Try GOLD - Free

What's So Funny?- A scientific attempt to discover why we laugh.

The New Yorker

|

August 19, 2024

A scientific attempt to discover why we laugh. How the brain processes humor remains a mystery. It’s easy to make someone smile or cry by electronically stimulating a single region of the brain, but it’s astonishingly difficult to make someone laugh. The “laughter circuit” is complex and various. Puns are processed on the left side of the brain by gyri, bumpy areas on the surface of the cerebral cortex; more complex, non-wordplay jokes are routed through gyri on the right side of the brain and also trigger electronic activity in many other parts of the brain.

- By Tad Friend - Illustration by Jules Feifer

What's So Funny?- A scientific attempt to discover why we laugh.

One Saturday evening in late June, the master of ceremonies at the Ice House, a comedy club in Pasadena, California, told the audience that they were in for a special treat: Dr. Richard Wiseman, a British scientist who was on a quest to determine the world’s funniest joke, was going to come out and enlist the audience’s help. The m.c., Debi Gutierrez, would tell jokes that particularly appealed to Americans who had visited Wiseman’s humor Web site, and he would tell jokes favored by the British.

Wiseman bounded up and perched on a stool facing Gutierrez, a brassy woman in her early forties. “May I call you Richard?” she asked.

“You can call me what you want,” Wiseman said.

“Dr. Dick! ” she said. The audience whooped, and Wiseman offered a game smile. In a navy-blue T-shirt, khakis, and tortoise-rimmed glasses, with a Vandyke beard balancing his baldness, he looked like a particularly helpful store manager at the Gap. In fact, at the age of thirty-five, Wiseman—a professor at the University of Hertfordshire and the director of its Perrott-Warrick Research Unit—is Britain’s most recognizable psychologist, famous for such mass-participation experiments as determining whether people can most easily detect lies told on television, on the radio, or in print. (It’s on the radio.) Since last fall, he has been conducting a global humor study at, a Web site where visitors submit jokes and rate other people’s jokes on a five-point scale called, somewhat unrigorously, the Giggleometer. When the experiment began, Wiseman posed for publicity photographs wearing a lab coat and holding a clipboard as he scrutinized a student wearing a chicken suit who was crossing a road. One photographer shouted, “Could the guy playing the scientist move to the left?,” and Wiseman cried, “I am a scientist.”

MORE STORIES FROM The New Yorker

The New Yorker

The New Yorker

Coconut Flan

Somehow, after the plane landed though before Andrés and Daria reached the taxi stand, Daria's wallet went missing.

time to read

22 mins

October 13, 2025

The New Yorker

The New Yorker

SEASON OF DISCONTENT

Gustavo Dudamel at the New York Philharmonic; \"Kavalier & Clay\" at the Met.

time to read

6 mins

October 13, 2025

The New Yorker

The New Yorker

THE TALK OF THE TOWN

For someone openly campaigning to get a Nobel Peace Prize, Donald Trump has been going about it in an unusual way. Early last month, the President proclaimed in a press conference that the Department of Defense would thereafter be known as the Department of War. At the same briefing, the presumed new Secretary of War, Pete Hegseth, promised that the armed forces will deliver “maximum lethality” that won't be “politically correct.” That was a few days after Trump had ordered the torpedoing of a small boat headed out of Venezuela, which he claimed was piloted by “narco-terrorists,” killing all eleven people on board, rather than, for instance, having it stopped and inspected. After some military-law experts worried online that this seemed uncomfortably close to a war crime, Vice-President J. D. Vance posted, “Don't give a shit.”

time to read

4 mins

October 13, 2025

The New Yorker

The New Yorker

THESE BLACK BOOTS ARE DIFFERENT FROM THOSE BLACK BOOTS

These have an almond toe.

time to read

2 mins

October 13, 2025

The New Yorker

The New Yorker

LOCKED IN

Two murders, a strike, and an explosive year inside New York's prisons.

time to read

41 mins

October 13, 2025

The New Yorker

The New Yorker

DON'T BLAME ME

Taylor Swift's new album eschews vulnerability for revenge.

time to read

6 mins

October 13, 2025

The New Yorker

The New Yorker

CONTINENTAL DREAMS

African independence was a time of high hopes. What happened?

time to read

16 mins

October 13, 2025

The New Yorker

The New Yorker

OUT OF OFFICE

Can a Prime Minister have work-life balance? Sanna Marin tried.

time to read

24 mins

October 13, 2025

The New Yorker

The New Yorker

ALMA MATER

\"After the Hunt.\"

time to read

6 mins

October 13, 2025

The New Yorker

The New Yorker

THE HAGUE ON TRIAL

Political intrigue—and a lurid scandal—rocks the International Criminal Court.

time to read

22 mins

October 13, 2025

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size