Qui trovi tutti i Riferimenti bibliografici di Ricerche, Testi, Libri relativi ad ogni frase, concetto, teoria ed esercizio contenuto in questo sito, nei video e nei libri Felicemente Stressati ed Ingegneria del Buon Umore.
Aurelio M., Colloqui con sé stesso, Fabbri Editori, Milano, 2001.
Bandura A., Social Foundations of Thought and Action: a social cognitive Theory, Prentice-Hall, Englewood Cliffs, 1986.
Bargh J. – Chartrand T., The Chameleon Effect: the Perception-Behavior Link and social Behavior, in “Journal of Personality and social Psychology”, 76 (1999), pp.893-910.
Berne E., A che gioco giochiamo, Bompiani, Milano, 1988.
Block A., La legge di Murphy, Longanesi, Milano, 1988.
Id., Il piccolo libro delle leggi di Murphy, Mondadori, Milano, 2000.
Bokun B., Ridere per vivere, Mondadori, Milano, 1997.
Borrel M., La ricerca della felicità, Gruppo Editoriale Armenia, Milano, 2005.
Brenot P., Geni da legare, Piemme, Milano, 1997.
Carnegie D., Come trattare gli altri e farseli amici, Bompiani, Milano, 1999.
Carnegie D., Come godersi la vita e lavorare meglio, Bompiani, Milano, 2006.
Carnegie D., Come vincere lo stress e cominciare a vivere, Bompiani, Milano, 2006.
Carter-Scott C., Se il successo è un gioco, ecco le regole, Sperling & Kupfer Editori, Milano, 2001.
Casadei I., Educare al successo, La Meridiana, Molfetta, 2012.
Chaplin C., La mia autobiografia, Rizzoli, Milano, 1993.
Cianni J.L., Filosofia per disoccupati, Rizzoli, Milano, 2007.
Confucio, Breviario, Bompiani, Milano, 2003.
Covey S.R., I sette pilastri del successo, Bompiani, Milano, 2001.
De Botton A., Come Proust può cambiarvi la vita, Guanda, Parma, 1998.
De Botton A., Esercizi d’amore, Guanda, Parma, 1999.
De Botton A., Le consolazioni della filosofia, Guanda, Parma, 2004.
De Botton A., Del buon uso della religione, Guanda, Parma, 2011.
De Montaigne M. (a cura di Allegri R.), Breviario, Rusconi, Milano, 1997.
De Montaigne M., Saggi, Adelphi Edizioni, Milano, 2002.
Dickson A., Pensieri sotto il cuscino, rcs, Milano, 1995.
Di Fazio T. – Giusti E., Psicoterapia integrata dello stress, Sovera Editore, Roma, 2008.
Duncan B.L.., Differential social perception and attribution of intergroup violence, Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 34, 590-8.
Epitetto, Manuale, Rizzoli, Milano, 2000.
Epicuro, Scritti morali, rcs, Milano, 2004.
Farnè M., Lo stress, Il Mulino, Bologna, 1999.
Favretto G., Lo stress nelle organizzazioni, Il Mulino, Bologna, 1994.
Folkman S. – Lazarus R.S., Stress, Appraisal and Coping¸ Springer, New York, 1984.
Frankfurt H.G., Stronzate, rcs Libri, Milano, 2005.
Frankl V.E., Homo patiens. Soffrire con dignità, Queriniana Editore, Brescia, 2011.
Frankl V.E., Lettere di un sopravvissuto. Ciò che mi ha salvato dal lager, Soveria Mannelli, Rubbettino (Cz), 2008.
Gabbard G.O., Psichiatria psicodinamica, Cortina Raffaello, Milano, 2007.
Gandhi, M.K., a cura di Mandel G., Breviario, Rusconi Libri, Santarcangelo di Romagna, 1999.
Giacobbe G. C., Come smettere di farsi le seghe mentali e godersi la vita, Ponte alle Grazie, Milano, 2006.
Goleman D., Intelligenza emotiva, Rizzoli, Milano, 2000.
Goleman D., Lavorare con intelligenza emotiva, bur, Milano, 2000.
Goleman D., Intelligenza sociale, Rizzoli, Milano, 2006.
Gray J., Gli uomini vengono da Marte le donne da Venere, Sonzogno, Milano, 2000.
Grün A., Sopravvivere lavorando, Paoline Editoriale Libri, Milano, 2008.
Haley J., Terapie non comuni, Casa Editrice Astrolabio, Roma, 1976.
Hales-Dutton V., Sconfiggere lo stress in cinque minuti, Antonio Avallardi Editore, Ariccia, 2008.
Hewstone M., Attribuzione causale, Giuffré Editore, Milano, 1991.
La Sacra Bibbia, ueci, Milano, 1974.
Legrenzi P., La felicità, Il Mulino, Bologna, 2011.
Levine M., A modo loro, Mondadori, Milano, 2004.
Levine M., I bambini non sono pigri, Mondadori, Milano 2005.
Kataria M. – Marchionni S. – Terzi A. – Toffolo L., Yoga della risata. Ridere per vivere meglio, La Meridiana, Molfetta, 2008.
Kielcolt-Glaser J. et al., Marital Stress: immunologic, neuroendocrine and autonomic Correlates, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 840 (1999).
Kindlon D., Thompson M., Intelligenza emotiva per un bambino che diventerà uomo, bur, Milano, 2002.
Kraus K., Aforismi in forma di diario, Newton Compton Editori, Roma, 1993.
Maometto, Breviario, Rusconi, Milano, 1996.
Marinoff L., Platone è meglio del prozac, Edizioni Piemme, Casale Monferrato, 2001.
Marinoff L., Le pillole di Aristotele, Edizioni Piemme, Casale Monferrato, 2004.
Monduzzi G., Orgasmo e pregiudizio, Mondadori, Milano, 1997.
Nietzsche W. F., Così parlò Zarathustra, Newton Compton Editori, Roma, 1997.
Norwood R., Donne che amano troppo, Feltrinelli, Milano, 2009.
Palazzi F., Il dizionario degli aneddoti, Garzanti, Milano, 1993.
Paramahansa Y., Il maestro disse, Casa Editrice Astrolabio, Roma, 1970.
Pascal B. (a cura di Claudio Marcellino), Breviario, Rusconi, Milano 1994.
Pascal B., Pensieri, Garzanti, Milano, 2006.
Pena-Ruiz H., La filosofia della felicità, Sonzogno, Venezia, 2005.
Peale N.V., Come vivere in positivo, Bompiani, Milano, 2000.
Pease A. – Pease B., Perché le donne non sanno leggere le cartine e gli uomini non si fermano mai a chiedere?, Rizzoli, Milano, 1999.
Peters T., Le piccole grandi cose. 163 modi per raggiungere l’eccellenza, Sperling & Kupfer Editori, Milano, 2011.
Peters T. – Waterman R.H.Jr., Alla ricerca dell’eccellenza, Sperling & Kupfer Editori, Milano, 1984.
Plotino (a cura di Claudio Marcellino), Breviario, Rusconi, Milano, 1997.
Plutarco, La serenità interiore, Mondadori, Milano, 1995.
Plutarco, Vita di Catone Uticense, Aldo Martello Editore, Milano, 1945.
Robbins A., Come ottenere il meglio da sé e dagli altri, Bompiani, Milano, 1998.
Robbins A., Come migliorare il proprio stato mentale, fisico e finanziario, Bompiani, Milano, 2004.
Rousseau J. J ., Emilio, Editore Laterza, Roma, 2006.
Rousseau J. J . (a cura di Raiko Mancini), Breviario, Rusconi, Milano 1998.
Sandrin L., Aiutare senza bruciarsi, Paoline Editoriale Libri, Milano, 2004.
Seneca L.A., La felicità, Newton Compton Editori, Roma, 1993.
Schiller F., La pulzella d’Orléans, Einaudi, Torino, 1997.
Schopenhauer A., La saggezza della vita, Newton Compton Editori, Roma, 1999.
Schopenhauer A. (a cura di Carla Buttazzi), Breviario, Rusconi, Milano 1996.
Sommaruga M., Comunicare con il paziente, Carocci, Roma, 2008.
Thoits P.A., Stress, Coping and social Support Processes: Where Are we? What Next?, in “Journal of Health and social Behavior”, (1995), pp. 53-79.
Voltaire, Lettere filosofiche, Barbera Editore, Milano, 2007.
Wager N., Feldman G. e Hussey T., Impact of Supervisior Interactional Style on Employees’ Blood Pressure, Consciousness and Experiential Psychology, 6 (2001).
Watzlawick P., Beavin J. H. Jackson D. D., Pragmatica della comunicazione umana, Casa Editrice Astrolabio, Roma, 1971.
Von Thun F. S., Parlare insieme, Tea, Milano, 1997.
Wilson P., Il libro della calma sul lavoro, Mondadori, Milano, 2000.
Zappelli G.M., L’incerto organizzativo. Strategie manageriali, soggettività e ben-essere, Guerrini e Associati, Milano, 2001.
Zappelli G.M., Vincere lo stress, Il Sole 24 Ore, Milano, 2011.
Bibliografia Recente sui Benefici del Sorriso:
[1] Keltner, D. and Harker, L., Expressions of positive emotion in women’s college yearbook pictures and their relationship to personality and life outcomes across adulthood, Journal of Personality and Social Psychology (2001, Vol. 80, No. 1)
[2] Ernest L. Abel, E. and Kruger, M., Smile Intensity in Photographs Predicts Longevity, Psychological Science (April 2010 21: 542-544)
[3] Scanner shows unborn babies smile, BBC News (September 9, 2003); Scans uncover secrets of the womb, BBC News (June 28, 2004).
[4] Bowlby, J., Attachment (Volume 2 of Attachment and Loss), Basic Books (1983)
[5] Ekman, P. & Friesen, W. V, The repertoire of nonverbal behavior: Categories, origins, usage, and coding, Semiotica (1969, 1, 49–98).
[6] Dimberg, U., Thunberg, M., Grunedal, S., Facial reactions to emotional stimuli: Automatically controlled emotional responses, Cognition and Emotion (2002) 16:4, 449–471; Dimberg, U., Söderkvist, S., The Voluntary Facial Action Technique: A Method to Test the Facial Feedback Hypothesis, Journal of Nonverbal Behavior (2011), 35:1, 17033.
[7] Niedenthal, P. Mermillod, M., Maringer, M., Hess, U., The Simulation of Smiles (SIMS) model: Embodied simulation and the meaning of facial expression, Behavioral and Brain Sciences (2010) 33, 417–480.
[8] Hennenlotter, A., Dresel, C., Castrop, F., et. all, The link between facial feedback and neural activity within central circuitries of emotion – New insights from botulinum toxin-induced denervation of frown muscles, Cerebral Cortex (2009) 19 (3): 537-542.
[9] One smile can make you feel a million dollars, The Scottsman, May 4, 2005 <http://news.scotsman.com/health/One-smile-can-make-you.2607641.jp>; Lewis, David and Carter, Nigel, “Yet Another Reason to Look After Your Teeth,” Press Release, British Dental Health Organization (April 30, 2005) <http://www.dentalhealth.org.uk/pressreleases/releasedetail.php?id=228/>.
[10] Abel, H. and Hester, R., “The Therapeutic Effects of Smiling,” in An Empirical Reflection on the Smile (Mellen Press, 2002).
Bibliografia Principale di Riferimento:
- Ferrario G. Ridere di Cuore. Tecniche Nuove
- Achor S. Il Vantaggio della Felicità. Palo Alto
- Achor S. Prima della Felicità. Palo Alto
- Seligman M. Imparare l’Ottimismo. Giunti
- Ekman P, Gyatso Tenzin. Felicità Emotiva. Sperling & Kupfer
- Ekman P. Giù la maschera. Giunti
- Ekman P. Te lo leggo in faccia. Amrita
Bibliografia sui Benefici della Risata:
- Adelswärd, Viveka, and Britt-Marie Öberg. “The Function of Laughter and Joking in Negotiating Activities.” HUMOR: International Journal of Humor Research 11.4 (1998): 411-430.
- L.Berk, M.Miller , Heo EH, Kim S, Park HJ, Kil SY in The effects of a simulated laughter programme on mood, cortisol levels, and health-related quality of life among haemodialysis patients. E Yim J1. In Therapeutic Benefits of Laughter in Mental Health: A Theoretical Review
- Arner, T. D. “No Joke: Transcendent Laughter in The Teseida and The Miller’s Tale.” Studies in Philology 102.2 (2005): 143-158.
- Askenasy, J. J. M. “The Functions and Dysfunctions of Laughter.” Journal of General Psychology 14.4 (1987): 317-34.
- Bainy, Moses. Why Do We Laugh and Cry? West Ryde, Australia: Sunlight Publications, 1993.
- Basil Hall, Laughter as a displacement activity: the implications for humor theory
- Baudelaire, Charles. The Essence of Laughter. New York, NY: Meridian: 1956.
- Bell, N. D. “Laughter in Interaction.” Discourse Studies 7.1 (2005): 137-138.
- Bellert, J. “Humor: A Therapeutic Approach in Oncology Nursing.” Cancer Nursing 12.2 (1989): 65-70.
- Berger, Arthur Asa. “After the Laughter: A Concluding Note.” Blind Men and Elephants: Perspectives on Humor. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Press, 1995, 159-170.
- Berger, Arthur Asa. “The Functions of Laughter: Sociological Aspects of Humor.” Blind Men and Elephants: Perspectives on Humor. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Press, 1995, 91-104.
- Berger, Arthur Asa. “The Politics of Laughter: A Cultural Theory of Humor Preferences.” Blind Men and Elephants: Perspectives on Humor. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Press, 1995, 105-120.
- Berger, Arthur Asa. “The Problem of Laughter: Philosophical Approaches to Humor.” Blind Men and Elephants: Perspectives on Humor. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Press, 1995, 37-50.
- Berger, Arthur Asa. Redeeming Laughter. New York, NY: Walter de Gruyter, 1997.
- Berger, Arthur Asa. “The Rhetoric of Laughter: The Techniques Used in Humor.” Blind Men and Elephants: Perspectives on Humor. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Press, 1995, 51-64.
- Berger, Arthur Asa. “Seeing Laughter: Visual Aspects of Humor.” Blind Men and Elephants: Perspectives on Humor. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Press, 1995, 139-158.
- Berger, Arthur Asa. “The Structure of Laughter: Semiotics and Humor.” Blind Men and Elephants: Perspectives on Humor. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Press, 1995, 65-78.
- Berger, Arthur Asa, and A. Wildavsky. “Who Laughs at What?” Society 31.6 (1994): 82-86.
- Berger, Peter L. Redeeming Laughter: The Comic Dimension of Human Experience. Hawthorne, NY: Walter de Gruyter, 1997.
- Berger, Phil. The Last Laugh. NY: Limelight, 1985.
- Bergler, E. Laughter and the Sense of Humor. NY: Intercontinental Medical Book Corp, 1956.
- Bergson, Henri Louis. Laughter: An Essay on the Meaning of the Comic. New York, NY: MacMillan, 1924.
- Bergson, Henri Louis. “Laughter.” Comedy. Ed. Wylie Sypher. Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1956, 59-190.
- Berk, Lee, and S. A. Tan. “Eustress of Mirthful Laughter Modulates the Immune System Lymphokine Interferon-Gama.” Annals of Behavioral Medicine Supplement, Proceedings of the Society of Behavioral Medicine’s Sixteenth Annual Scientific Sessions 17 (1995): C064.
- Berk, Lee, S. A. Tan, and William Fry. “Eustress of Humor Associated Laughter Modulates Specific Immune System Components.” Annals of Behavioral Medicine Supplement, Proceedings of the Society of Behavioral Medicine’s Fourteenth Annual Scientific Sessions 15 S111.
- Berk, Lee., S. A. Tan, William F. Fry, B. J. Napier, J. W. Lee, R. W. Hubbard, J. E. Lewis, and W. C. Eby. “Neuroendrocrine and Stress Hormone Changes During Mirthful Laughter.” American Journal of the Medical Sciences. 298.6 (1989): 390-96.
- Berk, Lee, S. Tan, B. Napier, and W. Evy. “Eustress of Mirthful Laughter Modifies Natural Killer Cell Activity. Clinical Research 37 (1989): 115A.
- Berk, Lee, S. A. Tan, S. Nehlsen-Cannarella, B. J. Napier, J. E. Lewis, J. E. Lee, and W. C. Eby. “Humor Associated with Laughter Decreases Cortisol and Increases Spontaneous Lymphocyte Blastogenesis.” Clinical Research 36 (1988): 435A.
- Berlyne, D. E. “Laughter, Humor, and Play.” Handbook of Social Psychology: Volume 3. Eds. G. Lindzey, and E. Aronson. Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley, 1969.
- Bizi, S., G. Keinan, and B. Beit-Hallahi. “Humor and Coping with Stress: A Test Under Real-Life conditions.” Personality and Individual Differences 9 (1988): 951-956.
- Black, D. W. “Laughter.” Journal of the American Medical Association 252.21 (1984): 2995-98.
- Black, D. W. “Pathological Laughter.” Journal of Nervous and Mental Diseases 170 (1982): 67-71.
- Blumenfeld, E., and L. Alpern. The Smile Connection: How to Use Humor in Dealilng with People. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall, 1986.
- Bonaiuto, Marino, Elio Castellana, and Antonio Pierro. “Arguing and Laughing: The Use of Humor to Negotiate in Group Discussions.” HUMOR: International Journal of Humor Research 16.2 (2003): 183-224.
- Bornstein, M. H., and M. E. Arterberry. “Recognition, Discrimination and Categorization ofSmiling by 5-Month-Old Infants.” Developmental Science 6.5 (2003): 585-599.
- Boston, Richard. An Anatomy of Laughter. London, England, Collins, 1974.
- Bouissac, Paul. “A Laughable Theory of Laughter.” High Quality 22 (1992): 8-11.
- Boyd, B. “Laughter and Literature: A Play Theory of Humor.” Philosophy and Literature 28.1 (2004): 1-22.
- Braga, S. S., R. Manni, and R. F. Pedretti. “Laughter-Induced Syncope.” Lancet (July 30-August 6, 2005): 366-426.
- Brody, R. “Anatomy of a Laugh.” American Health. (Dec, 1983): 43-47.
- Brottman, Mikita. “Risus Sardonicus: Neurotic and Pathological Laughter.” HUMOR: International Journal of Humor Research. 15.4 (2002): 401-418.
- Brown, G. E., D. Brown, and J. Ramos. “Effects of a Laughing Versus a Non-Laughing Model on Humor: Responses in College Students.” Psychological Relports 48.1 (1981): 35-40.
- Brown, G. E., K. J. Wheeler, and M. Cash. “The Effects of a Laughing vs. a Non-laughing Model on Humor Responses in Preschool Children.” Journal of Experimental Child Psychology 29 (1980): 334-39.
- Buckley, Francis H. The Morality of Laughter. Ann Arobr, MI: University of Michigan Press, 2003.
- Bushnell, D. D., and T. J. Scheff. “The Cathartic Effects of Laughter on Audiences.” The Study of Humor. Eds. Harvey Mindess and Joy Turek. Los Angeles, CA: Antioch Univ, 1979, 62ff.
- Cacioppo J. T. e Petty, R. ( 1981). “Electromyographic specificity during covert information processing. Psychophysiology, 18 (2), 518-523.
- Cacioppo J. T., Petty R. E. e Morris K. J. (1985). “Semantic, evaluative, and self-referent processing: Memory, cognitive effort, and somatovisceral activity”. Psychophysiology, 22, 371-384.
- Cacioppo J. T. e Dorfman D. D. (1987). “Waveform moment analysis in psychophysiological research”. Psychological Bulletin, 102, 421-438.
- Cacioppo, J. T., Tassinary, L. G. e Fridlund, A. F. (1990). “The skeletomotor system”. In J. T. Cacioppo e L. G. Tassinary (Eds.), Principles of psychophysiology: Physical, social, and inferential elements, Cambridge University Press, New York.
- Caron, James E. “From Ethology to Aesthetics: Evolution as a Theoretical Paradigm for Research on Laughter, Humor, and Other Comic Phenomena.” HUMOR: International Journal of Humor Research 15.3 (2002): 245-282.
- Carroll, Noel. “Words, Images, and Laughter.” Persistence of Vision 14 (1997): 42-52.
- Casadonte, Donald. “A Note on the Neuro-Mathematics of Laughter.” HUMOR: International Journal of Humor Research 16.2 (2003): 133-156.
- Chapman, Antony J. “Humor and Laughter in Social Interaction and Some Implications. Handbook of Humor Research, Volume I. Eds. P. E. McGhee, and J. H. Goldstein. New York, NY: Springer, 1983, 135-157.
- Chapman, Antony J. “Social Facilitation of Laughter in Children.” Journal of Experimental Social Psychology 9 (1973): 528-41.
- Chapman, Antony J., and W. Chapman. “Responsiveness to Humor: Its Dependency upon a Companion’s Humorous Smiling and Laughter.” The Journal of Psychology 88 (1974): 245-52.
- Chapman, Antony J., and Hugh C. Foot, eds. Humor and Laughter: Theory, Research, and Applications. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction, 1996.
- Chapman, Antony J., and D. S. Wright. “Social Enhancement of Laughter: An Experimental Analysis of Some Companion Variables.” Journal of Experimental Child Psychology 21 (1976): 201-218.
- Charland, M. “Normes and Laughter in Rhetorical Culture.” Quarterly Journal of Speech 80.3 (1994): 339-342.
- Chase, Jefferson S. Inciting Laughter: The Development of “Jewish Humor” in 19th Century German Culture. New York, NY: Walter de Gruyter, 1999.
- Claassens, L. J. M. “Laughter and Tears: Carnivalistic Overtones in the Stories of Sarah and Hagar.” Perspectives in Religious Studies 32.3 (2005): 295-308.
- Cleveland, Les. Dark Laughter: War in Song and Popular Culture. Westport, CT: Greenwood, 1994.
- Cogan, R., D. Cogan, W. Waltz, and M. McCue. “Effects of Laughter and Relaxation on Discomfort Thresholds.” Journal of Behavioral Medicine. 10.2 (1987): 139-144.
- Coser, R. L. “Laughter among Colleagues.” Psychiatry 23 (1960): 81-95.
- Coser, R. L. “Some Social Functions of Laughter: A Study of Humor in a Hospital Setting.” Human Relations 12.2 (1959): 171-182.
- Cousins, Norman. “The Laughter Prescription.” The Saturday Evening Post Oct, 1990: 34.
- Cousins, Norman. “Proving the Power of Laughter.” Psychology Today 23 (1989: 22-25.
- Cox, Samuel S. Why We Laugh. New York: Benjamin Blom, 1969.
- Dardick, G. “Learning to Laugh on the Job Principal 69.5 (1990): 32, 34.
- Darwin, Charles. “Joy, High Spirits, Love, Tender Feelings, Devotion.” The Expression of Emotions in Man and Animals. New York, NY: D. Appleton, 1924, 196-219.
- Davidhizar, Ruth, and Margaret Bowen. “The Dynamics of Laughter.” Archives of Psychiatric Nursing. 6.2 (1992): 132-137.
- Davidson, Cathy N. “Laughter without Comedy in For Whom the BellTolls.” Hemingway Notes 3.2 (1973): 609
- Davis, Jessica Milner. “Taking Humour and Laughter Seriously.” Australian Journal of Comedy. 2.1 (1996): 77-88.
- de Sousa, Ronald. “When Is It Wrong to Laugh?” The Philosophy of Laughter and Humor. Ed. John Morreall. Albany, NY: State University of New York Press, 1987, 226-249.
- Debenham, Warren. Laughter on Record: A Comedy Discography. Metuchen, NJ: The Scarecrow Press, 1988.
- Delahaye, S. “Death by Laughter in Sade and Maupassant.” French Studies Bulletin 96 (2005): 16-17.
- Derks, Peter, Lynn S. Gillikin, Debbie S. Bartolome-Rull, and Edward H. Bogart. “Laughter and Electroencephalographic Activity.” HUMOR: International Journal of Humor Research 10.3 (1997): 285-300.
- Devereux, Paul G., and Gerald P. Ginsburg. “Sociality Effects on the Production of Laughter.” Journal of General Psychology “Special Issue on Humor and Laughter” Eds. Mahony, Diana L. and Louis G. Lippman.128.2 (2001): 227-240.
- Dickie, S. “Joseph Andrews and the Great Laughter Debate.” Studies in Eighteenth Century Culture 34 (2005): 271-332.
- Dillon, K., B. Minchoff, and K. Baker. “Positive Emotional States and Enhancement of the Immune System.” International Journal of Psychiatric Medicine 15 (1985): 13-18.
- Ding, G. F., and A. T. Jersild. “A Study of the Laughing and Smiling of Preschool Children.” Journal of Genetic Psychology 40 (1932): 452-472.
- Dixon, N. “Humor: A Cognitive Alternative to Stress?” Stress and Anxiety. Eds. I. Sarason and C. Spielberger. 7 (1980): 281-289.
- Dobbin, J. Individual Differences in th Appraisal of Stress and the Immunological Consequences: Psychological Moderation of Lymphocyte Activation and Cytokine Production. Ontario, Canada: University of Western Ontario, 1990.
- Donoghu, E. E., M. W. McCarrey, and R. Clement. “Humor Appreciation as a Function of Canned Laughter, A Mirthful Companion, and Field Dependence–Facilation and Inhibitory Effects.” Canadian Journal of Behavioural Science 15.2 (1983): 150-162.
- Doskoch, P. “Happily ever Laughter.” Psychology Today July/August, 1996): 33-35.
- Dossey, L. “Now You Are Fit to Live: Humor and Health.” Alternative Therapies 2.5 (1996): 8-13, 98-100.
- Dudden, Arthur P. The Assault of Laughter. New York, NY: A. S. Barnes, 1962.
- Dvorakova, Alena. “Laughing at Nothing: Humor as a Response to Nihilism.” British Journal of Aesthetics 45.1 (2005): 106-108.
- Eastman, Max. Enjoyment of Laughter. NY: Simon and Schuster, 1936.
- Eckardt, A. Roy. Sitting in the Earth and Laughing: A Handbook of Humor. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction, 1992.
- Ekman P. (1972). “Universals and cultural differences in facial expressions of emotion”. In J. Cole (Ed.), Nebraska Symposium on Motivation 1971, NE, Lincoln, University of Nebraska Press.
- Ekman P. (1978). “Facial signs: Facts, fantasies, and possibilities”. In T. Sebeok (Ed.), Sight, Sound and Sense, Bloomington, Indiana University Press.
- Ekman P. (1979). “About brows: Emotional and conversational signals”. In J. Aschoff, M. von Carnach, K. Foppa, W. Lepenies e D. Plog (Eds.), Human ethology , Cambridge, Cambridge University Press.
- Ekman P. (1982). “Methods for measuring facial action”. In K. R. Scherer e P. Ekman (Eds.), Handbook of methods in Nonverbal Behavior Research, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press.
- Ekman P. (1984). “Expression and the nature of emotion”. In K. R. Scherer e P. Ekman (Eds.), Approaches to emotion , Hillsdale, N.J., Lawrence Erlbaum.
- Ekman P. (1989). “The argument and evidence about universals in facial expressions of emotion”. In H. Wagner e A. Manstead (Eds.), Handbook of social psychophysiology , Chichester, Wiley.
- Ekman P. (1992a). “Facial expression of emotion: New findings, new questions”. Psychological Science, 3, 34-38.
- Ekman P. (1992b). “An argument for basic emotions”. Cognition and Emotion, 6, 169-200.
- Ekman P. e Friesen W. V. (1969). “The Repertoire of Non Verbal Behaviour”. Semiotica, 1, 49-98.
- Ekman P. e Friesen W. V. (1972). “Hand Movements”. Journal of Communication, 12, 353-374.
- Ekman P. e Friesen W. V. ( 1975) Unmasking the face. A guide to recognizing emotions from facial clues, Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey, Prentice-Hall.
- Ekman P. e Friesen W. V. ( 1978). Facial action coding system: A method for the measurement of facial movement. Palo Alto, Calif, consulting Psychologist Press.
- Elliot-Binns, C. P. “Laughter and Medicine.” Journal of the Royal Coll Gen Pract 35.8 (1985): 364-65.
- Elsley, Judy. “Laughter as Feminine Power in The Color Purple and A Question of Silence.” New Perspectives on Women and Comedy. Ed. Regina Barreca. Philadelphia, PA: Gordon and Breach, 1992, 193-200.
- Erdman, L. “Laughter Therapy for Patients with Cancer.” Oncology Nursing Forum 18.8 (1991): 1359-1363.
- Falk, Dana R., and Clara E. Hill. “Counselor Interventions Preceding Client Laughter in Brief Therapy.” Journal of Counseling Psychology 39.1 (1992): 39-45.
- Farley-Hills, David. The Benovelence of Laughter: Comic Poetry of the Commonwealth and Restoration. Totowa, NJ: Rowman and Littlefield, 1974.
- Fendt, G. “Apartheid among the Dead; Or, on Christian Laughter in Ann Petry’s `The Bones of Louella Brown.’” Contributions in Afroamerican and African Studies 209 (2004): 111-118.
- Finnigan, Joan. Laughing All the Way Home: Indigenous Humour of the Ottawa Valley. Toronto, Canada: Deneau, 1984.
- Flewelling, Ralph Tyler. “The Animal Capable of Laughter.” Personalist 25 (1944): 341-353.
- Flugel, J. C. “Humor and Laughter.” Handbook of Social Psychology. Ed. Lindzey. Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley, 1954, 709-34.
- Fogarasi, A., J. Janszky, Z. Siegler, and I. Tuxhorn. “Ictal Smile Lateralizes to the Right Hemisphere in Childhood Epilepsy.” Epilepsia 46.3 (2005): 449-451.
- Foot, Hugh. “Humor and Laughter.” A Handbook of Communication Skills. Ed. O. D. W. Hargie. London, England: Croom Helm, 1986, 355-382.
- Fox, Kathleen. “Laugh it Off: The Effect of Humor on the Well-Being of the Older Adult.” Journal of Gerontological Nursing 16.12 (December, 1990): 11-16.
- Francis, L. E. “Laughter: The Best Mediation–Humor as Emotion Management Interaction.” Symbolic Interaction 17.2 (1994): 147-163.
- Frank, Mark G., and Paul Ekman. “Not all Smiles are Created Equal: The Differences between Enjoyment and Nonenjoyment Smiles.” HUMOR: International Journal of Humor Research 6.1 (1993): 6-26.
- Fridlund, Alan J. “Sociality of Solitary Smiling: Potentiation by an Implicit Audience.” Journal of Personality and Social Psychology. 60 (1991): 229-240.
- Fridlund, Alan J., and Jennifer M. Loftis. “Relations between Tickling and Humorous Laughter: Preliminary Support for the Darwin-Hecker Hypothesis.” Biological Psychology 30.2 (1990): 141-150.
- Fry, William F. “Laughter: Is It the Best Medicine?” Stanford MD 10.1 (1971): 16-20.
- Fry, William F. “The Respiritory Components of Mirthful Laughter.” Journal of Biological Psychology 19.2 (1977): 39-50.
- Fry, William F., and William M. Savin. “Mirthful Laughter and Blood Pressure.” HUMOR: International Journal of Humor Research 1.1 (1988): 49-62.
- Gallo, Nick. “Lighten Up: Laugh Your Way to Good Health.” Better Homes and Gardens. August, 1989: 31-32.
- Gavioli, Lauri. “Turn-Initial Versus Turn-Final Laughter: Two Techniques for Initiating Remedy in English/Italian Bookshop Service Encounters.” Discourse Processes 19 (1995): 369-384.
- Gazella, Katie. “Humor at the University of Michigan: A New Study Investigates What Makes Us Laugh, and Why.” LSA: College of Literature, Science, and the Arts Magazine (Fall, 2005): 41-42.
- Gelbart, Larry. Laughing Matters. New York, NY: Random House, 1998.
- Gelkopf, Marc, Shulamith Kreitler, and Mircea Sigal. “Laughter in a Psychiatric Ward: Somatic, Emotional, Social, and Clinical Influences on Schizophrenic Patients.” Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease. 185.1 (1993): 283-289.
- Gelkopf, Marc, and M. Sigal. “It is Not Enlough to Have them Laugh: Hostility, Anger, and Humor-Coping in Schizophrenic Patients.” Humor: International Journal of Humor Research 8.3 (1995): 273-284.
- Gervais, Matthew and David Sloane Wilson. “The Evolution of Laughter and Humor: A Synthetic Approach.” Quarterly Review of Biology 80.4 (2005): 395-430.
- Gierycha, Ewa, Rafal Milnera, and Andrzej Michalskia. “ERP Responses to Smile-Provoking Pictures.” Journal of Psychophysiology 19.2 (2005): 77-90.
- Giles, H., and G. S. Oxford. “Towards a Multidimensional Theory of Laughter Causation and its Social Implications.” Bulletin of the British Psychological Society 23 (1970): 97-105.
- Gilligan, B. “A Positive Coping Strategy: Humor in the Oncology Setting.” Professional Nurse 8.4 (1993): 231-233.
- Gilman, Diane, and Joel Goodman. “Laughing Matters.” In Context 13 (Spring, 1986): 11-13.
- Glasgow, R. D. V. Madness, Masks, and Laughter. Teaneck, NJ: Farleigh Dickinson University Press, 1995.
- Glasgow, R. D. V. Split Down the Sides: On the Subject of Laughter. Lanham, MD: University Press of America, 1997.
- Glen, P. “Initiating Shared Laughter in Multi-Party Conversations.” Western Journal of Speech Communication 53 (1989): 127-149.
- Glenn, Phillip. Laughter in Interaction. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press, 2003; reviewed by N. J. Enfield in Linguistics 400 (2005): 1195-1197; reviewed by Salvatore Attardo in HUMOR 18.4 (2005): 422-430.
- Goldstein, Jeffrey H. “A Laugh a Day.” Sciences 22.6 (1982): 21-25.
- Goldstein, Jeffrey H. “Therapeutic Effects of Laughter.” Handbook of Humor and Psychotherapy: Advances in the Clinical Use of Humor. Eds. William Fry and Waleed Salameh. Sarasota, FL: Professional Resource Exchange, 1987, 1-20.
- Goodman, Joel. “How to Get More Smileage Out of Your Life: Making Sense of Humor, Then Serving It.” Handbook of Research in Humor: Volume 2, Applied Studies Eds. P. E. McGhee, and J. H. Goldstein. New York, NY: Springer-Verlag, 1983, 1-21.
- Goodrich, A. J., J. Henry, and D. W. Goodrich. “Laughter in Psychiatric Conferences: A Sociopsychiatric Analysis.” American Journal of Orthopsychiatry 24 (1954): 175-184.
- Grant, Mary A. The Ancient Rhetorical Theories of the Laughable: The Greek Rhetoricians and Cicero. University of Wisconsin Studcies in Language and Literature 21. Madison, WI: University of Wisconsin, 1924.
- Gray, Frances. Women and Laughter. Charlottesville, VA: University Press of Virginia, 1994.
- Gregory, J. C. The Nature of Laughter. New York, NY: Harcourt, Brace, and Company, 1924.
- Greig, J. Y. T. The Psychology of Laughter and Comedy. New York, NY: Cooper Square, 1969.
- Grimm, Reinhold, ed. Laughter Unlimited. Seattle, WA: University of Washington Press, 1991.
- Gronnerod, J. S. “On the Meanings and Uses of Laughter in Research Interviews: Relationships between Interviewed Men and a Woman Interviewer.” Young 12.1 (21004): 31-49.
- Gross, E. “Laughter and Symbolic Interaction.” Symbolic Interaction 2 (1979): 111-112.
- Grotjahn, Martin. “Beyond Laughter: A Summing Up.” Comedy: Meaning and Form. Ed. Robert W. Corrigan, San Francisco, CA: Chandler, 1965, 270-276.
- Grumet, Gerald W. “Laughter: Nature’s Epileptoid Catharsis.” Psychological Reports 65 (1989): 1059-1078.
- Gruner, Charles R. “Audiences’ Response to Jokes in Speeches With and Without, Recorded Laughs.” Psychological Reports 73.1 (1993): 347-350.
- Gruner, Charles R. The Game of Humor: A Comprehensive Theory of Why We Laugh. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction, 1997.
- Gruner, Charles R. Understanding Laughter: The Workings of Wit and Humor. Chicago: Nelson-Hall, 1978.
- Gruner, Charles R., L. J. Pelletier, and M. A. Williams. “Evaluative Responses to Jokes in Informative Speech With and Without Laughter by an Audience: A Partial Replication.” Psychological Reports 74 (1994): 446.
- Gurevich, Aaron. “Bakhtin and his Theory of Carnival.” A Cultural History of Humour: From Antiquity to the Present Day. Eds. Bremmer, Jan, and Herman Roodenburg. Cambridge, England: Polity Press, 1997, 54-60.
- Gutwirth, Marcel. Laughing Matter: An Essay on the Comic. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1993.
- Hageseth, G. A Laughing Place: The Art and Psychology of Positive Humor in Love and Adversity Fort Collins, CO: Berwick, 1988.
- Halliwell, S. “Greek Laughter and the Problem of the Absurd.” Arion 13.2 (2005): 121-146.
- Hanly, Sheila. Peek-A-Boo! 101 Ways to Make a Baby Smile. New York, NY: D. K. Publishers, 1988.
- Harral, Stewart. When It’s Laughter You’re After. Norman, OK: Univ of Oklahoma Press, 1962.
- Hawakami, K. K. Takai-Kawakami, M. Tomonaga, J. Suzuki, T. Kusaka, and T. Okay. “Origins of Smiles and Laughter: A Preliminary Study.” Early Human Development (2005).
- Hayashi, T., O. Urayama, K. Kawai, K. Hayashi, S. Iwanaga, M. Ohta, T. Saito, and K. Murakami. “Laughter Regulates Gene Expression in Patients with Type 2 Diabetes.” Psychother. Psychosom. 75.1 (2006): 62-65.
- Hayworth, D. “Social Origin and Function of Laughter.” Psychological Review 35 (1928): 367-384.
- Hennenlotter, A., U. Schroeder, P. Erhard, F. Castrop, B. Haslinger, D. Stoecker, K. W. Lange, and A. O. Caballos-Bauman. “A Common Neural Basis for Receptive and Expressive Communicatoin of Pleasant Facial Affect.” Neuroimage 26.2 (2005): 581-591.
- Herth, K. “Laughter: A Nursing Treatment.” American Journal of Nursing 84 (1984): 991-992.
- Hertzler, Joyce O. Laughter: A Socio-Scientific Analysis. New York, NY: Exposition Press, 1970.
- Holden, Robert. Laughter–The Best Medicine. London, England: Thorsons, 1995.
- Holland, Norman N. Laughing: A Psychology of Humor. Ithaca, NY: Cornell Univ Press, 1982.
- Holme, Bryan. A Present of Laughter. NY: Viking, 1982.
- Hong, W. “Learning through Laughter: The Use of Cartoons in Business Chinese.” Journal of Language for International Business 15.1 (2004): 100-116.
- Humann, Ursula. “Der Witz als Waffe: Lachen and Humor in der Jüdischen Tradition.” Tribüne 126 (1993): 179-187.
- Hudak, D., A. Dale, M. Hudak, and D. DeGood. “Effects of Humorous Stimuli and Sense of Humor on Discomfort.” Psychological Reports 69.3 (1991): 779-786.
- Hutcheson, Francis. Reflections on Laughter. New York, NY: Garland, 1971.
- Ishigami, S, A. Nakajima, M. Tanno, T. Matsuzaki, H. Suzuki, and S. Yoshino. “Effects of Mirthful Laughter on Growth Hormone, IGF-1 and Substance P in Patients with Rheumatoid Arthritis.” Clin. Exp. Rheumatol. 23.5 (2005): 651-657.
- Jefferson, Gail. “An Exercise in the Transcription and Analysis of Laughter.” Handbook of Discourse Analysis, Volume 3: Discourse and Dialogue. Ed. T. A. van Dijk. London, England: Academic Press, 1985, 25-34.
- Jefferson, Gail. “On the Organization of Laughter in Talk about Troubles.” Structures of Social Action: Studies in Conversational Analysis. Eds. J. Atkinson and J. Heritage. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press, 1984, 346-369.
- Jefferson, Gail. “A Technique for Inviting Laughter and its Subsequent Acceptance/Declination.” Everyday Language: Studies in Ethnomethodology. Ed. G. Psathas. New York, NY: Irvington, 1979, 79-96.
- Jenkins, Ron. Subversive Laughter: the Liberating Power of Comedy. New York, NY: Free Press, 1994.
- Johnson, Helen. “Counteracting Performaitivity in Schools: The Case for Laughter as a Qualitative and Redemptive Indicator.” International Journal of Children’s Spirituality 10.1 (2005): 81-96.
- Joubert, Laurent. Treatise on Laughter. Trans. Gregory David de Rocher. Birmingham, AL: University of Alabama Press, 1980.
- Juni, Samuel, and Bernard Katz. “Self-Effacing Wit as a Response to Oppression: Dynamics in Ethnic Humor.” Journal of General Psychology Special Issue on Humor and Laughter Eds. Mahony, Diana L. and Louis G. Lippman.128.2 (2001): 117-119.
- Kaplan, L. “Suspense, Para-Science and Laughter.” Sub-Stance 71-71 (1993): 306-314.
- Karassev, Leonid V. Filosofia Smekha/Philosophy of Laughter. Moscow, Russia: R.G.G.U, 1996.
- Kehl, D. G. “Varieties of Risible Experience: Grades of Laughter in Modern American Literature.” HUMOR: International Journal of Humor Research 13.4 (2000): 279-395.
- Kelly, K. “Laughter: A Hearty Har-Har.” US News and World Report (March 21, 2005): 138-155.
- Killeen, M. “Clinical Clowning: Humor in Hospice Care.” American Journal of Hospice and Palliative Care 8.3 (1991): 23-27.
- Kimata, H. “Reduction of Allergic Responses in Atopic Infants by Mother’s Laughter.” European Journal of Clinical Investigation 34.9 (2004): 645-646.
- Kotani, K. “Socio-Psychological Activities Associated with Laughter in Older Japanese Females.” Arch. Med. Res 37.1 (2006): 186-187.
- Kraut, R. E., and R. E. Johnston. “Social and Emotional Messages of Smiling: An Ethological Approach.” Journal of Personality Social Psychology. 37 (1979): 1539-1553.
- Kreitler, H., and S. Kreitler. “Dependence of Laughter on Cognitive Strategies.” Merrill-Palmer Quarterly 16 (April, 1970): 163-177.
- Kuhn, C. C. “The Stages of Laughter.” Journal of Nursing Jocularity 4.2 (1994): 34-35.
- Kuipers, Giselinde. “Where Was King Kong When We Needed Him?: Public Discourse, Digital Disaster Jokes, and the Functions of Laughter after 9/11.” Journal of American and Comparative Cultures 28.1 (2005): 70-84.
- Kundera, Milan. The Book of Laughter and Forgetting. New York, NY: Penguin, 1980.
- Kushner, B. “Laughter as Materiel: The Mobilization of Comedy in Japan’s Fifteen-Year War.” International History Review 26.2 (21004): 300-330.
- LaFrance, M. “Felt Versus Feigned Funniness: Issues in Smiling and Laughing.” Handbook of Humor Research I. Eds. P. G. McGhee, and J. H. Goldstein. New York, NY: Springer-Verlag, 1983, 1-12.
- Labott, S., and R. Martin. “The Stress-Moderating Effects of Weeping and Humor.” Journal of Human Stress 13.4 (1987): 159-164.
- Lahue, Kalton C. World of Laughter. Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press, 1966.
- Lally, Steven. “Laugh Your Stress Away.” Prevention. June, 1991: 50ff.
- Lamb, Chris. “The Popularity of O. J. Simpson Jokes: The More We Know, the More We Laugh.” Journal of Popular Culture 28.1 (1994): 223-232.
- Lambert, R., and N. Lambert. “The Effects of Humor on Secretory Immunoglobulin A Levels in School-Aged Children.” Pediatric Nursing 21.1 (1995): 16-19.
- Lampert, Martin D., and Susan Ervin-Tripp. “Risky Laughter: Teasing and Self-Directed Joking among Male and Female Friends.” Journal of Pragmatics, 38.1 (2006): 51-72.
- Laura, Ronald S., and Bob Wolff. “Not Just for Laughs: Humor Can Relieve Stress and Prolong Life.” Muscle and Fitness. December, 1992: 148ff.
- Leventhal, H., and W. Mace. “The Effect of Laughter on Evaluation of a Slapstick Movie.” Journal of Personality 38 (1970): 16-30.
- Levi, Primo. “Ritual and Laughter.” Other People’s Trades. New York, NY: Summit Books, 1989.
- Lieber, D. B. “Laughter and Humor in Critical Care. Dimens Crit Care Nurs 5.3 (1986): 162-70.
- Light, K. Humor as a Coping Strategy: Its Relationship to Role Strain in Women. M.A. Thesis. Tampa, FL: University of South Florida, 1997.
- Lindvall, Terry. Surprised by Laughter. Nashville, TN: T. Nelson, 1996.
- Lipman, Steve. Laughter in Hell: The Use of Humor during the Holocaust. Northvale, NJ: Jason Aronson, 1991.
- Lippitt, John. “Nietzsche, Zarathustra and the Status of Laughter.” British Journal of Aesthetics 32.1 (1992).
- Littleton, J. “Learning to Laugh, and Laughing to Learn.” Montessori Life 10 (1998): 42-44.
- Long, Patricia. “Laugh and Be Well?” Psychology Today 21.10 (1987): 28-29.
- Loomans, D., and K. J. Kolberg. The Laughing Classroom: Everyone’s Guide to Teaching with Humor and Play. Tiburon, CA: H. J. Kramer, 1993.
- Lowe, G., and S. B. Taylor. “Relationship between Laughter and Weekly Alcohol Consumption.” Psychological Reports 72.3 (1993): 1210
- Ludovici, Anthony M. The Secret of Laughter. London, England: Constable Press, 1932.
- Lundell, Torborg. “An Experiential Exploration of Why Men and Women Laugh.” HUMOR: International Journal of Humor Research 6.3 (1993): 299-318.
- McAdams, D. P., R. J. Jackson, and C. Kirshmit. “Looking, Laughing, and Smiling in Dyads as a Function of Intimacy Motivations and Reciprocity.” Journal of Personality. 52.3 (1984): 261-273.
- McGhee, Paul E. The Laughter Remedy: Health, Healing, and the Amuse System. Randolph, New Jersey: pAUL mCgHEE, 1991.
- MacHovec, F. “Humor in Therapy.” Psychotherapy in Private Practice 9.1 (1991): 25-33.
- McMahon, C., A. Mahmud, and J. Freely. “Taking Blood Pressure–No Laughing Matter!” Blood Pressur Monitor 10.2 (2005): 109-110.
- Machline, Vera Cecelia. “The Legend Behind the Epithet `Sardonic Laugh,’ 2000 Ans de Rire: Permanence et Modernite ed. Mongi Medina. Besançons, France: Presses Universitaires France-Comtoises, 2002, 77-86.
- Mager, M., and P. A. Cabe. “Is Propensity to Laugh Equivalent to Sense of Humor?” Psychological Reports 66.3 (1990): 737-738.
- Mahony, Diana L., and M. D. Corson. “Light-Mindedness versus Lightheartedness: Conflicting Conceptions of Laughter among Latter-Day Saints.” BYU Studies 42.2 (2003): 115-129.
- Mahony, Diana L., W. Jeffrey Burroughs, and Arron C. Hieatt. “The Effects of Laughter on Discomfort Thresholds: Does Expectation Become Reality?” Journal of General Psychology “Special Issue on Humor and Laughter” Eds. Mahony, Diana L. and Louis G. Lippman.128.2 (2001): 217-226.
- Mahony, Diana L. and Louis G. Lippman, eds. “Introduction to the Special Issue on `Humor and Laughter.’” Journal of General Psychology 128.2 (2001): 117-119.
- Mallett, Jane. “Humour and Laughter Therapy.” The Nurses’ Handbook of Complementary Therapies. London, England: Churchill-Livingston, 1995, 109-117.
- Mallett, Jane. “The Use of Humour and Laughter in Patient Care.” British Journal of Nursing. 2 (1993): 172-175.
- Mandel, Siegfried. “The Laughter of Nordic and Celtic Irish Tricksters.” Fabula 23.1-2 (1982): 35-47.
- Marmysz, John. Laughing at Nothing: Humor as a Response to Nihilism. Albany, NY: SUNY Press, 2003.
- Martin, G. Neil, and Colin D. Gray. “The Effects of Audience Laughter on Men’s and Women’s Responses to Humor.” Journal of Social Psychology 136.2 (1996): 221-231.
- Martin, Rod A. “Humor, Laughter, and Physical Health: Methodological Issues and Research Findings.” Psychological Bulletin 127.4 (2001): 504-519.
- Martin, Rod, N. Kuiper, J. Olinger, and K. Dance. “Humor, Coping with Stress, Self Concept, and Psychological Well-being.” HUMOR: International Journal of Humor Research 6.1 (1993): 89-104.
- Martin, Rod, and Herbert Lefcourt. “Sense of Humor as a Moderator of the Relation between Stressors and Mood.” Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 45 (1983): 1313-1324.
- Meyer, M., S. Zysset, D. Y. von Cramon, and K. Alter. “Distinct fMRI Responses to Laughter, Speech, and Sounds along the Human Peri-Sylvian Cortex.” Cognitive Brain Research 24.2 (2005): 291-306.
- Mills, Letha. “Laughter is the Best Medicine.” Active Years 14 (2002): 74-77.
- Milner, George B. “Homo Ridens: Towards a Semiotic Theory of Humor and Laughter.” Semiotica 5 (1972): 1-30.
- Miyamoto, Lance. “Why Laughing is Good for You.” Science Digest. June, 1981, 27.
- Monro, D. H. Argument of Laughter. Notre Dame, IN: University of Notre Dame Press, 1963.
- Morreall, John. “Humor and Laughter.” Encyclopedia of U.S. Popular Culture. Forthcoming.
- Morreall, John. “Laughter.” Encyclopaedia Britannica, Japanese Edition. Forthcoming.
- Morreall, John. “Laughter, Suddenness, and Pleasure.” Dialogue: Canadian Philosophical Review 23 (1984): 689-694.
- Morreall, John. “A New Theory of Laughter.” The Philosophy of Laughter and Humor. Ed. John Morreall. Albany, NY: SUNY Press, 1987, 128-38.
- Morreall, John. Taking Laughter Seriously. Albany, NY: SUNY Press, 1983.
- Mowrer, Donald E. “A Case Study of Perceptual and Acoustic Features of an Infant’s First Laugh Utterances.” HUMOR: International Journal of Humor Research 7.2 (1994): 139-156.
- Mueller, Rolph, and Guenter Braus. “Laughter,” Special Issue of High Quality: Magazine of Design and Printing 22.1 (1992). Heidelberg, Germany: Rosi Pluschke-Moser; NOTE: There is also a German version.
- Mulkay, Michael, Colin Clark, and Trevor Pinch. “Laughter and the Profit Motive: The Use of Humor in a Photographic Shop.” HUMOR: International Journal of Humor Research. 6.2 (1993): 163-194.
- Mulkay, Michael, and Gerard Howe. “Laughter for Sale.” The Sociological Review 42.3 (1994): 481-500.
- Nasir, U. M., S. Iwanaga, Ahmn Nabi, O. Urayama, K. Hayashi, T. Hayashi, K. Kawai, A. Sultana, K. Murakami, and F. Suzuki. “Laughter Therapy Modulates the Parameters of Renin-Angiotensin System in Patients with Type 2 Diabetes.” International Journal of Molecular Medicine 16.6 (2005): 1077-1082.
- Nerhardt, G. “Humor and Inclination to Laugh: Emotional Reactions to Stimuli of Different Divergence from a Range of Expectancy.” Scandinavian Journal of Psychology 11 (1970): 185-95.
- Neuendorf, Kimberley, and Tom Fennell. “A Social Facilitation View of the Generation of Humor and Mirth Reactions: Effects of a Laugh Track.” Central States Speech Journal 39.1 (1988): 37-48.
- Nichols, Stephen G. “Laughter as Gesture: Hilarity and the Anti-Sublime.” Neohelicon 32.2 (2005): 375-389.
- Niebylski, Dianna C. Humoring Resistance: Laughter and the Excessive Body in Contemporary Women’s Fiction, Albany, NY: State University of New York Press, 2004.
- Niles, R. “Wigs, Laughter, and Subversion: Charles Busch and Strategies of Drag Performance.” Journal of Homosexuality 46.3-4 (2004): 35-54.
- Nilsen, Alleen Pace, and Don L. F. Nilsen. “Laughter and Smiles.” Encyclopedia of 20th Century American Humor. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 2000, 184-186.
- Nilsen, Don L. F. “Laughter and Smiling.” Humor Scholarship: A Research Bibliography. Westport, CT: Greenwood, 1993, 1-5.
- Nwokah, Eva E. “Giggle Time in the Infant/Toddler Classroom: Learning and Connecting Through Shared Humor and Laughter.” Focus on Infants and Toddlers 16.2 (2003): 1-8.
- Nwokah, Evangeline, and Alan Fogel. “Laughter in Mother-Infant Emotional Communication.” HUMOR: International Journal of Humor Research. 6.2 (1993): 137-162.
- O’Donnell-Trujillo, Nick, and Katherine Adams. “Heheh in Conversation: Some Coordinating Accomplishments of Laughter.” The Western Journal of Speech Communications 47 (Spring 1983): 175-191.
- Okun, M. S., D. Bowers, U. Springer, N. A. Shapira, D. Malone, A. R. Rezai, B. Nuttin, K. M. Heilman, R. J. Morecraft, S. A. Rasmussen, B. D. Greenberg, K. D. Foote, and W. K. Goodman.” Neurocase 10.4 (2004): 271-279.
- Osaka, N., and M. Osaka. “Striatal Reward Areas Activated by Implicit Laughter Induced by Mimic Words in Humans: A Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging Study.” Neuroreport 16.15 (2005): 1621-1624.
- Overeem, Sebastian, Walter Taal, E. Öcal Gezici, Gert Jan Lammers, and J. Gert van Dijk. “Is Motor Inhibition during Laughter due to Emotional or Respiratory Influences?” Pscychophysiology 41.2 (2004): 254ff.
- Owren, M. J., and J-A Bachorowski. “Reconsidering the Evolution of Nonlinguistic Communication: The Case of Laughter.” Journal of Nonverbal Behavior 27.3 (2003): 183-200.
- Parse, R. R. “Laughing and Health–A Study Using Parse Research Method.” Nursing Science Quarterly 123.2 (1994): 129-145.
- Paskind, J. “Effects of Laughter on Muscle Tone.” Archives of Neurology and Psychiatry 28 (1932): 623-628.
- Pasquali, Elaine Anne. “Learning to Laugh: Humor as Therapy.” Journal of Psychosocial Nursing 28.3 (March, 1990): 31-35.
- Paul, William. Laughing Screaming: Modern Hollywood Horror and Comedy. New York, NY: Columbia University Press, 1994.
- Pepper, Melissa. “In Outer Space No One Can Hear Your Laughter.” Australian Journal of Comedy 2 (1995): 101-114.
- Peter, Laurence, and Bill Dana. The Laughter Prescription. New York, NY: Ballentine, 1982.
- Pfeifer, Karl. “Laughter and Pleasure.” HUMOR: International Journal of Humor Research 7 (1994): 157-172.
- Pfeifer, Karl. “Laughter, Freshness and Titillation.” Inquiry 40 (1997): 307-322.
- Pfeifer, Karl. “From Locus Neoclassicus to Locus Rattus: Notes on Laughter, Comprehensiveness, and Titillation. ” Res Cogitans 3 (2006) 29-46.
- Pfeifer, Karl. “More on Morreall on Laughter.” Dialogue 26 (1987): 161-166.
- Piddington, Ralph. The Psychology of Laughter. New York, NY: Gamut Press, 1963.
- Plessner, Helmuth. Laughing and Crying. Evanston, IL: Northwestern University Press, 1970.
- Podlichak, Walter. “Fun, Funny, Fun–Of Humor and Laughter.” Humor: International Journal of Humor Research. 5.4 (1992): 375-396.
- Polio, Howard R., Rodney Mers, and William Lucchesi. “Humor, Laughter, and Smiling: Some Preliminary Observations of Funny Behaviors.” The Psychology of Humor. Eds. Jeffrey Goldstein and Paul McGhee. NY: Academic Press, 1972,2 211-42.
- Porteous, Janice. “Humor as a Process of Defense: The Evolution of Laughing.” Humor: International Journal of Humor Research 1.1 (1988): 63-80.
- Powell, B. S. “Laughter and Healing: The Use of Humor in Hospitals Treating Children.” J Assoc Care Child Hosp 3.2 (1974): 10-16.
- Poyatos, F. “Many Voices of Laughter–A New Audible-Visual Paralinguistic Approach.” Semiotica 93.1-2 (1993): 61-81.
- Prerost, F. “Presentation of Humor and Facilitation of a Relaxation Response among Internal and External Scores on Rotter’s Scale.” Psychological Reports 72 (1993): 1248-1250.
- Prerost, F. “Use of Humor and Guided Imagery in Therapy to Alleviate Stress.” Journal of Mental Health Counseling 10.1 (1988): 16-22.
- Propp, Vladimir. “Ritual Laughter in Folklore.” Theory and History of Folklore. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota, 1984.
- Provine, Robert R. “Contagious Laughter: Laughter is a Sufficient Stimulus for Laughs and Smiles.” Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 30.1 (1992): 1-4.
- Provine, Robert R. “Contageous Yawning and Laughter.” Social Learning in Animals: The Roots of Culture. Eds. C. M. Heyes, and B. G. Galef. New York, NY: Academic Press, 1996.
- Provine, Robert R. “The Laughing Species.” Natural History December, 2000, 72-77.
- Provine, Robert R. “Laughing, Tickling, and the Evolution of Speech and Self.” Current Directions in Psychological Science 13.6 (2004): 215-218.
- Provine, Robert R. “Laughter.” American Scientist 84.1 (1996): 38-48.
- Provine, Robert R. “Laughter: A Novel Tool for Understanding Vocal Production, Perceptions, and Social Behavior.” American Scientist 84.1 (1996): 38-40
- Provine, Robert R. Laughter: A Scientific Investigation. New York, NY: Harmondsworth/Penguin, 2001.
- Provine, Robert R. “Laughter Punctuates Speech: Linguistic, Social and Gender Contexts of Laughter.” Ethology 95.4 (1993): 291-298.
- Provine, Robert R., and Kenneth R. Fischer. “Laughing, Smiling, and Talking: Relation to Sleeping and Social Context in Humans.” Ethology 83 (1989): 295-305.
- Provine, Robert R., and Yvonne L. Young. “Laughter: A Stereotyped Human Vocalization.” Ethology 89 (1991): 115-124.
- Rankin, A. M., and P. J. Philip. “An Epidemic of Laughing in the Bukoba District of Tanganyika. Central African Journal of Medicine 9 (1963): 167-170.
- Ransohoff, R. “Some Observations on Humor and Laughter in Young Adolescent Girls.” Journal of Youth and Adolescence 4 (1975): 155-170.
- Raskin, Victor. “Better to Laugh: Linking Humor, Creativity, and Intelligence.” The World and I (June, 1992): 658-660.
- Repplier, Agnes. In Pursuit of Laughter. Boston, MA: Houghton Mifflin, 1936.
- Rothbart, Mary K. “Incongruity, Problem-Solving and Laughter.” Humor and Laughter: Theory, Research, and Applications. Eds. Antony J. Chapman, and Hugh C. Foot. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction, 1996, 37-54.
- Rothbart, Mary K. “Laughter in Young Children.” Psycholigical Bulletin 80.3 (1973): 247-256.
- Ruch, Willibald. “Commentary.” Charles Darwins’ Expression of Emotions in Man and Animals (3rd Edition). Ed. Paul Ekman. New York, NY: Oxford University Press, 1998.
- Ruch, Willibald. “Extraversion, Alcohol, and Enjoyment.” What the Face Reveals: Basic and Applied Studies of Spontaneous Expression Using the Facial Action Coding System. Eds. Paul Ekman, and E. L. Rosenberg. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press, 1997, 112-130.
- Ruch, Willibald. “The FACS in Humor Research.” What the Face Reveals: Basic and Applied Studies of Spontaneous Expression Using the Facial Action Coding System. Eds. Paul Ekman, and E. L. Rosenberg. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press, 1997, 109-111.
- Ruch, Willibald. “Laughter and Temperament.” What the Face Reveals: Basic and Applied Studies of Spontaneous Expression Using the Facial Action Coding System. Eds. P. Ekman, and E. L. Rosenberg. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press, 1997, 131-132.
- Ruch, Willibald, and Lambert Deckers. “Do Extroverts Like to Laugh? An Analysis of the Situational Humor Response Questionnaire.” European Journal of Personality 7.4 (1993): 211-220.
- Ruch, Willibald, and P. Ekman. “The Expressive Pattern of Laughter.” Emotion, Qualia, and Consciousness. Tokyo, Japan: Word Scientific Publisher, 2001.
- Russell, Roy E. Life, Mind and Laughter: A Theory of Laughter. Chicago, IL: Adams Press, 1987.
- Russell, Roy E. “Understanding Laughter in Terms of Basic Perceptual and Response Patterns.” HUMOR: International Journal of Humor Research 9.1 (1996): 39-56.
- Rutter, Jason. Stand-Up as Interaction: Performance and Audience in Comedy Venues. Unpublished Ph.D. Dissertation. Salford, England: University of Salford, 1997.
- Ruxton, J., and M. Hesler. “Humor: Assessment and Interventions.” Clinical Gerontologist 7.1 (1987): 13-21.
- Salamone, Frank A. “Laughin’ Louie: An Analysis of Louis Armstrong’s Record and its Relationship to African-American Musical Humor.” HUMOR: International Journal of Humor Research 15.1 (2002): 47-64.
- Sanders, Barry. Laughter as Subversive History. Boston, MA: Beacon Press, 1995.
- Sanders, T. “Controllable Laughter: Managing Sex Work through Humour.” Sociology 38.2 (2004): 273-291.
- Satow, R. “Three Perspectives on Humor and Laughing–Classical, Object, Relations and Self Psychology.” Group 15.4 (1991): 242-245.
- Schaeffer, Neil. The Art of Laughter. New York: Columbia Univ Press, 1981.
- Scherberger, L. “The Janus-Faced Shaman: The Role of Laughter in Sickness and Healing among the Makushi.” Anthropology and Humanism 30.1 (2005): 55-69.
- Schickel, Richard. The Shape of Laughter. Boston, MA: New York Graphics Society, 1974.
- Schopenhauer, Arthur. “On the Theory of the Ludicrous.” The World as will and Idea. Trans. R. B. Haldane and John Kemp. London, England: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1907.
- Schulman, N. M. “Laughing across the Color Barrier: In Living Color–Satirizing the Stereotypes–Racial Generalization as a Basis for Comedy.” Journal of Popular Film and Television 20.1 (1992): 2-7.
- Scruton, Roger. “Laughter.” The Philosophy of Laughter and Humor. Ed. John Morreall. Albany, NY: SUNY, 1987, 156-171.
- Scruton, Roger. “Laughter.” Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 56 (1982).
- Shapiro, Rebecca. R. D. V. Glasgow: Madness, Masks, and Laughter. Teaneck, NJ: Farleigh Dickinson University Press, 1995.
- Sheldon, S. T. “Tickle.” Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology. 50 (2004): 93-97.
- Shoji, Osamu. “Study of Dr. Sutorius’ Theory Concerning Laughter.” The Journal of Ryutsu Keizai University 34.3 (2000): 51-55.
- Simon, Jolene. “Humor and the Older Adult: Implications for Nursing.” Journal of Advanced Nursing Practice 13 (1988): 441-446.
- Simon, Jolene. “Humor Techniques for Oncology Nurses.” Oncology Nursing Forum 16.5 (19789): 667-670.
- Smith, J. “The Frenzy of the Audible: Pleasure, Authenticity, and Recorded Laughter.” Television and New Media 6.1 (2005): 23-48.
- Smith, Ken. “Laughing at the Way We See: The Role of Visual Organizing Principles in Cartoon Humor.” HUMOR: International Journal of Humor Research 9.1 (1996): 19-38.
- Solomon, Robert. “Are the Three Stooges Funny? Soitainly! (or When is it OK to Laugh?).” Ethics and Values in the Information Age. Eds. Joel Rudinow and Anthony Graybosch. New York, NY: Wadsworth, 2002.
- Spencer, Herbert. “The Physiology of Laughter.” MaclMillan’s Magazine 1 (1860).
- Spitz, R. “The Smiling Response: A Contribution to the Ontogenesis of Social Relations.” General Psychology Monograph 34 (1946): 57-125.
- Strack, F., L. Martin, and S. Strepper. “Inhibiting and Facilitating Conditions of the Human Smile: A Nonobtrusive Test of the Facial-Feedback Hypothesis.” Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 54 (1988): 768-777.
- Stearns, F. R. Laughing: Physiology, Pathology, Psychology, Pathopsychology and Development. Springfield, IL: Charles C. Thomas, 1972.
- Stebbins, Robert A. The Laugh-Makers: Stand-Up Comedy as Art, Business, and Life-Style. Montreal: McGill-Queen’s University Press, 1990.
- Sterling, Philip. Laughing on the Outside. NY: Grosset and Dunlap, 1965.
- Stone, Judith. “Laugh and Your Whole Cardiovascular System Laughs with You–Not to Mention Your Stress Hormones.” In Health. 5 (January, 1992): 52-55.
- Stroufe, L. A., and E. Waters. “The Ontogenesis of Smiling and Laughter: A Perspective on the Organization of Development in Infancy.” Psychological Review 83.3 (1976): 173-189.
- Stroufe, L. A., and J. P. Wunsch. “The Development of Laughter in the First Year of Life.” Child Development 43 (1972): 1326-1344.
- Sully, J. An Essay on Laughter. New York, NY: Longmans/Green, 1902.
- Sumitsuji, N., and Y. Takemura. “Electromyography Counting of the Numbers of Times of the Laughing Act in Man.” Electromyography 1 (1971): 55-60.
- Svebak, Sven. “Three Attitude Dimensions of Sense of Humor as Predictors of Laughter.” Scandinavian Journal of Psychology 15 (1974): 185-190.
- Svebak, Sven, and Michael J. Apter. “Laughter: An Empirical Test of Some Reversal Theory Hypotheses.” Scandinavian Journal of Psychology 28 (1987): 189-198.
- Swabey, Mary Collins. “Comic Laughter: A Philosophical Essay.” New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1961.
- Tamblyn, Doni. Laugh and Learn: 95 Ways to Use Humor for More Effective Teaching and Training. New York, NY: AMACON (American Management Association), 2003.
- Tarantili, V. V. D. J. Halazonetis, and M. N. Spyropoulos. “The Spontaneous Smile in Dynamic Motion.” American Journal of Dentofacial Orthop 128.1 (2005): 8-15.
- Taylor, Paul. “Laughter and Joking–The Structural Axis.” It’s a Funny Thing, Humour. Eds. Antony Chapman and Hugh Foot. NY: Pergamon, 1977, 385-90.
- Thorson, James A. “Is Propensity to Laugh Equivalent to Sense of Humor?” Psychological Reports 66.3 (1990): 737-738.
- Toren, C. “Laughter and Truth in Fiji: What We May Learn from a Joke.” Oceania 75.3 (2005): 268-283.
- Trice, A., and J. Price. “Joking under the Drill: A Validity Study of the Coping Humor Scale.” Journal of Social Behavior and Personality 1.2 (1986): 265-266.
- Trieber, Roz. Live Life Laughing: An Innovative and Imaginative Approach to Living a Healthier, Happier, and More Prosperous Life. Owings Mills, MD: Trieber Associates, 2000.
- Vaid, Jyotsna. “Do Those Who Laugh Last? The Evolution of Humor.” Evolution of the Psyche. Eds. D. Rosen, and M. Luebbert. Westport, CT: Greenwood, 1999.
- Vaid, Jyotsna. “Laughter and Humor.” Encyclopedia of the Human Brain. Ed. V. S. Ramachandran. Academic Press, 2000.
- Vaid, Jyotsna. “Laughter and Humor.” Oxford Companion to the Body Eds. C. Blakemore and S. Jennett. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press, 2001, 426-427.
- Vaid, Jyotsna, and J. B. Kobler. “Laughing Matters: Toward a Structural and Neural Account.” Brain and Cognition 42 (2000): 139-141.
- Van Hoof, J. A. R. A. M. “A Comparative Approach to the Phylogeny of Laughter and Smiling.” Non-Verbal Communication. Ed. R. A. Hinds. Cambridge, England: University Press.
- Vettin, Julia, and Dietmar Todt. “Laughter in Conversation: Features of Occurence and Acoustic Structure.” Journal of Nonverbal Behavior. 28.2 (2004): 93-115
- Viktoroff, David. Introduction à la Psycho-Sociologie du Rire. Paris, France: Presses Universitaires de France, 1953.
- Wallace, Earle Stegner. Remembering Laughter. Boston, MA: Little Brown, 1937.
- Waller, Bridget M., and Robin I. M. Dunbar. “Differential Behavioural Effects of Silent Bared Teeth Display and Relaxed Open Mouth Display in Chimpanzees (Pan Troglodytes).” Ethology 3.2 (2005): 129-142.
- Weeks, Mark C. “Laughter, Desire, and Time.” HUMOR: International Journal of Humor Research. 15.4 (2002): 383-400.
- Weisfeld, G. E. “Adaptive Value of Humor and Laughter.” Ethology and Sociobiology 14.2 (1993): 141-169.
- Weiskrantz, L. J., Elliott, and C. Darlington. “Preliminary Observations on Tickling Oneself.” Nature 230 (1970): 598-599.
- Westbrook, Kathy Grant. “Laugh It Up: Carolina Ha Ha Prescribes a Healthy Dose of Humor to Combat Pain and Stress and to Help Folks Feel More Positive.” Our State: Down Home in North Carolilna, (January, 2005): 62-64.
- Whistler, Laurence. Laughter and the Urn: The Life of Rex Whistler. NY: Wiedenfeld and Nicolson, 1985.
- White, Sabina, and Andrew Winzelberg. “Laughter and Stress.” Humor: International Journal of Humor Research. 5.4 (1992): 343-356.
- White, Sabina, and P. Camarena. “Laughter as a Stress Reducer in Small Groups.” HUMOR: International Journal of Humor Research 2.1 (1989): 73-79.
- Williams, H. “Humor and Healing: Therapeutic Effects in Geriatrics.” Gerontion 1.3 (1986): 14-17.
- Willman, J. M. “An Analysis of Humor and Laughter.” American Journal of Psychology 53 (1940).
- Wise, B. “Comparison of Immune Response to Mirth and to Distress in Women at Risk for Recurrent Breast Cancer.” Dissertation Abstracts International 49.7 (1989): 2918.
- Wolosin, R. J. “Cognitive Similarity and Group Laughter.” Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 32 (1975): 505-509.
- Wooten, Patty. Compassionate Laughter: Jest for Your Health. New York, NY: Commune-a-Key, 1996.
- Ziegler, J. “Immune System May Benefit from the Ability to Laugh.” Journal of the National Cancer Institute 87.5 (1995): 342-343.
- Zijderveld, Anton C. “The Sociology of Humour and Laughter.” Current Sociology 31.3 (1983): 1-103.
- Zijderveld, Anton C. “Trend Report on the Sociology of Humor and Laughter.” Current Sociology 31.3 (1983): 1-59.