Jim Lyttle

Other Citations


105. Zargham, Nima, Vino Avanesi, Leon Reicherts, Ava Elizabeth Scott, Yvonne Rogers, and Rainer Malaka. 2023. “Funny how?” A serious look at humor in conversational agents. Proceedings of the 5th International Conference on Conversational User Interfaces. LINK

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

103. Nima Zargham, Nina, Leon Reicherts, Vino Avanesi, Yvonne Rogers, and Rainer Malaka. 2023. Tickling proactivity: Exploring the use of humor in proactive voice assistants. 22nd International Conference on Mobile and Ubiquitous Multimedia (pp. 294–320). LINK

102. Wangwe, Susann Wegesa. 2023. Exploring the application of humour as a management tool in construction projects: A case study on humour at the Julius Nyerere Hydro Power Project in Tanzania. M.Sc., Human Resources Management and Development, The University of Salford.

101. Yöney, Ayşe. 2023. Mizahi Ifadelerin Kişilerarası Iletişimde Iknaya Etkisi [The effect of humorous expressions on persuasion in interpersonal communication]. Doctor of Philosophy, Marmara Universitesi (Turkey). Proquest 30685411.

100. Giles, Matthew Neil. 2023. Competing demands in police positioning: Institutional logics in law enforcement recruitment videos. Doctor of Philosophy, Communication, University of California Santa Barbara.

99. Whitenton, Michael R. 2020. Configuring Nicodemus: An interdisciplinary approach to complex characterization. (The Library of New Testament Studies, 549), T&T Clark. ISBN: 978-0567665300.

98. Zywietz B. 2020. Formen, Funktionen und Dimensionen extremistischer Online-Propaganda im Web 2.0: Herausforderungen und Untersuchungsansätze. In, Schmitt J., Ernst J., Rieger D., and Roth HJ. (Eds.) Propaganda und Prävention. Interkulturelle Studien. Springer VS, Wiesbaden.

97. Rossi, S, T Cimmino, and M Raiano. 2019. Coherent and incoherent robot emotional behavior for humorous and engaging recommendations. 28TH IEEE International Conference on Robot and Human Interactive Communication. LINK

96. Minganti, Pia Karlsson. 2019. Unga muslimer och humor som norm. In, Skratt som fastnar: Kulturella perspektiv på skratt och humor, Lund University, Lund Studies in Arts and Cultural Sciences.

95. Fox, Kaelah Jean. 2019. Humor as a persuasive tool for social change. Master of Arts, Communication Studies, University of Texas at Austin.

94. Giménez, Clara Liquete. 2019. Humor y aprendizaje Lúdico: Estrategias didácticas en la enseñanza de la Filosofía [Humor and leisure learning: Didactic strategies in the teaching of philosophy]. Masters thesis, Universidad de Valladolid.

93. Jing, Xiaonan, Chinmay Talekar, and Julia Taylor Rayz. 2018. Comparing jokes with NLP: How far can joke vectors take us? In N. Streitz and S. Konomi, (Eds.). 6th International Conference on Distributed, Ambient and Pervasive Interactions (DAPI) Held as Part of 20th International Conference on Human-Computer Interaction (HCI International) 10922: 310-326. LINK

92. Wolf, Katharina. 2018. Clowning around A critical analysis of the role of humor in activist-business engagement (pp. 42-55), in Francois Maon, Adam Lindgreen, Joelle Vanhamme, Robert J. Angell, and Juliet Memery (Eds.). Not All Claps and Cheers: Humor in Business and Society Relationships. ISBN 978-1138243439.

91. Baumgartner, Jody. 2018. Political humor and its effects: A review essay. In Jacqueline Benavides Delgado (Ed.). Humor and Politics: A Transcultural Perspective (pp. 3-39).

90. Argüello-Gutiérrez, Catalina, and Mónica Romero-Sánchez. 2018. Psicología Social y humor: Aproximaciones desde el humor de denigración [Social psychology and humor: Approaches from denigrating humor]. In Jacqueline Benavides Delgado (Ed.). Psicología y filosofía del humor (pp. 289-316). Ediciones Universidad Cooperativa de Colombia. LINK

89. Promsri, Chaiyaset. 2018. Impact of demographics and body mass index (BMI) on humor styles and employees’ innovative work behaviors in corporations listed in stock exchange of Thailand [Research Report]. Rajamangala University of Teehnology Phra Nakhon.

88. Iqbal, Qaisar, and Siti Hasna 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.

87. Panteleeva, V. G. 2017. [Humor in a a comparative study of cultures: A teaching manual] Russsia: Udmart State University.

86. Zafar, Yalman. 2017. Management by humor: A path to a performative field? Paper read at 40th International Academic Conference, Stockholm. LINK

85. Dorner, Andreas. 2017. Komik, Humor und Lachen als Dimensionen der politischen Kommunikation: Grundsätzliche Aspekte und strategische Perspektiven der Akteure. in Wahlkampf mit Humor und Komik edited by Andreas Dorner Ludgera Vogt, Germany:Springer, pp. 17-41. LINK

84. Bai, Yu. 2017. Tweets win votes: A persuasive communication perspective on Donald Trump's Twitter use during the 2016 US presidential election campaign. Department of Informatics and Media. Sweden, Uppsala Univeritet. Masters.

83. Argüello-Gutiérrez, C. 2016. Social functions of humor: Effects on the disparagement on stereotypes. Psychology (Social). Granada, University of Granada. Ph.D.

82. Šejnov, Viktor Pavolovich. 2016. [Humor as a Way to Influence] Russian. St. Petersburgh: Peter Press. ISBN: 978-5-496-01271-3

81. Nie, Jing, and Xinyi Lu. 2016. Playfulness and creativity: Individual and organizational analysis. Sydney Institute of Language and Commerce, Shanghai University.

80. Kollberg, Amanda, and Ina Kovacs Molander. 2016. You are what you laugh at: On humor in different professions., Psychology, Mälardalen University, Västeras, Sweden.

79. Birkhead, Hanna K. 2016. Texts from Hillary: Political meta-meming, likeability, and social presence. M.A., Media Studies, Syracuse University.

78. Logar, Ljiljana. 2015. Humor as argument in Croation political discourse. Phonetics, University of Zagreb, Croatia.

77. Pardal, F.M.S. 2015. A sátira política na televisão: O caso do "Governo Sombra." University de Porto, Thesis.

76. Yu, Han. 2015. The other kind of funnies: Comics in technical communication. New York, NY: Taylor & Francis.

75. Caird, Sara M. 2015. An examination of daily humour styles and relationship satisfaction in dating couples. Doctor of Philosophy, The University of Western Ontario. Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository, paper 3772.

74. Caird, Sara. 2015. An examination of daily humour styles and relationship satisfaction in dating couples. Doctor of Philosophy, Psychology, The University of Western Ontario. LINK

73. Leyla Tekul, Leyla. 2014. The role of humour in Second Language acquisition: When students fluently smile in L2. M.Ed., Department of Language and Literacy Education, University of British Columbia.

72. Mascolo, Laurie B. 2014. Leading through laughter: Humor and perceived effectiveness of P-12 principals. Doctor of Educational Leadership, Georgie Southern University.

68. Engelhard, Sabrina. 2014. The use of humor in intercultural business negotiations: A German point of view over China, Brazil and India. Master of Advanced Studies in Intercultural Communication, Università della Svizzera Italiana.

71. Carolino, Maria Patricia, Maria Clarice Anne Libunao, Jamie Dominique Magcale, and Timothy Carlo Racho. 2014. The effects of humor strength and brand familiarity on brand attitude. Ateneo de Manila University.

70. Colmenares, Marelis C., and Stephanie A. Valenzuela. 2014. Relationship between humor styles and job satisfaction at Maranello Investments, C.A., with gender as a moderator, Psychology, Lisandra Alvarado MidWestern University, Barquisimeto, Venezuela.

69. Reece, Brandy Lee. 2014. Putting the ha! in aha!: Humor as a tool for effective communication, Master of Applied Positive Psychology, University of Pennsylvania.

68. Taylor, Julia, and Victor Raskin. 2013. Natural language cognition of humor by humans and computers: A computational semantic approach. Paper read at 12th IEEE International Conference, at New York, NY.

67. Jordan, Stephen. 2013. Comics, comedy and cake - The lighter side of social work? London, UK: Centre for Social Work Practice.

66. Kádár, Dániel Z. 2013. Relational rituals and communication: Ritual interaction in groups. Hampshire, UK: Palgrave Macmillan.

65. Kuo, Feng-Yang Bob, Chih-Yi Tseng, Cathy s. Lin, Chen-Kuang Yang. 2013. Do utilitarian/hedonic subject and personal relevance matter in users' choice of best knowledge in online question-answering community? In Pacific Asia Conference on Information Systems (PACIS) 2013. Jeju Island, Korea: Korea Society of Management Information Systems (KMIS).

64. McGlade, Rhiannon Elizabeth. 2013. Seriously funny: Towards an interpretative framework for an analysis of Catalan satirical cartoons in the Twentieth Century. Doctor of Philosophy, Hispanic Studies, University of Sheffield.

63. Lee, Judith Yaross. 2012. Twain's brand: Humor in contemporary American culture. Jackson, MS: University Press of Mississippi.

62. Cooper, Cecily D., and John J. Sosik. 2012. The laughter advantage: Cultivating high quality connections and workplace outcomes through humor. In The Oxford handbook of positive organizational scholarship, edited by Kim S. Cameron and Gretchen M. Spreitzer, 474-486. New York, NY: Oxford University Press.

61. Hurst, David K. 2012. The new ecology of leadership: Business mastery in a chaotic world. New York, NY: Oxford University Press.

60. Newstrom, John W. 2012. Comportamiento humano en el trabajo, 13th ed. McGraw-Hill ISBN: 978-6071506139.

59. Raskin, Victor. 2012. A little metatheory: Thoughts on what a theory of computational humor should look like. In 2012 AAAI Fall Symposium Series. Arlington,VA: Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence.

58. Abang Ibrahim, Dayang Kartini, and Lim, Shiella Lim Omar. 2011. Fun at work, less job stress by using humour. Proceedings of the 2nd Entrepreneurship and Management International Conference (pp. 17-19).

57. Souza, Carla Moura deMello. 2011. Consumer response to the use of humor in services: The roles of threat, credibility, and familiarity. Escola de Administração de Empresas, Getulio Vargas Foundation, São Paulo, Brazil.

56. Strother, Jay. 2011. (Not) just for laughs: Humor in the legal workplace serves many purposes, but be smart. Legal Management 30(6): 29-33.

55. Johnson, William H.A. 2011. Managing university technology development using organizational control theory. Research Policy. LINK

54. Jones, Robyn L., Paul Potrac, Chris Cushion, and Lars Tore Ronglan. 2011. The sociology of sports coaching. New York, NY: Routledge/Taylor & Francis.

53. Fields, Jonathon P. 2011. Perceptions of teachers: Effects of principals' uses of humor on teacher job satisfaction, Educational Leadership, East Tennessee State University.

52. Capracotta, Patricia. 2011. The effect of humor on persuasion. In Patricia Ross: A professional website devoted to writing and communication [Weblog].

51. Gijsbers, Wout. 2010. Managing humor in organizations: Handling the double-edged sword, Management, Maastricht University, Maastricht, Netherlands.

50. Kanipe, J. Tristan. 2010. Staying ahead of today's economy: The six essential aptitudes for successful entrepreneurs in tomorrow's business world, Economics, Colorado College.

49. Kleinbaum, Rob, and Aviva Kleinbaum. 2010. A culture of profitability. In Samuel Huntington Memorial Symposium: Culture, Culture Change, and Economic Development. Moscow.

48. Lelchook, Ariel. 2010. The use of humor by leaders in response to situational stressors, Psychology, Wayne State University.

47. Matsa, Katerina-Eva. 2010. Laughing at politics: Effects of television satire on political engagement in Greece, Communication, Culture & Technology, Georgetown University, Washington, DC.

46. Millear, Prudence M. R. 2010. Adapting to the work-life interface: The influence of individual differences, work and family on well-being, mental health and work engagement, Psychology, Queensland University of Technology.

45. Miznikova, Jelena, and Sara N Schönfeldt. 2010. The serious business of humor: A qualitative study of humor as a management tool. School of Business, UMEA Universitet, Umea, Sweden.

44. Santagada, Miguel Ángel, and Gabriel Perosino. 2010. Humor y corrección política. Un caso de Les Luthiers [Humor and political correctness. A case of Les Luthiers]. XIII Jornadas De Estética E Historia Del Teatro Marplatens [XIII Conference on Aesthetics and History of the Marplate Theater], pp. 162-174. ISBN: 978-987-25450-1-7.

43. Oral, Günseli. 2010. Egitimde mizahin rolü ve önemi [The role and importance of humor in education]. Antalya, Turkey: Akdeniz Üniversitesi.

42. Dahn, Alvin. 2010. Studies on humor and laughter: Comedy, the comic, and the like. In Alvin Dahn Blogspot.

41. Wijewardena, Nilupama, Charmine E. J. Härtel, and Ramanie Samaratunge. 2010. Chapter 10 A laugh a day is sure to keep the blues away: Managers' use of humor and the construction and destruction of employees' resilience. In Wilfred J. Zerbe, Charmine E. J. Härtel and Neal M. Ashkanasy, (Eds.). Emotions and organizational dynamism: Research on emotion in organizations (Vol. 6), pp. 259-278. Emerald Group. ISBN: 978-0-85724-177-1.

40. Delhomme, Patricia, Werner De Dobbeleer, Sonja Forward, Anabela Simões, Giannis Adamos, Alain Areal, Julien Chappé, Chloe Eyssartier, Peter Loukopoulos, Teti Nathanail, Suzanne Nordbakke, Heiko Peters, Ross Phillips, Maria Pinto, Marie-Frédérique Ranucci, Gian Marco Sardi, Jose Trigoso, Truls Vaa, Knut Veisten, and Esther Walter. 2009. Manual for designing, implementing, and evaluating road safety communication campaigns: Part 1. In Campaigns and awareness-raising strategies in traffic safety. Institut Belge pour la Sécurité Routière (IBSR).

39. Collins, Denis. 2009. Reducing ethical risks: An organization systems solution. Working paper at Edgewood College. Madison, WI.

38. Bergqvist, Tuula, and Susanne Strömberg. 2009. Information, communication and the use of humour: Creating flexibility in changing organisations. In 15th World Congress of the International Labour and Employment Relations Association. Sydney, Australia.

37. Huang, Shu-Hua (Ruby). 2009. Co-constructed humor: Creating sense in nonsense, English Language Literature and Linguistics, Providence University, Taichung City, Taiwan.

36. Kornreich, Jennifer. 2009. The relationships of humor to defensive maturity, aggression, and interpersonal relatedness, Doctor of Philosophy, Psychology, Long Island University, Brooklyn, NY.

35. Krasner, Michael A. 2009. Humor in the 2008 American Presidential Campaign. In 31st annual meeting of the International Society for Political Psychology. Paris, France: ISPP.

34. Qin, Susu. 2009. The uses, gratifications and political knowledge young adults obtain from watching network newscasts and late night comedy shows, Journalism, Iowa State University, Ames, IA.

33. Tower, Matthew A. 2009. Developing healthy and balanced minds: How creative, critical, and moral thinking promote good cognition, Critical and Creative Thinking, University of Massachusetts, Boston.

32. Ulleberg, Pål, Truls Vaa, Karin Ausserer, Gitte Carstensen, Sonja Forward, Barbara Krol, Jacek Malasek, Annette Meng, Mette Møller, Inger Synnøve Moan, Ross Phillips, and Ralf Risse. 2009. Road user model. In Campaigns and awareness raising strategies in traffic safety. Institut Belge pour la Sécurité Routière (IBSR).

31. Baumgartner, Jody C. 2008. American youth and the effects of online political humor. In Laughing matters: Humor and American politics in the media age, edited by Jody C. Baumgartner and Jonathan S. Morris, 131-147. London/New York: Routledge.

30. Niven, David, S. Robert Licter, and Zeynep Merve UnalDaniel Amundson. 2008. Our first cartoon president: Bill Clinton and the politics of late night comedy. In Laughing matters: Humor and American politics in the media age, edited by Jody C. Baumgartner and Jonathan S. Morris. London/New York: Routledge.

29. Lake, Eric. 2008. Leading with humor: A quantitative, correlational study of humor styles and organizational culture, Management, University of Phoenix, Phoenix, AZ.

28. Raza, Amber. 2008. Humor and work? You got to be serious. In 16th Annual Conference on Pacific Basin Finance, Economics, Accounting and Management. Queen's University of Technology, Brisbane, Australie.

27. Painter-Morland, Mollie. 2008. Business ethics as practice: Ethics as the everyday business of business. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.

26. Taylor, Julia Michelle. 2008. Towards informal computer human communication: Detecting humor in a restricted domain, Engineering: Computer Science and Engineering, University of Cincinnati.

25. Anderson, Karen, and Angela Brewer. 2008. Beyond 'Rock the Vote': A mixed methods approach to understanding the young nonvoter. In NCA 94th Annual Convention. San Diego, CA.

24. Martin, Rod A. 2007. The social psychology of humor. In The psychology of humor: An integrative approach, edited by Rod A. Martin, 113-150. San Diego: Academic Press.

23. Michels, Steven, and Michael Ventimiglia. 2007. Can the Daily Show save democracy? Jon Stewart as the gadfly of Gotham. In The Daily Show and philosophy: Moments of Zen in the art of fake news, edited by Jason Holt, 81-92. Oxford, UK: Blackwell.

22. Why all the office jokes shouldn't be on David Brent. 2007. The Daily Mail, April 25.

21. Robert, Chris, and Wan Yan. 2007. The case for developing new research on humor and culture in organizations: Toward a higher grade of manure. In Research in Personnel and Human Resources Management, edited by Joseph J. Martocchio, 205-267. Amsterdam: Elsevier.

20. Sampietro, Marco. 2007. Humor in project management. In 3rd International Project Management Conference. Tehran, Iran.

19. Ling, Pebble Teo Bee. 2007. A study of humour in the workplace and business from a Singapore perspective. Management, University of Nottingham, UK.

18. Kam, Jennifer, and Joanna Eidsmore. 2007. Applying burlesque rhetoric to create social change. In Kurt April and Marylou Shockley (Eds.), Diversities: New realities in a changing world (pp. 111-124). Palgrave Macmillan ISBN: 978-0-230-00133-6.

17. Siebörger, Florian. 2006. Funktionelle Neuroanatomie des Textverstehens: Kohärenzbildung bei Witzen und anderen ungewöhnlichen Texten [Functional neuroanatomy of text comprehension: Formation of coherence in jokes and other unusual texts]. Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences, MPI Series in Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences; 83.

18. Dyrud, Marilyn A. 2006. Industrial ethics training: A look at ethics games. In ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition: Excellence in Education. Chicago, IL.

16. Cihasky, Carrie A. 2006. Who's laughing now? Late night comedy's influence on perceptions of Bush and Gore in 2000. In 64th annual meeting of the Midwest Political Science Association. Chicago, IL.

15. Compton, Joshua, and Michael Pfau. 2005. Effects of late night political comedy on candidate image during campaigns. In 55th annual meeting of the International Communication Association. New York.

14. In the trenches: As it was portrayed in The Office, humour is a poor fit for the white-collar world. 2006. InThe Black, 76(7):24-27.

13. Lewis, Paul. 2006. Cracking up: American humor in a time of conflict. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press.

12. Rockwell, Patricia Ann. 2006. Sarcasm and other mixed messages: The ambiguous ways people use language. Edwin Mellen Press.

11. Alexander, Peter. 2006. Electronic word-of-mouth communication: Factors that influence the forwarding of e-mail messages, Business Administration, Touro University International.

10. Arendt, Lucy A. 2006. Leaders' use of positive humor: Effects on followers' self-efficacy and creative performance, Management Science, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee.

9. Siebörger, Florian Theodor. 2006. Funktionelle Neuroanatomie des Textverstehens: Kohärenzbildung bei Witzen und anderen ungewöhnlichen Texten. Diplom-Psychologe, Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences, Universität Leipzig, Leipzig.

8. Jackob, Nickolaus. 2005. Öffentliche Kommunikation bei Cicero: Publizistik und Rhetorik in der späten römischen Republik [Public communication according to Cicero: Journalism and rhetoric in the late Roman Republic]. Vol. 1, Communication Science Series. Baden-Baden: Nomos.

7. Kreuger, Hijmen, and Aris van Dijk. 2005. Rideo, ergo cogito [I laugh, therefore I think]. Universiteit Utrecht.

6. Ritchie, Graeme. 2005. Computational mechanisms for pun generation. In 10th European Natural Language Generation Workshop, at Aberdeen, Scotland.

5. Krasner, Michael A. 2004. Quips, jokes, and power: Humor as weapon in presidential campaigns. In 3rd Annual Pre-APSA Conference on Political Communication. Chicago, Illinois.

4. Rauterberg, Matthias. 2004. Entertainment technology and human behaviour: Literature study. Eindhoven, Netherlands: Department of Industrial Design, Technical University Eindhoven (The Netherlands).

3. Skinner, Jonathan S. 2004. Use of healthcare resources in the last six months of life: Author's reply. British Medical Journal 328 (7449):1202.

2. Fortin, Bruno. 2002. Toucher le cœur et l'esprit en passant par la rate. In Colloque de l'Associationdes cadres des collèges du Québec (ACCQ).

1. Pruim, Douglas E. 2001. A reformed perspective on humor. In The Stromata, edited by Joshua S. Benton, 37-44. Grand Rapids, MI: Calvin Theological Seminary.


                     

© 2023, Jim Lyttle