Funny bone's all in the head
A serious piece of scientific research has located the "funny spot" in the brain where jokes generate a feeling of mirth and merriment.
A serious piece of scientific research has located the "funny spot" in the brain where jokes generate a feeling of mirth and merriment.
Scientists believe the region is vital for appreciating an outrageous punchline or clever pun. Without it we would have a sense-of-humour bypass.
Experiments on a group of 14 people who were told a series of jokes while lying in a brain scanner have revealed the funny spot to be a region of the cerebral cortex, which controls the "higher" functions of mental ability - even when the jokes are by Bernard Manning.
Raymond Dolan, of the Institute of Neurology in London, said: "We were interested in knowing whether to appreciate or to get a joke - and to experience the funniness of getting a joke - there was a particular brain region implicated."
The research, published in the journal Nature Neuroscience, has a serious side, in that it may explain why humour is such a necessary aspect of being human.
"What we showed was that one particular region of the brain was accessed by all jokes irrespective of their type."
Join our commenting forum
Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies
Comments