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Article
The Effect of Humor on Memory: Constrained by the Pun
Journal of General Psychology (2010)
  • Louis Lippman, Western Washington University
  • Ira E. Hyman, Jr., Western Washington University
Abstract
In a series of experiments, we investigated the effect of pun humor on memory. In all experiments, the participants were exposed to knock-knock jokes in either the original form retaining the pun or in a modified form that removed the pun. In Experiment 1, the authors found that pun humor improved both recall and recognition memory following incidental encoding. In Experiment 2, they found evidence that rehearsal is not the cause of the humor effect on memory. In Experiments 3 and 4, the authors found that the constraints imposed by puns and incongruity may account for the humor effects observed. Puns constrain and limit the information that can fit in the final line of a joke and thus make recall easier.
Keywords
  • Constraints in reconstruction,
  • Humor,
  • Memory,
  • Memory reconstruction
Disciplines
Publication Date
2010
DOI
10.1080/00221309.2010.499398
Publisher Statement
Published by Taylor & Francis Group
Citation Information
Louis Lippman and Ira E. Hyman. "The Effect of Humor on Memory: Constrained by the Pun" Journal of General Psychology Vol. 137 Iss. 4 (2010) p. 376 - 394
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/louis-lippman/1/