Results 281 to 290 of about 355,833 (326)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.

Related searches:

Laughter

JAMA - Journal of the American Medical Association, 1984
Knowledge of laughter, other than of its clinical manifestations, is tenuous. A unique, ubiquitous human phenomenon, laughter has largely been neglected by medical investigators and relegated to philosophers and naturalists, particularly Darwin. Clinical manifestations are well described, but the many physiological changes accompanying laughter are not.
Donald W Black
exaly   +3 more sources

Pathological laughter

Annals of Emergency Medicine, 1990
A man experienced one hour and 40 minutes of continual, inappropriate, uncontrollable laughter. The onset was preceded by a single-inhalation exposure to an insecticide of very low toxicity. The episode was terminated by a single dose of IV diazepam. A discussion of pathological laughter, including its proposed pathophysiology, differential diagnosis ...
G L, Zellers, M, Frank, J, Dougherty
openaire   +2 more sources

Laughter

2017
Following Mikhail Bakhtin’s influential study Rabelais and His World, a generation of scholars have thought of laughter as subversive—of norms, institutions, religion, gender. The literary canon, however, is ripe with situations in which characters refrain from laughing at certain objects.
Trouvain, Jürgen, Truong, Khiet Phuong
  +5 more sources

Laughter: Belly-aching Laughter

2016
This chapter surveys media that elicits laughter from the spectator. The chapter examines laughter as an involuntary response to a wide range of experiences, and not simply things that could be considered humorous. Laughter (particularly in the communal setting of a theater, or among friends) might follow jump-out-of-your-seat frights in a horror film,
Aaron Michael Kerner, Jonathan L. Knapp
openaire   +1 more source

Home - About - Disclaimer - Privacy