.edu/>   at Ann Arbor has found
a window into that state of mind: the eyes.



Humor psychologist Richard Lewis
<http://www-personal.umich.edu/%7Erickl>   (no relation to the comedian)
was intrigued by past studies showing that a person's pupils dilate
in proportion to the funniness of a cartoon he or she is looking at. He
took a closer look at this eye reflex by showing volunteers cartoons
from the New Yorker magazine and using eye-tracking device to monitor
their pupil dilation and eye movements. The subjects' pupils dilated
about half a second after their gaze fell on the regions of cartoon that
were critical is making it funny-a period that is very similar to the
time it takes our brain to derive meaning from words we read. "The
nice thing about combining pupil dilation with eye tracking," Lewis
explains, "is that we can now pinpoint the `got it'
moment."



Determining this moment with pupil dilation, which Lewis thinks is most
likely a basic arousal response, could aid researchers who investigate
humor-related brain activity with MRI or electroencephalography. So far
scientists have found several brain areas, including the reward system,
to be associated more generally with our sense of humor; it appears we
do not have a distinct neurological funny bone.



But why do we have a sense of humor in the first place? According to
Lewis, psychologists are just beginning to discover its relation to
other cognitive processes that seemingly lie outside the realm of the
funny, such as our ability to gauge the thoughts of others. "This is
all part of looking at the state humor puts you and your brain in and
how that affects other things you do," Lewis says. "This will
help us piece together the puzzle of what humor is for."


Happy Learning,

Yovan P. Putra <http://primamind.blogspot.com>

www.primastudy.com <http://www.primastudy.com>





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