Startseite Psychometric evaluation of the revised Sense of Humor Scale and the construction of a parallel form
Artikel
Lizenziert
Nicht lizenziert Erfordert eine Authentifizierung

Psychometric evaluation of the revised Sense of Humor Scale and the construction of a parallel form

  • Willibald Ruch

    Willibald Ruch is a Full Professor of Psychology at the University of Zurich, Switzerland. His research interests are in the field of personality and assessment, with a special focus on humor and laughter, cheerfulness, and smiling. In his doctoral dissertation at the University of Graz (Austria) in 1980, he developed a taxonomy of jokes and cartoons and studied their relation to personality. His more recent work, together with his research team at the University of Zurich, includes humor from a positive psychology perspective, the effectiveness of humor training programs and clown interventions, the ability to laugh at oneself, the fear of being laughed at (gelotophobia), and the measurement of humor.

    EMAIL logo
    und Sonja Heintz

    Sonja Heintz is a postdoctoral researcher at the Department of Psychology at the University of Zurich in Switzerland. Her main research interests in humor are individual differences (humor and comic styles, dimensions of the sense of humor), measurement (humor questionnaires and humor-related behaviors), and positive psychology (relationships of humor with character strengths and well-being, virtuous forms of humor).

Veröffentlicht/Copyright: 28. April 2018
HUMOR
Aus der Zeitschrift HUMOR Band 31 Heft 2

Abstract

McGhee (1996, Health, healing and the amuse system: Humor as survival training. Dubuque: Kendall/Hunt; 1999, Health, healing and the amuse system: Humor as survival training (3rd edition). Dubuque: Kendall/Hunt) proposed a model of the sense of humor including the six “humor skills” of enjoyment of humor, laughter, verbal humor, finding humor in everyday life, laughing at yourself, and humor under stress, measured with the Sense of Humor Scale (SHS). The purpose of the present study is to evaluate the psychometric properties of the SHS (revised version from 1999) and to develop a parallel form of the SHS to double the amount of items for each humor skill. Combing these two forms should yield reliable and factorially valid scales of the six humor skills. Participants in two online studies (n=315 and 542) completed the SHS and its parallel form, along with measures of various outcomes. The psychometric properties of the SHS were of mixed quality, and those of the parallel form were uniformly good. The parallel-test reliability was sufficiently high to regard the two scales as parallel versions. Combining the two measures resulted in reliable and distinguishable scales of the six humor skills. All humor skills correlated positively with humor-related attitude and mood, cheerfulness, and life satisfaction. Importantly, they spanned different dimensions of the sense of humor, underscoring the usefulness of each humor skill.

About the authors

Willibald Ruch

Willibald Ruch is a Full Professor of Psychology at the University of Zurich, Switzerland. His research interests are in the field of personality and assessment, with a special focus on humor and laughter, cheerfulness, and smiling. In his doctoral dissertation at the University of Graz (Austria) in 1980, he developed a taxonomy of jokes and cartoons and studied their relation to personality. His more recent work, together with his research team at the University of Zurich, includes humor from a positive psychology perspective, the effectiveness of humor training programs and clown interventions, the ability to laugh at oneself, the fear of being laughed at (gelotophobia), and the measurement of humor.

Sonja Heintz

Sonja Heintz is a postdoctoral researcher at the Department of Psychology at the University of Zurich in Switzerland. Her main research interests in humor are individual differences (humor and comic styles, dimensions of the sense of humor), measurement (humor questionnaires and humor-related behaviors), and positive psychology (relationships of humor with character strengths and well-being, virtuous forms of humor).

Acknowledgements

We would like to thank Sarah Auerbach and the graduate students for their help in creating the SHS-P items and in collecting data for Sample 1. We would also like to thank Frank Appletree Rodden for his helpful comments on an earlier version of this manuscript and Moritz Meyer for drawing Figure 1.

References

Beermann, Ursula & Willibald Ruch. 2011. How virtuous is humor? What we can learn from current instruments. The Journal of Positive Psychology 4. 528–539.10.1080/17439760903262859Suche in Google Scholar

Craik, Kenneth, Martin D. Lampert & Arvalea Nelson 1996. Sense of humor and styles of everyday humorous conduct. Humor: International Journal of Humor Research 9. 273–302.10.1515/humr.1996.9.3-4.273Suche in Google Scholar

Diener, Ed, Robert A. Emmons, Randy J. Larsen & Sharon Griffin 1985. The satisfaction with life scale. Journal of Personality Assessment 49(1). 71–75.10.1037/t01069-000Suche in Google Scholar

McGhee, Paul E. 1979. Humor: Its origin and development. San Francisco: WH Freeman and Company.Suche in Google Scholar

McGhee, Paul E. 1996. Health, healing and the amuse system: Humor as survival training. Dubuque: Kendall/Hunt.Suche in Google Scholar

McGhee, Paul E. 1999. Health, healing and the amuse system: Humor as survival training, 3rd edn. Dubuque: Kendall/Hunt.Suche in Google Scholar

McGhee, Paul E. 2010. Humor as survival training for a stressed-out world: The 7 humor habits program. Bloomington: AuthorHouse.Suche in Google Scholar

Müller, Liliane & Willibald Ruch. 2011. Humor and strengths of character. The Journal of Positive Psychology 6(5). 368–376.10.1080/17439760.2011.592508Suche in Google Scholar

Proyer, Rene T. 2014. A psycho-linguistic approach for studying adult playfulness: A replication and extension toward relations with humor. The Journal of Psychology 148. 717–735.10.1080/00223980.2013.826165Suche in Google Scholar

Proyer, Rene T., Rahel Flisch, Stefanie Tschupp, Tracey Platt & Willibald Ruch. 2012. How does psychopathy relate to humor and laughter? Dispositions toward ridicule and being laughed at, the sense of humor, and psychopathic personality traits. International Journal of Law and Psychiatry 35. 263–268.10.1016/j.ijlp.2012.04.007Suche in Google Scholar

Proyer, Rene T., Willibald Ruch & Liliane MüLler. 2010. Sense of humor among the elderly: Findings with the German version of the SHS. Zeitschrift für Gerontologie und Geriatrie 43. 19–24.10.1007/s00391-009-0082-0Suche in Google Scholar

R Core Team. 2015. R: A language and environment for statistical computing. Vienna: R Foundation for Statistical Computing.Suche in Google Scholar

Rosseel, Yves. 2012. lavaan: An R package for structural equation modeling. Journal of Statistical Software 48(2). 1–36.10.18637/jss.v048.i02Suche in Google Scholar

Ruch, Willibald. 2012a. Towards a new structural model of the sense of humor: Preliminary findings. AAAI Fall Symposium: Artificial Intelligence of Humor 2. 68–75.Suche in Google Scholar

Ruch, Willibald. 2012b. Four dimensions of humor scale. University of Zurich Unpublished manual.Suche in Google Scholar

Ruch, Willibald & Amy Carrell. 1998. Trait cheerfulness and the sense of humor. Personality and Individual Differences 24. 551–558.10.1016/S0191-8869(97)00221-3Suche in Google Scholar

Ruch, Willibald, Gabriele Köhler & Christoph van Thriel. 1996. Assessing the “humorous temperament”: Construction of the facet and standard trait forms of the State-Trait-Cheerfulness-Inventory – STCI. Humor: International Journal of Humor Research 9. 303–339.10.1515/humr.1996.9.3-4.303Suche in Google Scholar

Ruch, Willibald & Sonja Heintz. 2016. The virtue gap in humor: Exploring benevolent and corrective humor. Translational Issues in Psychological Science 2. 35–45.10.1037/tps0000063Suche in Google Scholar

Ruch, Willibald & Paul E. McGhee. 2014. Humor intervention programs. In Acacia C. Parks & Stephen M. Schueller (eds.), The Wiley Blackwell handbook of positive psychological interventions, 179–193. Chichester: John Wiley & Sons.10.1002/9781118315927.ch10Suche in Google Scholar

Ruch, Willibald, Rene T. Proyer, Claudia Esser & Otilia Mitrache. 2011. Cheerfulness and everyday humorous conduct. In Romanian Academy (eds.), Yearbook of the ‘George Baritiu’ Institute of History in Cluj-Napoca, 67–87. Bucharest: Romanian Academy Publishing House.Suche in Google Scholar

Schermelleh-Engel, Karin, Helfried Moosbrugger & Hans Müller. 2003. Evaluating the fit of structural equation models: Tests of significance and descriptive goodness-of-fit measures. Methods of Psychological Research Online 8(2). 23–74.Suche in Google Scholar

Soury, Mariette & Laurence Devillers. 2014. Smile and laughter in human-machine interaction: A study of engagement. In Nicoletta Calzolari, Khalid Choukri, Thierry Declerck, Hrafn Loftsson, Bente Maegaard, Joseph Mariani, Asuncion Moreno, Jan Odijk & Stelios Piperidis (eds.), Proceedings of the ninth international conference on Language Resources and Evaluation (LREC’14), 3633–3637. Paris: European Language Resources Association.Suche in Google Scholar

Wrench, Jason S. & James C. McCroskey 2001. A temperamental understanding of humor communication and exhilaratability. Communication Quarterly 49(2). 142–159.10.1080/01463370109385622Suche in Google Scholar

Published Online: 2018-4-28
Published in Print: 2018-4-25

© 2018 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston

Heruntergeladen am 21.11.2025 von https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/humor-2016-0085/html?lang=de
Button zum nach oben scrollen