Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
Life

Laughter Best Tactic To Woo Your Girl

Darpan News Desk IANS, 17 Mar, 2015 02:47 PM
    If you want someone to open up to you, just make them laugh.
     
    Sharing a few good giggles and chuckles makes people more willing to tell others something personal about themselves, without even necessarily being aware that they are doing so, finds a new study.
     
    Such self-disclosure can be of a highly sensitive nature - like sharing one's religious convictions or personal fears - or a superficial titbit such as one's favourite type of food.
     
    These are among the findings of the study from University College London (UCL) and published in the journal Human Nature.
     
    "This seems to be in line with the notion that laughter is linked specifically to fostering behaviours that encourage relationship development, since observer ratings of disclosure may be more important for relationship development than how much one feels one is disclosing," said lead researcher Alan Gray of UCL.
     
    To investigate the role and influence of laughter in this disclosure process, Gray and his colleagues gathered 112 students from Oxford University in England, into groups of four.
     
    The students did not know one another. The groups watched a 10-minute video together, without chatting to one another.
     
    The videos differed in the amount of laughter they invoked, and the amount of positive feelings or emotions they elicited.
     
    One featured a stand-up comedy routine by Michael McIntyre, another a straightforward golf instruction video, and the third a pleasant nature excerpt from the "Jungles" episode of the BBC's Planet Earth series.
     
    The levels of laughter and the participants' emotional state after watching the video was then measured.
     
    Each group member also had to write a message to another participant to help them get to know each other better.
     
    The participants who had a good laugh together shared significantly more intimate information than the groups who did not watch the comedy routine.
     
    Gray suggests this is not merely because it is a positive experience, but because of the physiology behind a good laugh.
     
    It actually triggers the release of the so-called "happy hormone" endorphin.
     
    The findings support the idea that laughter encourages people to make more intimate disclosures to strangers.
     
    Interestingly, the person who disclosed information was seldom aware that he or she had done so. It was only the listener who realised that it had happened.
     
    "These results suggest that laughter should be a serious topic for those interested in the development of social relationships," Gray said.

    MORE Life ARTICLES

    Buy books, happiness will come free

    Buy books, happiness will come free
    Purchasing books, video games or other experiential products designed to enhance your buying experience can make you just as happy as travelling...

    Buy books, happiness will come free

    Well-educated wives no longer at divorce risk

    Well-educated wives no longer at divorce risk
    Take heart and show some humility if your wife is more educated than you and earns better. With changing times, this may not drive your relationship to the dead end any more....

    Well-educated wives no longer at divorce risk

    Earth missed solar catastrophe just a year back: NASA

    Earth missed solar catastrophe just a year back: NASA
    Just a year ago, on July 23, the Earth missed being hit by a giant solar flare from the most powerful storm on the sun in over 150 years, NASA has said in a sensational revelation.

    Earth missed solar catastrophe just a year back: NASA

    Husband makes wife's 'sexual rejection' list

    Husband makes wife's 'sexual rejection' list
    Next time when you refuse sex to your husband, hide all papers first. A man has prepared a 'sexual rejection' spreadsheet - in three columns - jotting...

    Husband makes wife's 'sexual rejection' list

    Men with wider faces negotiate better

    Men with wider faces negotiate better
    Men with wider faces are better at negotiating when it comes to their own benefit but not so much when the situation requires compromise and collaboration, says a study....

    Men with wider faces negotiate better

    Why obese workers get tired sooner

    Why obese workers get tired sooner
    Workers who are obese may have significantly shorter endurance times when performing workplace tasks, compared with their non-obese counterparts, says a study....

    Why obese workers get tired sooner