A new study suggested that people who laugh regularly in their daily lives can be better equipped to deal with stressful events – although this does not seem to apply to the intensity of the sound. laugh. The findings of the new study by Basel University were published in the journal PLOS One. It is estimated that people often laugh 18 times a day – generally in interactions with others and depending on the level of joy they experience. The researchers also reported differences related to the time of the day, age and gender – for example, it is known that women laugh more than men. Now, researchers from the Faculty of Clinical Psychology and Epidemiology of Psychology Department at Basel University recently conducted a study of the relationship between stressful events and laughter about the Cognitive stress in everyday life. The questions of the application are asked in long -term research, an audio signal from the mobile phone app has caused participants to answer questions eight times a day in the uneven period of time in the period of time. 14 days. Questions related to the frequency and intensity of laughter and the reason to laugh – as well as any stressful events or tension symptoms – during the period from the final signal. Using this method, researchers work with the main authors, Dr. Thea Zander-Schellenberg and Dr. Isabella Collins, was able to study the relationship between laughter, stressful events and million million. Physical and psychological stress (“I have a headache” or “I feel restless”) as part of everyday life. The new analysis is published based on data from 41 psychological students, 33 of them are women, with an average age of less than 22. Observations are expected to be based on expert document: In the stages in which the subjects laugh often, stressful events are related to many smaller symptoms of subjective tensions. However, the second discovery is unexpected. When it comes to the interaction between stressful events and the intensity of laughter (strong, medium or weak), there is no statistical correlation with stressful symptoms. “This may be because people are better in estimating their laughter, instead of its intensity, over the past few hours,” according to the research team. (ANI)
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