When Laughter Hurts and Helps: Associations Between Gelotophobia, Gelotophilia, Katagelasticism and Well-Being
Robert Reinecke, Diana Mazzarella, Jürgen Maurer

TL;DR
This study explores how fear of being laughed at, joy in being laughed at, and joy in laughing at others relate to well-being in older adults.
Contribution
The study investigates how laughter-related dispositions affect well-being in older adults, a population with unique social and emotional challenges.
Findings
Higher gelotophobia is linked to lower life satisfaction and increased depression in older adults.
Higher gelotophilia correlates with stronger social connectedness and more frequent social activity.
Katagelasticism is associated with reduced social engagement and lower social support.
Abstract
Laughter is commonly seen as a source of positive emotion and a facilitator of social bonding, yet its perception varies based on individual characteristics. Three constructs capture individual differences in how laughter is perceived: gelotophobia (fear of being laughed at), gelotophilia (joy of being laughed at), and katagelasticism (joy in laughing at others). Although these constructs have been predominantly studied in younger adults, their roles in older populations remain underexplored, despite unique social, emotional, and health challenges – including increased social avoidance behavior. This study examined how these constructs relate to well-being – specifically, life satisfaction, social engagement, and mental health – in 1,163 Swiss respondents aged 60 and older from Wave 9 (2021/2022) of the Survey of Health, Ageing and Retirement in Europe (SHARE). The PhoPhiKat-9…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHumor Studies and Applications · Eating Disorders and Behaviors · Stuttering Research and Treatment
