Men are naturally more comedic than women
because of the male hormone testosterone, an expert claims.
Men make more gags than women and their
jokes tend to be more aggressive, Professor Sam Shuster,
of Norfolk and Norwich University Hospital, says.
The unicycling doctor observed how the
genders reacted to his "amusing" hobby.
Women tended to make encouraging, praising
comments, while men jeered. The most aggressive were young
men, he told the British Medical Journal.
Previous findings have suggested women
and men differ in how they use and appreciate humour.
Women tend to tell fewer jokes than men
and male comedians outnumber female ones.
Aggressively funny
Research suggests men are more likely
to use humour aggressively by making others the butt of
the joke.
And aggression - generally considered
to be a more masculine trait - has been linked by some
to testosterone exposure in the womb.
Professor Shuster believes humour develops
from aggression caused by male hormones.
He documented the reaction of over 400
individuals to his unicycling antics through the streets
of Newcastle upon Tyne.
Almost half of people responded verbally
- more being men. Very few of the women made comic or
snide remarks, while 75% of the men attempted comedy -
mostly shouting out "Lost your wheel?", for example.
Mocking and sneering
Often the men's comments were mocking
and intended as a put-down. Young men in cars were particularly
aggressive - they lowered their windows and shouted abusively.
This type of behaviour decreased among
older men however, who tended to offer more admiring comments,
much like the women.
"The idea that unicycling is intrinsically
funny does not explain the findings," said Professor Shuster.
The simplest explanation, he says, is
the effect of male hormones such as testosterone.
"The difference between the men and women
was absolutely remarkable and consistent," said Professor
Shuster.
"At 11-13 years, the boys began to get
really aggressive. Into puberty, the aggression became
more marked, then it changed into a form of joke. The
men were snide."
The initial aggressive intent seems to
become channelled into a more subtle and sophisticated
joke, so the aggression is hidden by wit, explained Professor
Shuster.
Dr Nick Neave is a psychologist at the
University of Northumbria who has been studying the physical,
behavioural, and psychological effects of testosterone.
He suggested men might respond aggressively
because they see the other unicycling man as a threat,
attracting female attention away from themselves.
"This would be particularly challenging
for young males entering the breeding market and thus
it does not surprise me that their responses were the
more threatening."