It's not funny if they're laughing: self-categorization, social influence, and responses to canned laughter

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Platow, Michael
Haslam, S. Alexander
Both, Amanda
Chew, Ivanne
Cuddon, Michelle
Goharpey, Nahal
Maurer, Jacqui
Rosini, Simone
Tsekouras, Anna
Grace, Diana

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Academic Press

Abstract

Pre-recorded, or "canned" laughter is often used to encourage audience laughter. Previous research suggests that hearing others laugh can influence an audience, although several variables moderate its effects. We examined an unexplored moderator, hypothesizing that canned laughter would influence listeners only if they believed the laughter came from fellow in-group members. We manipulated the presence or absence of canned laughter in a potentially humorous recording and participants' beliefs about the in-group or out-group composition of the laughing audience. The results confirmed our hypothesis: Participants laughed and smiled more, laughed longer, and rated humorous material more favorably when they heard in-group laughter rather than out-group laughter or no laughter at all.

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Journal of Experimental Social Psychology

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Restricted until

2037-12-31