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joeyjoey
12-27-2003, 03:49 PM
Brain Rewards Us for Laughing: Study
Fri December 26, 2003 02:53 PM ET

By Merritt McKinney
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - They say laughter is the best medicine, and a new study may help explain how laughter makes us feel good.

Researchers report that humor seems to activate brain networks that are involved in rewards.

Humor is no laughing matter, according to Dr. Allan L. Reiss of Stanford University in California, who led the research.

"Humor has significant ramifications for our psychological and physical health," he told Reuters Health. Our sense of humor, he said, "often dictates if, how and with whom we establish friendships and even long-lasting romantic relationships." Humor is also a "universal coping mechanism" for dealing with stress, Reiss added.

Despite the importance of humor, Reiss said that little is known about the brain mechanisms that underlie humor.

The Stanford researcher noted that most people are drawn to humor and that it makes people feel good. "We seem to feel rewarded" by humor, he said.

Now, Reiss and his colleagues report that they have zeroed in on the brain's reward system for humor.

In the study, volunteers had their brain activity monitored as they read a series of cartoons. Some of the cartoons were supposed to be funny, but others had the funny cues omitted.

After viewing each strip, participants pushed a button if they thought the comic was funny.

Researchers found that when a cartoon made a person laugh, a brain network that is known to be involved in reward was activated. In fact, the areas activated by humor have been shown previously to be activated by amphetamines and cocaine, according to a report in the December 4th issue of the journal Neuron.

"I believe that understanding humor is fundamental to understanding many aspects of 'normal' human social behavior," Reiss said.

Learning more about the brain mechanisms that underlie humor may also help scientists who study depression, according to Reiss. He noted that the loss of the ability to appreciate humor is a common symptom of depression.

"We believe that utilizing studies such as this may be one way to more specifically identify individuals at risk for depressive disorders," Reiss said. The research may also be useful in measuring a person's response to treatment for depression, according to Reiss. The humor reward system in the brain may come "on line" even before symptoms of depression change, he said.

The research may also help explain "humorless" people, who, Reiss noted, may have serious problems in relationships.

"Perhaps they are missing this reward link in their circuitry," he said.

Finally, humor is known to play a role in the sleeping disorder narcolepsy and other conditions, Reiss said.

SOURCE: Neuron, December 4, 2003.

http://reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=healthNews&storyID=4047557

woo
12-28-2003, 03:40 AM
ha! i've been a laughaholic all my life. i smile at EVERYTHING!!!!
and i've had to be treated for narcolepsy for a few years.

i wish they woulda went a bit further into detail in discussing how humor and narcolepsy are related.

woooood
12-28-2003, 06:31 AM
humor and narcolepsy are related!
id laugh my balls off if i saw a narcalepic person just pass out

CECE
12-28-2003, 11:49 PM
people say I laugh too much, I have been known to laugh at a family member's funeral

I don't know I just alway lean towards thinking of something happy

Co-workers say I have my own little world going on in my head

Krisss 10
12-29-2003, 01:00 AM
i love laughing.....my family (esp my dads side) is all about jokes and laughter

woo
12-29-2003, 02:19 PM
Originally posted by woooood
humor and narcolepsy are related!
id laugh my balls off if i saw a narcalepic person just pass out

it's a fuQed up sight actually.
i've fallen asleep during meals, walking-- i'd "sit for a second", after parking my car- i'd pass out in my car all night even parked on the street-- yeah i have horor stories, bathtub, waiting rooms, etc.
i was found asleep in a hallway once @ SJU too.
i can't remember somewhere between a few minutes and a few hours prior to the "episode"

this doesn't happen anymore. i been off the meds too.

Ohh GoddeSs
01-04-2004, 04:23 AM
Originally posted by CrAcKa A55 CeCe
people say I laugh too much, I have been known to laugh at a family member's funeral

I don't know I just alway lean towards thinking of something happy

Co-workers say I have my own little world going on in my head



at funeral's? that's horrible....

i guess it was an evil laugh

Piccola2002
01-05-2004, 01:40 PM
i'm always laughing.. hehe sometimes i laugh at the stupidest thing..n ill go on n on for so long..hehe!!