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Tickling Induces a Unique Type of Spontaneous Laughter
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Laughing is ubiquitous in human life, yet what causes it and how it sounds is highly variable. Considering this diversity, we sought to test whether there are fundamentally different kinds of laughter. Here, we sampled spontaneous laughs (n = 887) from wide range of everyday situations (for example, comedic performances and playful pranks). Machine learning analyses showed that laughs produced during tickling are acoustically distinct from laughs triggered by other kinds of events (verbal jokes, watching something funny, or witnessing someone else’s misfortune). In a listening experiment (n = 201), participants could accurately identify tickling-induced laughter, validating that such laughter is not only acoustically, but also perceptually distinct. A second listening study (n = 210) combined with acoustic analyses indicate that tickling-induced laughter involves less vocal control than laughter produced in other contexts. Together, our results reveal a unique acoustic and perceptual profile of laughter induced by tickling, an evolutionarily ancient play behaviour, distinguishing it clearly from laughter caused by other triggers. This study showcases the power of machine learning in uncovering patterns within complex behavioural phenomena, providing a window into the evolutionary significance of ticking-induced laughter.
Center for Open Science
Title: Tickling Induces a Unique Type of Spontaneous Laughter
Description:
Laughing is ubiquitous in human life, yet what causes it and how it sounds is highly variable.
Considering this diversity, we sought to test whether there are fundamentally different kinds of laughter.
Here, we sampled spontaneous laughs (n = 887) from wide range of everyday situations (for example, comedic performances and playful pranks).
Machine learning analyses showed that laughs produced during tickling are acoustically distinct from laughs triggered by other kinds of events (verbal jokes, watching something funny, or witnessing someone else’s misfortune).
In a listening experiment (n = 201), participants could accurately identify tickling-induced laughter, validating that such laughter is not only acoustically, but also perceptually distinct.
A second listening study (n = 210) combined with acoustic analyses indicate that tickling-induced laughter involves less vocal control than laughter produced in other contexts.
Together, our results reveal a unique acoustic and perceptual profile of laughter induced by tickling, an evolutionarily ancient play behaviour, distinguishing it clearly from laughter caused by other triggers.
This study showcases the power of machine learning in uncovering patterns within complex behavioural phenomena, providing a window into the evolutionary significance of ticking-induced laughter.
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