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Munn, William C.; Gruner, Charles R. – Southern Speech Communication Journal, 1981
Manipulated speaker sex and "sick" jokes/no-jokes in printed speeches are evaluated by college students. "Sick" jokes generally resulted in negative evaluations of both speech and speaker; "sick" jokes may be enjoyed in certain social situations but should probably be left out of formal speeches. (PD)
Descriptors: College Students, Communication Research, Evaluation Criteria, Higher Education
Chang, Mei-Jung; Gruner, Charles R. – Southern Speech Communication Journal, 1981
Data indicate that speakers with relatively high ethos (college professors) can raise their ratings on wittiness/funniness and sense of humor--without damaging their credibility--by making fun of their professional fields, provided they do not at the same time humorously disparage the values of the audience. (PD)
Descriptors: Audiences, College Faculty, College Students, Communication Research
Gruner, Charles R. – 1984
In the first of two experiments designed to determine whether the use of humor would enhance audience reactions to a speaker without damaging that speaker's ethos (character and authoritativeness), 98 university students were randomly assigned to read one of four versions of the speech, "Why I Chose Psychology." The subjects read…
Descriptors: Affective Measures, College Students, Communication Research, Communication Skills

Pearson, Judy C.; And Others – Central States Speech Journal, 1983
This study did not support the following hypothesis: more sexually-oriented jokes will reflect a sexist bias against women than against men. Instead, the findings indicate that joke-tellers of both sexes were more likely to select sexual jokes that discriminated against males. (PD)
Descriptors: College Students, Communication Research, Comparative Analysis, Females
McDowell, Earl E.; Yotsuyanagi, Noriko – 1996
An exploratory study focused on United States and Japanese college students' perceptions of their communication apprehension, willingness to communicate, and sense of humor in various communication situations. Subjects, 110 students selected from several scientific and technical communication classes at the University of Minnesota and 108 students…
Descriptors: College Students, Communication Apprehension, Communication Research, Comparative Analysis
Pearson, Judy C. – 1982
A study explored sex differences among tellers of sexually oriented jokes. One hundred forty-seven undergraduate students wrote and told sexually oriented jokes to same, opposite, and mixed sex audiences. These jokes were analyzed to determine whether they were biased against men or women, in favor of men or women, biased against both sexes, or…
Descriptors: College Students, Communication Research, Comparative Analysis, Females