Why laugh inappropriately?

1. Humour is ehe quality of being amusing or comic, especially as expressed in literature or speech. 

2. David is having conversations with Sophie Scott who is a neuroscientist spins her chair to show him a video of half naked man jumping (canonfalling) in a frozen swimming pool.

3. He did that flexing his muscle and to show and entertain but when he jumps the frozen water.

4. But the ice didn't break down, so everyone who were witnessing this incedent burst out in laughter.

5. Author cites that how do we get such a attack of gigs instead of helping him/er.

6. The guy who jumped on the frozen water imagining him bumping on the ice all started to gig and because of their giggles everyone has a tear in their eyes.

7. Whenever something comic happens incident happened we don't understand the pain s/he is going through our first reaction would be our giggles.

8. why are we so contagious (auta haase sabai haasne)?

9. At the neuroscientist university college of London, Scott studied about why do we laugh unnecessarily.

10. INn TED Vancouver Canada she studied about human behaviour she researched her way and tells everyone that we are misjudging the statement and we are not able to understand the feelings. 

11. But Scott's colleagues didn't approve this theory on laughter. 

12. Scott wrote a handwritten notes and had already thought that if this won't be collected than she would dispose it. 

13. She is wearing a T-shirt where it's written Is it "Science"? and was ready for the event that was to be happening today itself.

14. Scott began her early carrier by examining the voice in more general way. She believes that voice is the one medium which gives us information about our own identity.

15. Her Research believed having a good shot in her gender, the age, socioeconomic status, geographical origin, mood, health and even with human interactions. 

16. One of her research was involved with Duncan Wisbey's brain (comic character) to explore human talent on coping other person's voice.

17. She explored that the brain can reflect areas normally with the motion and human visualisation.

18. Her study in Namibia she realised that laughter is our richest vocal tics as in her earlier research she recognized 6 universal emotions across human cultures. 

19. Facial expressions are based on, anger, fear, surprise, disgust, happiness and sadness.

20. she dubbed the conversation between Namibians and the English people and rate the emotions including six universals, as well as relief, triumph or contentment.

21. She could easily recognise the emotion from both the groups. it was looking different from the other positive emotions.

22. More she probed the more she got fascinated by it's intricacies. she found majority of laugh has nothing to do with humour.

23. “You are 30 times more likely to laugh if you’re with someone else,”

24. She had set up an experiment at London’s Science Museum, where her team will be asking visitors of different ages to judge the authenticity of different clips of people laughing and crying.

25. The way we respond to their social signals, than anything particularly irritating about them.

26. When a person is alone and if any miss happening happen his entire laugh will be entirely normal. 

27. Scott recorded a clips and judged her own abilities to read people’s
laughter:

28. Scott’s curiosity has also taken her to comedy clubs to see “What’s interesting about laughter in the situation of stand-up is that it’s still an interaction,” or the conversation with the comedian. 

29. She found out it is easier to work in large venues, because of the contagious nature of laughter means that waves can catch on more easily when there are more people.

30. she says the word “cummerbund” occasionally, is the infectious laughter spreading through the audience.

31.she tried to equip audience members watching comedians with sensors to track the outbreak of laughter, which wasn't successful.

32. the audience froze under the
attention but she hopes to continue the work with a high-profile comedian like Rob Delaney, who may be able to break through the awkwardness.

33. Scott occasionally takes up the microphone herself at comedy nights in London.

34. She disagrees that science has
offered her a fast track to comic genius, though she discovered a charity gig followed that evening.

35. Scott's “Is this science?” T-shirt reminded, her more uptight colleagues might disapprove of her flippant attitude. 

36. Scott understands how powerful
a tool that laughter can be to express ourselves, and get people to listen.

37. “Laughter seems trivial (value of importance), ephemeral (replacing the old), pointless,” 

38. Laughter is never neutral – there’s always a meaning to it.”

39. laughing inappropriately can also be called paradoxical laughing.

40. Nervous laughter is a psychological response to anxiety and tension, that “our own body makes us start laughing to relieve the tension, even if we don’t really want to [and] we’d prefer to be serious.”

41. Nervous laughter makes everyone feel bad. Even if you know you don’t mean it, your eyewitnesses conclude you have a problem.

42. Inappropriate laugh helps to regulate emotional responses, including laughter.

43. example "someone loudly farting in the middle of a funeral, you’re more likely to laugh than if you perceive a harmful violation."

44. Laughter is best described as a physiological response to humor.

45. humans can giggle as early as three months old. The fact that laughter kicks in before babies can even speak. 

46. Some people can't help but laugh during extremely stressful situations such as a funeral.






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