Humor Styles Predict Self-Reported Sarcasm Use in Interpersonal Communication
Liberty McAuley, Melanie Glenwright

TL;DR
This study shows how different humor styles influence how people use sarcasm in their communication with others.
Contribution
The study reveals that various humor styles predict specific sarcasm use patterns, including face-saving sarcasm.
Findings
Higher affiliative humor scores correlate with greater sarcasm use, especially face-saving sarcasm.
Aggressive humor scores are linked to frequent sarcasm use for diffusing frustration.
Self-defeating humor scores are associated with using sarcasm to manage embarrassment.
Abstract
We investigated how participants’ humor styles impact their sarcasm use. English-speaking participants (N = 179) completed online self-report measures of humor styles and sarcasm use. We conducted linear regressions to test whether their humor style scores could predict their sarcasm use scores. Participants with higher affiliative humor scores reported a greater tendency to use sarcasm in general and to use face-saving sarcasm to protect the social images of the speaker and addressee. People use face-saving sarcasm to enhance their relationships, to tease others, and to self-deprecate. Surprisingly, participants who scored high on aggressive humor reported using face-saving sarcasm often. We suspect this occurred because the aggressive humor and the face-saving scales contain conceptually similar items. Participants with high aggressive humor scores also reported frequently using…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHumor Studies and Applications · Language, Metaphor, and Cognition · Discourse Analysis in Language Studies
