Frontiers in Psychology (Oct 2017)

Getting the Joke: Insight during Humor Comprehension – Evidence from an fMRI Study

  • Fang Tian,
  • Fang Tian,
  • Yuling Hou,
  • Yuling Hou,
  • Wenfeng Zhu,
  • Wenfeng Zhu,
  • Arne Dietrich,
  • Qinglin Zhang,
  • Qinglin Zhang,
  • Wenjing Yang,
  • Wenjing Yang,
  • Qunlin Chen,
  • Qunlin Chen,
  • Jiangzhou Sun,
  • Jiangzhou Sun,
  • Qiu Jiang,
  • Qiu Jiang,
  • Guikang Cao,
  • Guikang Cao

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2017.01835
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8

Abstract

Read online

As a high-level cognitive activity, humor comprehension requires incongruity detection and incongruity resolution, which then elicits an insight moment. The purpose of the study was to explore the neural basis of humor comprehension, particularly the moment of insight, by using both characters and language-free cartoons in a functional magnetic resonance imaging study. The results showed that insight involving jokes elicited greater activation in language and semantic-related brain regions as well as a variety of additional regions, such as the superior frontal gyrus (SFG), the inferior frontal gyrus (IFG), the middle temporal gyrus (MTG), the superior temporal gyrus (STG), the temporoparietal junctions (TPJ), the hippocampus and visual areas. These findings indicate that the MTG might play a role in incongruity detection, while the SFG, IFG and the TPJ might be involved in incongruity detection. The passive insight event elicited by jokes appears to be mediated by a limited number of brain areas. Our study showed that the brain regions associated with humor comprehension were not affected by the type of stimuli and that humor and insight shared common brain areas. These results indicate that one experiences a feeling of insight during humor comprehension, which contributes to the understanding of humor comprehension.

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