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Graham, Elizabeth E. – Communication Reports, 1995
Finds that a high, rather than a low, sense of humor facilitated the reduction of uncertainty and also served to reduce social distance between interactants. Supports the facilitative nature of humor in the development of interpersonal relations. (SR)
Descriptors: Communication Research, Higher Education, Humor, Interpersonal Relationship
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Wanzer, Melissa Bekelja; And Others – Communication Quarterly, 1996
Finds that higher Humor Orientation (HO) was associated with lower levels of loneliness; acquaintances' perceptions of HO and self-reported HO were positively related; people seen as more humorous were seen as socially attractive; and verbally aggressive individuals did not report more loneliness, but were perceived to be less socially attractive,…
Descriptors: Communication Research, Higher Education, Humor, Interpersonal Attraction
Eshleman, Joe G.; Neuendorf, Kimberly A. – 1989
After an extensive review of the literature on the theoretical underpinnings of humor in human interaction, a six-category typology of humor was developed and exemplified by examples from mass media comedy. Humor can first be divided into two major types: individual level humor or social level humor. These levels are then further divided into the…
Descriptors: Classification, Comedy, Communication Research, Human Relations
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Bippus, Amy M. – Western Journal of Communication, 2000
Explores the factors affecting the outcomes experienced by distressed persons (undergraduate students) when their comfort providers use humor during comforting interactions. Explains that results indicate the skillfulness of the comforting behavior, specific qualities of humor used, and the relationship between interactants predicted behavior.…
Descriptors: Behavioral Objectives, Communication Research, Emotional Disturbances, Higher Education
Lukens, Janet G.; Jain, Nemi C. – 1974
This paper presents the results of an empirical study designed to test three hypotheses concerning the type of humor initiated by faculty in their interpersonal communication: (1) the organizational type of person is associated with the type of humor he initiates; (2) cosmopolitans tend to initiate abrasive humor more often than lubricant humor;…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Communication Research, Educational Research, Faculty