This monograph reflects a culmination of influences. Over a decade ago,
a graduate student at the University of Waterloo, Dr. Carl Sordoni, had
worked with one of the present authors (H.L.) to develope a dissertation
concerned with humor. At that time, the literature on humor was scanty.
There was much that had been written by philosophers and scholars in
literature. But in psychology, especially empirical research in
psychology, there was not an overwhelming literature to give substance
to the belief that humor was an important element in human affairs.
Memories of that dissertation are fond. The findings were disappoint-
ing, but the execution of the research provided us with much hilarity.
Though the dissertation research did not pan out as we had hoped, we had
begun to look for the influence of humor in other investigations that we
were conducting. Two published studies from that era are described in
this book, one of which grew as an off-shoot of a dissertation by Dr.
Paul Antrobus. In these studies not only did we find evidence that humor
could be predicted and understood within particular contexts, but again
we found enjoyment in doing the studies.