Jim Lyttle

Academic Journals


122. Bishara, Saied. 2024. Humor and school culture in special education schools. An-Najah University Journal for Research - B (Humanities) 38(3): 435-458. LINK

122. Krys, Kuba, Igor de Almeida, Arkadiusz Wasiel, and Vivian L. Vignoles. 2024. WEIRD-Confucian comparisons: Ongoing cultural biases in psychology's evidence base and some recommendations for improving global representation. American Psychologist (early access online) LINK

121. Jun, Kiho, and Joonghak Lee. 2024. How does abusive supervision impair follower’s intrinsic motivation? Testing roles of positive affect and leader humor expression. Current Psychology 43: 9323–9335 LINK

121. Necdet Gürkan, and Jordan W. Suchow. 2023. Harnessing collective intelligence under a lack of cultural consensus.

120. Ivanova P. O., and E. M. (Alyona) Ivanova. 2023. Апробация русскоязычной версии Опросника сценариев дружелюбного подшучивания и агрессивного высмеивания (ОСПВ) Т. Платт [Russian approbation of the Ridicule Teasing Questionnaire (RTQ) of T. Platt]. Clinical Psychology and Special Education 8(2): 140-158. LINK

119. Vizcaíno-Cuenca, Rocio, Andrés R. Riquelme, Mónica Romero-Sánchez, Jesús L. Megías, and Hugo Carretero-Dios. 2024. Exposure to feminist humor and the proclivity to collective Action for gender equality: The role of message format and feminist fdentificatio.n Sex Roles, 90, 186-201. LINK

118. Sumagna, Bhowmick, and R. Vijaya. 2023. Winning battles with a joke: a qualitative inquiry of humour in the Indian Army. The European Journal of Humour Research, 11(1): 27–45. LINK

117. Huang, Mei-Jun. 2023. Leader self-deprecating humor and employee creativity at workplace: a longitudinal study. Review of Managerial Science 17(2): 467-492.

116. Lazebna, Olena, Olena Bezzubo, Viktoriia Kotvytska, and Ivan Bakhov. 2022. El humor desde una perspectiva linguistica: El problema de la clasificacion [Humour from a linguistic perspective: The problem of classification]. Revista EntreLínguas, 8(1), 1-12. LINK

115. Tremblay, Michel. 2023. How, when, and why do stores' humor climates affect retail customer purchase? Journal of Marketing Theory and Practice 31(4): 434-449. LINK

114. Surahmat, Surahmat, I. Dewa Putu Wijana, and Suryo Baskoro. 2022. The role of intersubjectivity in the production and appreciation of humor. Parole: Journal of Linguistics and Education, 12(2): 261-271. LINK

114. Hongyan Yang, Hong Xu, Yan Zhang, Yan Liang, and Ting Lyu. 2022. Exploring the effect of humor in robot failure. Annals of Tourism Research 95(July): 103425. LINK

113. Yuan, Ai. 2021. Laughter in early China: The Zhuangzi and beyond. Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, 84(2): 321-340. LINK

112. Kreismann, Dominic and Till Talaulicar. 2021. Business ethics training in human resource development: A literature review. Human Resource Development Review 20(1): 68-105. LINK

111. Rocio Zamora-Medina, Rocio, Salvador Gómez García, and Helena Martínez Martínez. 2021. Los memes políticos como recurso persuasivo online . Análisis de su repercusión durante los debates electorales de 2019 en España [Political memes as an online persuasive resource. Analysis of its impact during the 2019 election debates in Spain]. Opinião Pública, 27(2):681-704. LINK

110. Fedakar, Selami. 2020. Mizah Teorilerinin Sınıflandırılması Üzerine Bir Değerlendirme [An evaluation on classification of humor theories]. Millî Folklor, 16(126): 52-62.

109. Kanchanapoomi, Taptip, and Wannapa Trakulkasemsuk. 2020. Laughter: A communication strategy in business meeting between Thai and Burmese professionals. rEFLections, 27(1): 22-43.

108. Clyne, Lauren, Michael Fellers, and Adam S. Richards. 2020. Metacognitive inoculation reduces the persuasiveness of sarcastic attack messages. Communication Reports 33(2): 68-81. LINK

107. Daniel, Ejiroghene, and Kelechi Charles. 2020. Enhancing employee’s commitment of deposit money banks in Rivers State through affiliative managerial humor practices. International Journal of Management Sciences, 7(5): 88-98.

106. Büyükyılmaz1, Üyesi Ozan. 2020. [The Relationship Between Positive and Negative Use of Humor of Managers and Employee Attitudes] Anadolu University Journal of Social Sciences, 19(2), 125-150. LINK

105. De Clercq, Dirk and Imanol Belausteguigoitia. 2020. Coping and laughing in the face of broken promises: Implications for creative behavior. Personnel Review, 49(4):993-1014. LINK

1xx. De Clercq, Dirk and Imanol Belausteguigoitia. 2020. When does job stress limit organizational citizenship behavior, or not? Personal and contextual resources as buffers. Journal of Management and Organization: FirstView: 1-25. LINK

105. Maqbool, Rameesha, Amna Noor, Kaneez Fatima, Suheera Khalid, and Nabeeha Maqbool. 2020. Customers trust propensity: Mediating effect of salespersons characteristics. International Journal of Management Research and Emerging Sciences, 10(2), 204-214. LINK

104. Hong, Alice Yahhuei, & Chang, Roland. 2019. The use motivation of political satire show and the impacts of viewing frequency on voters’ political efficacy and political cynicism. Advances in Journalism and Communication, 7, 74-93. LINK

103. Niketić, Predrag. 2019. Conceptual blending in English and Serbian question-and-answer jokes: cultural transfer issues. European Journal of Humour Research, 7(4): 106-124. LINK

102. Pabel, Anja, and Philip L. Pearce. 2019. Humour in supplier-customer interactions: the viewsof Australian tourism operators. European Journal of Humour Research, 7(3): 84–100. LINK

101. Orthaber, Sara. 2019. Aggressive humour as a means of voicing customer dissatisfaction and creating in-group identity. Journal of Pragmatics 152: 160-171. LINK

100. Brauer, Kay and René T. Proyer. 2019. The ridiculed impostor: Testing the associations between dispositions toward ridicule and being laughed at and the impostor phenomenon. Current Psychology [online 11 April 2019] LINK

99. Predrag Niketić, Predrag. 2019. Conceptual blending in English and Serbian question-and-answer jokes: Cultural transfer issues. European Journal of Humour Research 7(4): 106-124. LINK

98. Nir, Nimrod, and Eran Halperin. 2019. Effects of humor on intergroup communication in intractable conflicts: Using humor in an intergroup appeal facilitates stronger agreement between groups and a greater willingness to compromise. Political Psychology 40(3):467-485. LINK

97. Iqbal, Qaisar, and Siti Hasnah Hassan. 2018. A dyadic analysis of salespersons and customers in banking sector: Humor usage, word of mouth and expectation of continuity. International Academic Journal of Business Management, 5(3):109-120.

96. Bompar, Laurent, Renaud Lunardo, and Camille Saintives. 2018. The effects of humor usage by salespersons: The roles of humor type and business sector. Journal of Business & Industrial Marketing, 33(5):599-609, LINK

95. Elif BİLGİNOĞLU, Elif, and Uğur Yozgat. 2018. İŞYERİNDE DENEYİMLENEN EĞLENCENİN POZİTİF BİREYSEL VE ÖRGÜTSEL ÇIKTILARA ETKİSİ [The effects of experienced fun at work on positive individual and organizational outcomes]. YAŞAM BECERİLERİ PSİKOLOJİ DERGİSİ [Life Skills Journal of Psychology], 2(4): 399-413.

94. Şahin, Ahmet. 2018. Humor climate of the primary schools. European Journal of Education Studies, 4(1): 95-117. ISSN: 2501-1111, LINK

93. Oktuğ, Zeynep, Tülay Turgut, and Zeynep Merve Ünal. 2018. [Questionnaire of occupational humorous coping: The study of adaptation into Turkish, reliability, and validity] Mehmet Akif Ersoy University Journal of Social Sciences, 10(26 Dec): 782-797. LINK

92. Sheer, Vivian C., Fuyuan Shen, Dion Tse, and Tiffany Chan. 2018. Evaluating the effectiveness of four Hong Kong antismoking cartoon posters with humor and threat elements. Chinese Journal of Communication. 11(4): 400-418. LINK

91. Warren, Caleb, Adam Barsky, and A. Peter Mcgraw. 2018. Humor, comedy, and consumer behavior. Journal of Consumer Research, 45(3): 529-552. LINK

90. Baumgartner, Jody C., Jonathan S. Morris, and Jeffrey Michael Coleman. 2018. Did the 'road to the White House run through' Letterman? Chris Christie, Letterman, and other-disparaging versus self-deprecating humor. Journal of Political Marketing, 17(3):282:300. LINK

89. Söderlund, Magnus and Eeva-Liisa Oikarinen. 2018. Joking with customers in the service encounter has a negative impact on customer satisfaction: Replication and extension. Journal of Retailing and Consumer Services 42(42): 55–64. LINK

88. Xiao, Yi, Verolien Cauberghe, and Liselot Hudders. 2018. Humour as a double-edged sword in response to crises versus rumours: The effectiveness of humorously framed crisis response messages on social media. Journal of Contingencies and Crisis Management 26(2), 247-260. LINK

87. Moscato, Derek. 2018. Clearcut persuasion? Audience cognition of mediated environmental advertising through the lens of the Elaboration Likelihood Model. Journal of Public Interest Communications, 2(1): 64-84.

86. Ivanova, Alyona, Ekaterina Stefanenko, and Sergey Enikolopov, 2017. Russian attitudes towards humour and laughter. European Journal of Humour Research, 5(2):80–90. LINK

85. Gupta, Saurabh, and Ruchi Tyagi. 2017. Influence of humor on individual and organizational outcomes. Academicia: An International Multidisciplinary Research Journal, 7(11): 58-63. LINK

84. Şahin, Ahmet. 2017. İlköğretim Kurumu Yöneticilerinin Mizah Tarzları ve Okullarındaki Mizah İklimi Arasındaki İlişki [The relationship between humor styles of the administrators and the humor climate in primary school]. The Journal of Academic Social Science Studies (59):25-52. LINK

83. Todd, Michelle E., Logan L. Watts, Tyler J. Mulhearn, Brett S. Torrence, Megan R. Turner, Shane Connelly, and Michael D. Mumford. 2017. A meta-analytic comparison of face-to-face and online delivery in ethics instruction: The case for a hybrid approach. Science and Engineering Ethics 23(6), 1719-1754. LINK

82. Mao, Jih-Yu, Jack Ting-Ju Chiang, Ye Zhang, and Ming Gao. 2017. Humor as a relationship lubricant: The implications of leader humor on transformational leadership perceptions and team performance. Journal of Leadership & Organizational Studies 24(4), n.p. LINK

81. Söderlund, Magnus, Eeva-Liisa Oikarinen, and Eija-Liisa Heikka. 2017. Jokes in the store and its effects on customer satisfaction. The International Review of Retail, Distribution and Consumer Research 27(3): 260-283. LINK

80. Bitterly, T. Bradford; Alison Wood Brooks, Maurice E. Schweitzer, ME. 2017. Risky Business: When Humor increases and decreases status. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 112(3): 431-455. LINK

79. Mulhearn, Tyler J., Logan M. Steele, Logan L. Watts, Kelsey E. Medeiros, Michael D. Mumford, and Shane Connelly. 2017. Review of instructional approaches in ethics education. Science and Engineering Ethics 23, 883-912. LINK

78. Yu, Yeonsu and Tek-Jin Nam. 2017. Products with a sense of humor: Case study of humorous products with Giggle Popper. International Journal of Design, 11(1), 79-92.

77. Cedeño, Edison Rubén Zambrano and Marcelo Fabián Barcia Briones. 2016. El buen humor para el buen vivir de la educación [Good humor for the well educated life]. RECUS: Revista Electrónica Cooperación Universidad-Sociedad 1,(1):39-50. LINK

76. Gkorezis, Panagiotis, and Victoria Bellou. 2016. The relationship between leader self-deprecating humor and perceived effectiveness: Trust in leader as a mediator. Leadership & Organization Development Journal, 37(7):882-898. LINK

75. Förster, Kati, and Cornelia Brantner. 2016. Masking the offense? An ethical view on humor in advertising. Journal of Media Ethics, 31(3), 146-161. LINK

74. Nie, Jing, and Xinyi Lu. 2016. Playfulness and creativity: From the perspective of individuality and organization. Forum on Science and Technology in China 2016(3), 19-23.

73. Leitsberger, Madelaine, Judith Benz-Schwarzburg, Herwig Grimm. 2016. A speaking piglet advertises beef: An ethical analysis on objectification and anthropomorphism. Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 29(6): 1003-1019. LINK

72. Steele, Logan M., Tyler J. Mulhearn, Kelsey E. Medeiros, Logan L. Watts, Shane Connelly, and Michael D. Mumford. 2016. How do we know what works? A review and critique of current practices in ethics training evaluation. Accountability in Research: Policies and Quality Assurance May 9, 319-350. LINK

71. Wiid, Ria, Philip Stanley Grant, Adam J. Mills, and Leyland F. Pitt. 2016. No joke: Understanding public sentiment toward selling and salespeople through cartoon analysis. Marketing Theory, 16(2): 171-193. LINK

70. Campisano, Frankie. 2016. Case study of comedian Hannibal Buress and humor as change agent. Elon Journal of Undergraduate Research in Communications, 7(2): 25-35.

69. Tremblay, Michel, and Megan Gibson. 2016. The role of humor in the relationship between transactional leadership behavior, perceived supervisor support, and citizenship behavior. Journal of Leadership & Organizational Studies, 23(1): 39-54. LINK

68. Butler, Nick, Casper Hoedemaekers, and Dimitrinka Stoyanova Russell. 2015. The comic organization. Ephemera: Theory & Politics in Organization. 15(3): 497-512.

67. Gaffari, Fatemeh, Nahid Dehghan-Nayeri, and Mahboubeh Shali. 2015. Nurses' experiences of humour in clinical settings. Medical Journal of the Islamic Republic of Iran, 29(182): 1-11.

66. Cvetkovic, Anita, and Anneli Öljarstrand. 2015. Humorforskning i svenska organisationeroch arbetslivssammanhang En litteraturöversikt [Research on humor in Swedish organizational and working life contexts: A literature review]. Sociologisk Forskning, 52(4): 363–394.

65. Cameron, John D. 2015. Can poverty be funny? The serious use of humor as a strategy of public engagement for social justice. Third World Quarterly. 36(2): 274-290. LINK

64. Hamiseung (Mee Sung Ha). 2015. A study on the influencing factors of Positive Organizational Behavior. Korean Society and Public Administration. 26(2): 77-113.

63. Schwind, Kai Hanno. 2015. Like watching a motorway crash: Exploring the embarrassment humor of The Office. Humor: International Journal of Humor Research. 28(1), 49-70. LINK

62. Butler, Nick. 2015. Joking aside: Theorizing laughter in organizations. Culture and Organization, 21(1): 42-58. LINK

61. Carrera, Beaatriz Carbajal. 2015. Dogsbody: An overview of transmorphic techniques as humour devices and their impact in Alberto Montt's cartoons. Philaments, 20: 79-104.

60. Ďurka, Róbert, and Willibald Ruch. 2015. The location of three dispositions towards ridicule in the five-factor personality model in the population of Slovak adults. Personality and Individual Differences, 72:177-181. LINK

59. Fürer, Rebekka, and Jörg Matthes. 2014. Zur Wirkungsweise von Selbstironieund Spott in der politischen Rede [On the effects of self-irony and ridicule in political speech]. medien & zeit, 29(3):33-42.

58. Cacciatore, Michael A., Sara K. Yeo, Dietram A. Scheufele, Michael A. Xenos, Doo-Hun Choi, Dominique Brossard, Amy B. Becker, and Elizabeth A. Corley. 2014. Misperceptions in polarized politics: The role of knowledge, religiosity, and media. Political Science and Politics, 47(3): 654-661. LINK

57. Flaskerud, Jacquelyn H. 2014. It's funny here. Is it there? Issues in Mental Health Nursing, 35(11):898-901. LINK

56. Lee, Francis L. F. 2014. The impact of online user-generated satire on young people's political attitudes: Testing the moderating role of knowledge and discussion. Telematics and Informatics. 33(3): 397-409. LINK

55. Zepeda, Andrés Valdez, Delia A. Huerta Franco, and Octavio Adolfo Perez Preciado. 2014. O humor na estratégia de persuasão durante as campanhas eleitorais. Revista Brasileira de Ciência Política 13, 245-258.

54. Bayerl, Petra Saskia, and Lachezar Stoynov. 2014. Revenge by Photoshop: Memefying police acts in the public dialogue about injustice. New Media & Society

53. Vraga, Emily K., Courtney N. Johnson, D. Jasun Carr, Leticia Bode, and Mitchell T, Bard. 2014. Filmed in front of a live studio audience: Laughter and aggression in political entertainment programming. Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media 58(1):131-150. LINK

52. Ruch, Willibald, Jennifer Hofmann, Tracey Platt, and René Proyer. 2014. The state-of-the art in gelotophobia research: A review and some theoretical extensions. Humor: International Journal of Humor Research 27(1): 23-45. LINK

51. Fox, Stephen. 2013. Getting real about ICT: Applying critical realism to the framing of information and communication technologies. Management Research Review 36(3):296-319. LINK

50. Moccia, Salvatore. 2013. The role of a sense of humor in an advanced perspective of organizational management. Israeli Journal of Humor Research, (3):5-26.

49. Ruch, Willibald, Claudia Harzer, Rene T. Proyer. 2013. Beyond being timid, witty, and cynical: Big five personality characteristics of gelotophobes, gelotophiles, and katagelasticists. International Studies in Humour, 2(1):24-42. LINK

48. Kowalewski, Jennifer and Chip Stewart. 2013. To laugh or not to laugh: How comedy news versus hard news interacts with individuals' levels of political cynicism and political efficacy to impact the agenda-setting effects. Southwest Mass Communication Journal 28(2):n.p. LINK

47. Baumgartner, Jody C. 2013. No laughing matter? Young adults and the 'spillover effect' of candidate-centered political humor. Humor: International Journal of Humor Research 26(1):23-43. LINK

46. Hoption, Colette, Julian Barling, and Nick Turner. 2013. "'It's not you, it's me': Transformational leadership and self-deprecating humor. Leadership & Organization Development Journal 34(1):4-19. LINK

45. Wu, Zhihui. 2013. The laughter-eliciting mechanism of humor. English Linguistics Research 2(1):no pagination.

44. Bippus, Amy M., Norah E. Dunbar, and Shr-Jie Liu. 2012. Humorous responses to interpersonal complaints: Effects of humor style and nonverbal expression. The Journal of Psychology: Interdisciplinary and Applied 146(4):437-453. LINK

43. Forabosco, Giovannantonio. 2012. [Review of the book L'umorismo in pubblicità. Con una valutazione dell'impattodell'umorismo nella pubblicità a scopo sociale, by Pier Paolo Pedrini]. Humor: International Journal of Humor Research 25(1):113-116. LINK

42. Nissan, Ephraim. 2012. A tentative evaluation of the spread of humour studies among journals in other domains. Israeli Journal of Humor Research 1(1):107-184.

41. Platt, Tracey, Willibald Ruch, Jennifer Hofmann, and René T. Proyer. 2012. Extreme fear of being laughed at: Components of Gelotophobia. Israeli Journal of Humor Research 1(1):86-106.

40. Proyer, René T., Willibald Ruch, and Guo-Hai Chen. 2012. Gelotophobia: Life satisfaction and happiness across cultures. Humor: International Journal of Humor Research 25(1):23-40. LINK

39. Vraga, Emily K., Stephanie Edgerly, Leticia Bode, D. Jasun Carr, Mitchell Bard, Courtney N. Johnson, Young Mie Kim, and Dhavan V. Shah. 2012. The correspondent, the comic, and the combatant: The consequences of host style in political talk shows. Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly 89(1):5-22. LINK

38. Wood, Robert E., Nadin Beckmann, and John R. Rossiter. 2011. Management humor: Asset or liability? Organizational Psychology Review 1(4):316-338. LINK

37. Moccia, Salvatore. 2011. Los posibles beneficios de la conciliación. Acciones e Investigaciones Sociales 30(Dec), 135-154.

36. Ziyaeemehr, Ali, Vijay Kumar, and Faiz S. Abdullah. 2011. Use and non-use of humor in academic ESL classrooms. English Language Teaching 4(3):111-119. LINK

35. Chen, Shi-min, Pei-zhen Sun, and Xue Zheng. 2011. "[Development and validation of sense of humor questionnaire for college students]. Chinese Journal of Clinical Psychology, 19(2):167-170.

34. Okazaki, Sumie, Ahmed M. Kassem, and Judy Y. Tan. 2010. Annual Review of Asian American Psychology, 2010. Asian American Journal of Psychology 2(4):225-290. LINK

33. Simola, Sheldene K. 2010. Use of a 'coping-modeling, problem-solving' program in business ethics education Journal of Business Ethics> 96(3):383-401. LINK

32. Haigh, Michel M., and Aaron Heresco. 2010. Late-night Iraq: Monologue joke content and tone from 2003 to 2007. Mass Communication and Society 13(2):157-173. LINK

31. Proyer, René T., and Willibald Ruch. 2010. Dispositions towards ridicule and being laughed at: Current research on gelotophobia, gelotophilia, and katagelasticism. Psychological Test and Assessment Modeling 52(1):49-59.

30. Rodríguez Torres, Velis J., and Lya Feldman. 2009. [Preliminary validation of the humor styles questionnaire in male and female health workers: The Venuzuela case]. Ciencia y Trabajo [Science and Work] 11(31):9-13.

29. Kurtzberg, Terri R, Charles E Naquin, and Liuba Y Belkin. 2009. Humor as a relationship-building tool in online negotiations. International Journal of Conflict Management 20(4):377-397.

28. Holbert, R. Lance, Jay Hmielowski, Parul Jain, Julie Lather, and Alyssa Morey. 2009. Adding nuance to political humor effects: Experimental research on Juvenalian satire versus Horatian satire. American Behavioral Scientist 55(3):187-211. LINK

27. Morris, Jonathan S. 2009. The Daily Show with Jon Stewart and audience attitude change during the 2004 party conventions. Political Behavior 31(1):79-102. LINK

26. Liang, Jing. 2008. [Theoretical analysis of the literature on persuading consumers.] Foreign Economies and Management 30(7):39-44, 51.

25. Bergeron, Jasmin, and Marc-Antoine Vachon. 2008. The effects of humour usage by financial advisors in sales encounters. The International Journal of Bank Marketing 26(6):376-398. LINK

24. Baumgartner, Jody C. 2008. Polls and elections: Editorial cartoons 2.0: The effects of digital political satire on presidential candidate evaluations. Presidential Studies Quarterly 38(4):735-758. LINK

23. Baumgartner, Jody C., and Jonathan S. Morris. 2008. One 'nation,' under Stephen? The effects of the Colbert Report on American youth. Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media 52(4):622-643. LINK

22. Ivarsson, Lars, and Patrik Larsson. 2008. Anställdas upplevelse av interaktionen med kunder/mottagare i tjänstesektorn [Employee experience of interaction with customers/clients in the service sector]. Arbetsmarknad & Arbetsliv [Labor Market & Working Life], 14(4), 44-61. LINK

21. Rendtorff, Jacob Dahl. 2008. The corporation as a good citizen: A case study of Lockheed Martin. Tidsskriftet Politik 11(4): 48-59.

20. Romero, Eric, and Anthony Pescosolido. 2008. Humor and group effectiveness. Human Relations 61(3):395-418. LINK

19. van Dolen, Willemijn M., Ko de Ruyter, and Sandra Streukens. 2008. The effect of humor in electronic service encounters. Journal of Economic Psychology 29(2):160-179. LINK

18. Platt, Tracey. 2008. Emotional responses to ridicule and teasing: Should gelotophobes react differently? Humor: International Journal of Humor Research 21(2):105-128. LINK

17. Young, Dannagal Goldwiate. 2008. The privileged role of the late-night Joke: Exploring humor's role in disrupting argument scrutiny. Media Psychology> 11(1):119-142. LINK

16. Romal, Jane B. 2008. Use of humor as a pedagogical tool for accounting education. Academy of Educational Leadership Journal 12(1):83-106.

15. Kruger, Estelle. 2008. Die integrasie van humoristiese tekste in die opleiding van taalonderwysstudente binne 'n konstruktivistiese paradigma [The integration of humorous texts in the training of language education students within a constructivist paradigm]. Per Linguam 24(2): 21-44. LINK

14. Kruger, Estelle and Linda Rutgers. 2008. Die integrasie van humoristiese tekste by taalonderwys om studente se emosionele geletterdheid te ontwikkel: ’n gevallestudie1 [The integration of humorous texts in language education to develop students’ emotional literacy: a case study]. Koers: Bulletin for Christian Scholarship, 73(3):549-588. LINK

13. Teven, Jason J., and Julie L. Winters. 2007. Pharmaceutical representatives' social influence behaviors and communication orientations: Relationships with adaptive selling and sales performance. Human Communication. A Publication of the Pacific and Asian Communication Association 10(4):465-486.

12. Dyrud, Marilyn A. 2007. Ethics, gaming, and industrial training. IEEE: Technology and Society Magazine, 26(4):36-44. LINK

11. Baumgartner, Jody C. 2007. Humor on the next frontier: Youth, online political humor, and the JibJab effect. Social Science Computer Review 25(3):319-338. LINK

10. Scholl, Juliann C. 2007. The use of humor to promote patient-centered care. Journal of Applied Communication Research 35(2):156-176. LINK

9. Nabi, Robin L, Emily Moyer-Gusé, and Sahara Byrne. 2007. All joking aside: A serious investigation into the persuasive effect of funny social issue messages. Communication Monographs 74(1):29-54. LINK

8. Holian, Rosalie. 2006. Management decision making, ethical issues and 'emotional' intelligence. Management Decision 44(8):1122-1138. LINK

7. Young, Trajan Shipley. 2006. Towards a humour translation checklist for students of translation. Interlingüística 17, 981-988.

6. Baumgartner, Jody C., and Jonathan S. Morris. 2006. The Daily Show effect: Candidate evaluations, efficacy, and American youth. American Politics Research 34, 341-367. LINK

5. McRoberts, Daniel A., and Cindv Larson-Casselton. 2006. Humor in public address, health care and the workplace: Summarizing humor's use using meta-analysis. North Dakota Speech and Theatre Journal 19, 26-33.

4. Jones, John A. 2005. The masking effects of humor on audience perception of message organization. Humor: International Journal of Humor Research 18(4):405-418.

3. Cifuentes, Carolina Maria. 2005. Tipos de humor en la publicidad impresa Colombiana. Diversitas: Perspectivas en Psicologa, 1(1):31-45.

2. Fortin, Bruno, and Lynda Méthot. 2004. S'adapter avec humour au travail interdisciplinaire: Pistes de réflexion [Coping with humor in interdisciplinary work: Reflexive statements]. Revue Québécoise de Psychologie 25(1):99-118.

1. Niven, David, S. Robert Lichter, and Daniel Amundson. 2003. The political content of late night comedy. Harvard International Journal of Press/Politics 8(3):118-133. LINK


                     

© 2023, Jim Lyttle