Laughter and Tickling Laughter is physiologically spasmodic, rhythmic, vocalized, expiratory, and involuntary. Stearns discusses in some detail the neural pathways of the tickle-laughter reflex arc. Regarding the structure of tickling, Stearns defers to Houssay, who ``contends that [tickling] is due to `simultaneous excitation of both touch and pain receptors... because tickling cannot be produced after section of the spinothalamic tract ; also, tickling cannot be provoked when the circulation of an extremity is arrested, which first eliminates the sensation of touch, and with it the tickling sensation. The pain sensation is eliminated later. In short, tickling involves simultaneous sensation of touch and of pain. This is perfectly isomorphic to the elements N and V of the present theory of humor.
Pain, after all, is a violation of physical integrity and comfort; these are principles which we certainly care about quite viscerally. Pain is essentially a sensory representation of a violation of ones bodys natural order. It represents V, a violation of moral principle, reduced to the level of a physiological response to a physical stimulus. Touch sensations, on the other hand, provide an internal representation of the external, touched stimulus for the organism to process. This representation of the stimulus is painless by itself; it is a representation of a normal contact with a stimulus, N.
The fact that tickling requires a sensation of pain as well as a ``normal touch sensation, is a remarkable piece of evidence that appears to support the present theory of humor. The physiology of tickling is actually a restatement at the physiological level of the present theory of humor. Indeed, this suggests that physical tickling and more cerebral and cognitive forms of humor may have the same basic representation in the human nervous system, and that biological implementations of the two may at least be evolutionarily related.
It should be pointed out in making this comparison that the tickle response is not a purely physiological reflex response. While tickling of the type, ``research scientist applies feather to plantar surface of foot, may be thought to be purely physiological, there are kinds of tickling which clearly involve other mechanisms. Some people, for example, may be tickled without actually being touched. Such cases appear to involve a perceived attack in combination with a perceived lack of a real threat. Also, some people are simply ``not ticklish. Finally, one of the most robust and mysterious facts about ticklishness is that people usually cannot tickle themselves, but rather can only be tickled by some other agent. It would seem that the tickle response is not an innate physiological reflex, but involves something else that is possibly learnable, presumably cognitive. I suggest that this something is the judgement that one is being physically attacked in some way: a perceived fake attack. A perceived attack is obviously a violation of physical integrity and corresponds to a V interpretation. The falsity of the attack allows for a predominating N interpretation at the same time. The findings above follow from this suggestion: First, people for whom no sense of violation, invasion, or attack is evoked by light stimulation on footsoles, armpits, etc., will not be ticklish; conversely, ticklish people, on this account, are not of this character. Second, people who perceive an attack ``in fun may have a tickle response without actual touch, simply because the requisite judgment - a perceived fake attack - is present. And third, people ought not to be able to tickle themselves, either, since and to the extent that it is impossible to convince oneself that one is attacking oneself. You cant fake an attack on yourself; you see through it every time. So both the physiological facts regarding the tickle response, and the more psychological findings are fully consistent with the present theory of humor.
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裕兴新概念英语名师精讲第三册第1-52课
新概念英语第一册 Lesson 115: Knock,knock
新概念英语第一册 Lesson 61:A bad cold
新概念英语第一册 Lesson 63:Thank you,doctor
新概念英语第一册 Lesson 79:Carol’s shopping list
新概念英语第一册 Lesson 67:The weekend
新概念英语第一册 Lesson 83:Going on holiday
新概念英语第一册 Lesson 65:Not a baby
新概念英语第一册 Lesson 73:The way to King Street
新概念英语第二册必知语法汇总
新概念英语第一册 Lesson 91:Poor Ian
新概念英语第三册必背词汇(1)
新概念英语第一册 Lesson 103:The French test
新概念英语第三册必背词汇(2)
新概念英语第一册 Lesson 129:Seventy miles an hour
新概念英语第一册 Lesson 101:A card from Jimmy
新概念英语第一册 Lesson 111:The most expensive model
新概念英语第一册 Lesson 131:Don’t be so sure
新概念英语第一册 Lesson 113:Small change
新概念英语第一册 Lesson 95:Tickets,please
新概念英语第一册 Lesson 87:A car crash
新概念英语词汇随身听手册一C开头
新概念英语第一册 Lesson 119:A true story
新概念英语第一册 Lesson 127:A famous actress
新概念英语第一册 Lesson 71:He’s awful
新概念英语词汇随身听手册一D开头
新概念英语第一册 Lesson 107:It’s too small
新概念英语第一册 Lesson 109:A good idea
新概念英语第一册 Lesson 77:Terrible toothache
新概念英语第一册 Lesson 105:Full of mistakes