6533b82bfe1ef96bd128e215

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Benevolent and corrective humor, life satisfaction, and broad humor dimensions : extending the nomological network of the BenCor across 25 countries

Hsueh Chih ChenHsueh Chih ChenPetra LajčiakováThomas E. FordRobert B. IslerRăzvan SăftoiuLiisi LainesteAlyona IvanovaAlyona IvanovaHugo Carretero-diosIfu MigiwaAngélica Quiroga-garzaAnastassios StalikasIncheol ChoiWillibald RuchOlga V. ShcherbakovaAlena SlezáčkováTracey PlattRóbert ĎUrkaMinha LeeAngelika GüsewellSimge AykanTamilselvan RamisIngrid BrdarWładysław ChłopickiCharles Martin-krummCharles Martin-krummChloe LauJorge Torres-marínDorota BrzozowskaSonja HeintzAndrés Mendiburo-seguelIeva StokenbergaRené T. ProyerStanca MădaAtsushi OshioDonald H. SaklofskeAlberto DionigiPeter S.o. WongNailya Mustafi

subject

Humor ; Life satisfaction ; Cross-cultural comparisons ; BenCorSocial psychology (sociology)Virtuegenetic structuresmedia_common.quotation_subject3301 Social Sciences (miscellaneous)Nomological network[SHS.PSY]Humanities and Social Sciences/Psychology050109 social psychology050105 experimental psychologyfluids and secretions0501 psychology and cognitive scienceslife satisfactionBenCorComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUSmedia_commonsub_psychology10093 Institute of Psychologyhumor05 social sciencesLife satisfactionCognitioncross-cultural comparisonsMoralityUncorrelatedeye diseasesPositive psychologysub_socialpsychologysense organs150 PsychologyPsychologySocial psychologySocial Sciences (miscellaneous)

description

Indexación: Scopus. Benevolent and corrective humor are two comic styles that have been related to virtue, morality, and character strengths. A previous study also supported the viability of measuring these two styles with the BenCor in 22 countries. The present study extends the previous one by including further countries (a total of 25 countries in 29 samples with N = 7813), by testing the revised BenCor (BenCor-R), and by adding two criterion measures to assess life satisfaction and four broad humor dimensions (social fun/entertaining humor, mockery, humor ineptness, and cognitive/reflective humor). As expected, the BenCor-R showed mostly promising psychometric properties (internal consistency and factorial validity). Consistent with previous studies, benevolent humor correlated positively with life satisfaction in most countries, while corrective humor was uncorrelated with life satisfaction. These relationships were only slightly changed when controlling for social fun/entertaining humor and mockery, respectively. Benevolent humor was mostly positively associated with cognitive/reflective humor, followed by social fun/entertaining humor and mockery. Corrective humor was mostly positively associated with mockery, followed by cognitive/reflective and social fun/entertaining humor, although these relationships differed between the countries. Overall, the present study supports the viability of benevolent and corrective humor, which has yet received insufficient attention in psychology, for cross-cultural investigations and applications of humor, well-being, and morality. © 2019, Springer Nature B.V. https://link-springer-com.recursosbiblioteca.unab.cl/article/10.1007%2Fs10902-019-00185-9

10.1007/s10902-019-00185-9https://ruj.uj.edu.pl/xmlui/handle/item/248086