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267. Seema Ghangale, Madan Jagtap, Carmeline Sequeira, Sneha Date-Ranade, Pravinkumar Govind Shastri, Kishor Baburao Dalve, and Atul Bansilal Patil. 2025. Analysing the power of humour to enhance critical communication. Forum for Linguistic Studies, 7(12). LINK

266. Zekai Çakır, Fatih Çatıkkaş, Mutlu Türkmen, Abdullah Şengönül, Menzure Sibel Yaman, Tuncay Öktem, Mevlüt Gönen, Sema Güzel, and Kader Yel. 2025. Preservice teachers’ attitudes toward pedagogical humour: The role of physical activity, sociodemographic factors, and academic discipline. BMC [BioMed Central] Psychology 13(1), 1423. LINK

265. Ahmad Naufalul Uman, Regina Okti Rusliyanti, and Firdania Reski Oktaviani. 2025. Norms violation and dark personality: Benign Violation Theory for humor and dark humor. In Ayu Okvitawanli, Wolfgang Friedlmeier, and Rachana Bhangaokar (Eds.). Globalization in Context. Proceedings from the 27th Congress of the International Association for Cross-Cultural Psychology. LINK

264. Loren D. Marks, Danielle H. Cannon, Antonius D. Skipper, Tehya A. Vassar, and David C. Dollahite. 2025. The power of humor in strong African American marriages: Laughing, lifting, and loving. Marriage & Family Review 61(8), 844-865. LINK

263. Kadri Nazli and Berivan Uzun Seyitvan. 2025. When laughter hurts: Gelotophobia as a sociolinguistic barrier in multicultural language classrooms. TOBIDER: International Journal of Social Sciences, 9(3), 457-472. LINK

262. Shaaban Ahmed Mohammed. 2025. The effectiveness of cognitive-analytic therapy in reducing Gelotophobia in stuttering university students and its impact on the quality of their friendships: An experimental-clinical study. Sohag Journal of Education, 136, 361-482. LINK

261. Kiho Jun, and Junghack Lee. 2025. Supervisor’s positive humor and follower’s intrinsic motivation: Roles of emotion and relationship quality. Evidence-based HRM: A Global Forum for Empirical Scholarship (pp. 1-16). LINK

260. Bung Fai. 2025. Komunikasi dalam stand up commedy [Communication in stand-up comedy]. ISBN: 978-6349609982. LINK

259. Gockel, Christine Gockel. 2025. Humor in teams, In Tabea Scheel, and Christine Gockel. Humor at work in teams, leadership, negotiations, learning, and health (2nd ed., pp. 39-59). LINK

258. Jana Kvalan and Violeta Vidaček Hainš. 2025. Anayzing humor styles and emotional reactions of comic scene participants in TV series. Zbornik radova Veleučilišta u Šibeniku, 19(1-2), 71-83. LINK

257. Prasoon Kumar. 2025. Humour in educational settings: An exploratory study. The European Journal of Humour Research, 13(2), 240-256. LINK

256. Huichi Qian and Yah Zhou. 2025. Loneliness and longing: Investigating the impact of workplace isolation on employees’ citizenship fatigue and social learning. Baltic Journal of Management LINK

255. Kiho Jun and Zhehua Hu. 2025, July. Impact of leader humor on prosocial behavior through identification and power distance orientation. 35th Annual Conference of the Academy of Management at Copenhagen, Denmark.

254. Katarina Banov Trošelj, Nada Krapić, and Igor Kardum. 2025. Do you share a vocational interest? Examining congruence and satisfaction in couples. 22nd European Congress of Work and Organizational Psychology, May 21-25. LINK

253. Julie Aitken Schermer and Đorđe Čekrlija. 2025. A funny thing did not happen at work: Humor styles are not strongly correlated with vocational interests. Current Research in Behavioral Sciences, LINK

252. Guangming Li and Yuan Xia. 2025. How do the different humor styles of streamers affect consumer repurchase intentions? Behavioral Sciences, 15(4), 544-558. LINK

251. Violeta Ioana Irimie. 2025. Ce este umorul? Sinteze teoretice [What is humor? Theoretical syntheses]. Doctor of Philosophy, Interdisciplinary Studies, University of Transylvania at Brașov. LINK

250. Mariko Shirai and Rie Ito. 2024. Differential perception of shame in the Japanese: gelotophobia tendency and negative emotional states responding to being laughed at. European Journal of Humour Research 12(4), 297-312. LINK

249. Maria Magdelana Walker, and Maria Constanza Mujica. 2024. “El humor está bien, pero con cuidado”: percepciones de la audiencia chilena sobre la presencia del humor en la discusión política en matinales. [“Humor is fine, but with caution”: Chilean audience perceptions of humor in political discussions in morning shows.] Palabra Clave, 27(4), e2742. LINK

248. Hao Chang, Yu-Chen Chan, I-Fei Chen, and Hsueh-Chih Chen. 2025. Resting-state functional connectivity in gelotophobes: A neuroscientific perspective on the fear of laughter. Behavioural Brain Research 479(1), 115355. LINK

247. John R. Gallagher and Rebecca E. Avgoustopoulos. 2024. Emojination facilitates inclusive emoji design through technical writing: Fitting tactical technical communication inside institutional structures. Journal of Technical Writing and Communication, 54(1), 93-112. LINK

246. Yuto Ushijima, Satoru Satake, and Takayuki Kanda. 2024. Predicting humor effectiveness of robots for human line cutting. Frontiers in Robotics and AI, 11, 1-17. LINK

245. Emma S. Jones, Karen Margaret Wright, and Mick Mckeown. 2024. Humour in forensic services: Enabling connections between patients and students. British Journal of Mental Health Nursing, 13(3), 1-9. LINK

244. Peng Gao, Chuanqi Tao, and Donghai Guan. 2024. FEF-Net: Feature enhanced fusion network with crossmodal attention for multimodal humor prediction. Multimedia Systems, 30(4), #195. LINK

243. Surahmat Surahmat, I. Dewa Putu Wijana, and B. R. Suryo Baskoro. 2024. [Cultural violence in Indonesian ethnic humor: A critical discourse analysis]. Bahasa dan Seni: Jurnal Bahasa, Sastra, Seni, dan Pengajarannya, 52(1), 43-60. LINK

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

241. Kuba Krys, 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

240. Kiho Jun 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

239. Christoph Deupmann. 2024. Bertolt Brecht's Drums in the Night and Ernst Toller's Hinkemann. Two dramatic experimental arrangements about war returnees. In Kirsten Reimers, Lydia Mühlbach, and Thorsten Unger. Bertolt Brecht and Ernst Toller (pp. 111-126). LINK

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

237. P. O. Ivanova and Elena M. Ivanova. 2023. [Russian approbation of the Ridicule Teasing Questionnaire (RTQ) of T. Platt]. Clinical Psychology and Special Education 8(2), 140-158. LINK

236. Rocio Vizcaíno-Cuenca, 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

235. Bhowmick Sumagna 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

234. Nima Zargham, 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

233. Nima Zargham, 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

232. Susann Wegesa Wangwe. 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.

231. Ayşe Yöney. 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.

230. Nathan Keates and Krysia Waldock. 2023. Autistic people, gelotophobia, gelotophilia and katagelasticism: A narrative review. Review Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders 12(1), 40-49. LINK

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

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

227. Olena Lazebna, 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

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

225. 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

224. 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

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

222. Ozan Büyükyılmaz. 2021. Linking Leaders’ Humor Styles and Employees’ Organizational Creativity: Moderating Role of Organizational Tenure. Istanbul Business Research, 51(2), 491-516. LINK

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

220. Rocio Zamora-Medina, 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

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

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

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

216. Daniel Ejiroghene and Charles Kelechi. 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.

215. Üyesi Ozan Büyükyılmaz1. 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

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

213. Dirk De Clercq 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

212. Rameesha Maqbool , 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

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

210. B. Zywietz. 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.

209. Sulistyarini Sulistyarini. 2019. Why is humor funny? Fifth PRASASTI International Seminar on Linguistics. Advances in Social Science, Education and Humanities Research, 338, 277-284. LINK

208. Alice Yahhuei Hong and Roland Chang. 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

207. Anja Pabel 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

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

205. Emily Philips. 2019. Why we stand up: Comedy and its impact. Bachelor of Arts, Department of Cinema Studies, Robert D. Clark Honors College, University of Oregon. LINK

204. Kay Brauer 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

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

202. Nimrod Nir 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

201. S. Rossi, 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

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

198. Clara Liquete Giménez. 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.

197. Laurent Bompar, 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

196. Ahmet Şahin. 2018. Humor climate of the primary schools. European Journal of Education Studies, 4(1), 95-117. LINK

195. Zeynep Oktuğ, 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

194. Vivian C. Sheer, 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

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

192. Jody C. Baumgartner, 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

191. Magnus Söderlund 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

190. Yi Xiao, 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

189. Derek Moscato. 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.

188. Xiaonan Jing, 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

187. Katharina Wolf. 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.

186. Jody Baumgartner. 2018. Political humor and its effects: A review essay. IIn Jacqueline Benavides Delgado (Ed.). Psicología y filosofía del humor (pp. 3-39). Ediciones Universidad Cooperativa de Colombia. LINK

185. Elif Bilginoglu and Uğur Yozgat. 2018. The effects of experienced fun at work on positive individual and organizational outcomes. Life Skills Journal of Psychology 2(4), 399-413. LINK

184. Catalina Argüello-Gutiérrez 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

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182. Qaisar Iqbal 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.

181. Elif Bilginoglu and Uğur Yozgat. 2017. Is "workplace fun" a new management fashion or another passing fad? Journal of Management, Marketing and Logistics 4(4), 448-455. LINK

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

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

178. Ahmet Şahin. 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

177. Michelle E. Todd, 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

176. Sheryl Raffat Saeed. 2017. Teacher perceptions on the social justice impact of Saeed's skits in American history classrooms. Doctor of Education, University of Houston. LINK

175. Aikaterini Georganta. 2017. Fun and positive experiences in the workplace: Effects on job burnout, need for recovery and job engagement. Doctor of Philosophy, University of Macedonia.

174. Jih-Yu Mao, 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

173. Magnus Söderlund, 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

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

171. Tyler J. Mulhearn, 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

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166. Yu Bai. 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.

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