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Jim Lyttle

Cited in Journals

Baumgartner, J. C. (2007). Humor on the next frontier: Youth, online political humor, and
the JibJab effect. Social Science Computer Review, 25(3), 319-338. doi:
10.1177/0894439306295395
Baumgartner, J. C. (2008). Polls and elections: Editorial cartoons 2.0: The effects of digital
political satire on presidential candidate evaluations. Presidential Studies Quarterly,
38(4), 735-758. doi: 10.1111/j.1741-5705.2008.02675.x
Baumgartner, J. C., & Morris, J. S. (2006). The Daily Show effect: Candidate evaluations,
efficacy, and American youth. American Politics Research, 34, 341-367. doi: 10.1177/1532673X05280074
Baumgartner, J. C., & Morris, J. S. (2008). One "nation," under Stephen? The effects of the
Colbert Report on American youth. Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media,
52(4), 622-643.
Bergeron, J., & Vachon, M. A. (2008). The effects of humor usage by financial advisors in
sales encounters. International Journal of Bank Marketing, 26(6), 376-398. doi: 10.1108/02652320810902424
Chen, S.-m., Sun, P.-z., & Zheng, X. (2011). Development and validation of sense of humor
questionnaire for college students. Chinese Journal of Clinical Psychology, 19(2),
167-170.
Cifuentes, C. M. (2005). Tipos de humor en la publicidad impresa Colombiana [Types of humor
in Colombian print advertising]. Diversitas: Perspectivas en Psicologa, 1(1), 31-45.
Dyrud, M. A. (2007). Ethics, gaming, and industrial training. IEEE: Technology and Society
Magazine, 26(4), 36-44.
Fortin, B., & Méthot, L. (2004). S'adapter avec humour au travail interdisciplinaire: Pistes de
réflexion [Coping with humor in interdisciplinary work: Reflexive statements]. Revue
Québécoise de Psychologie, 25(1), 99-118.
Haigh, M. M., & Heresco, A. (2010). Late-night Iraq: Monologue joke content and tone
from 2003 to 2007. Mass Communication and Society, 13(2), 157-173. doi:
10.1080/15205430903014884
Holbert, R. L., Hmielowski, J. D., Jain, P., Lather, J., & Morey, A. (2011). Adding nuance
to political humor effects: Experimental research on Juvenalian satire versus
Horatian satire. The American Behavioral Scientist, 55(3), 187-211. doi:
10.1177/0002764210392156
Holian, R. (2006). Management decision making, ethical issues and "emotional"
intelligence. Management Decision, 44(8), 1122-1138.
Jones, J. A. (2005). The masking effects of humor on audience perception of message
organization. Humor: International Journal of Humor Research, 18(4), 405-418.
Liang, J. (2008). [Theoretical analysis of the literature on persuading consumers].Foreign
Economies and Management, 30(7), 39-44, 51.
McRoberts, D. A., & Larson-Casselton, C. (2006). Humor in public address, health care and
the workplace: Summarizing humor's use using meta-analysis. North Dakota Speech
and Theatre Journal, 19, 26-33.
Morris, J. S. (2009). The Daily Show with Jon Stewart and audience attitude change during
the 2004 party conventions. Political Behavior, 31(1), 79-102. doi:
10.1007/s11109-008-9064-y
Nabi, R. L., Moyer-Gusé, E., & Byrne, S. (2007). All joking aside: A serious investigation into
the persuasive effect of funny social issue messages. Communication Monographs,
74(1), 29-54. doi: 10.1080/03637750701196896
Niven, D., Lichter, S. R., & Amundson, D. (2003). The political content of late night comedy.
Harvard International Journal of Press/Politics, 8(3), 118-133. doi:
10.1177/1081180X03008003007
Platt, T. (2008). Emotional responses to ridicule and teasing: Should gelotophobes react
differently? Humor: International Journal of Humor Research, 21(2), 105-128.
Proyer, R. T., & Ruch, W. (2010). Dispositions towards ridicule and being laughed at:
Current research on gelotophobia, gelotophilia, and katagelasticism. Psychological
Test and Assessment Modeling, 52(1), 49-59.
Rendtorff, J. D. (2008). The corporation as a good citizen: A case study of Lockheed Martin.
Tidsskriftet Politik, 11(4), 48-59.
Rodríguez Torres, V. J., & Feldman, L. (2009). Validación Preliminar del Cuestionario de
Estilos de Humor en Trabajadores y Trabajadoras de la Salud. Caso Venezuela
[Preliminary validation of the humor styles questionnaire in male and female health
workers: The Venuzuela case]. Ciencia & Trabajo [Science and Work], 11(31), 9-13.
Romal, J. B. (2008). Use of humor as a pedagogical tool for accounting education. Academy
of Educational Leadership Journal, 12(1), 83-106.
Romero, E., & Pescosolido, A. (2008). Humor and group effectiveness. Human Relations,
61(3), 395-418. doi: 10.1177/0018726708088999
Scholl, J. C. (2007). The use of humor to promote patient-centered care. Journal of Applied
Communication Research, 35(2), 156-176.
Simola, S. K. (2010). Use of a "coping-modeling, problem-solving" program in business
ethics education. Journal of Business Ethics 96(3), 383-401. doi:
10.1007/s10551-010-0473-6
Skinner, J. S. (2004). Use of healthcare resources in the last six months of life: Author's
reply. British Medical Journal, 328(7449), 1202a.
Stefanenko, E. A., Ivanova, E. M., Enikolopov, S. N., Proyer, R., & Ruch, W. (2011).
[Diagnosing the fear of looking ridiculous: English adaption of Gelotophobia
questionnaire]. Psikhologicheskii Zhurnal, 32(2), 94-108.
Teven, J. J., & Winters, J. L. (2007). Pharmaceutical representatives' social influence
behaviors and communication orientations: Relationships with adaptive selling
and sales performance. Human Communication. A Publication of the Pacific
and Asian Communication Association, 10(4), 465-486.
van Dolen, W. M., de Ruyter, K., & Streukens, S. (2008). The effect of humor in
electronic service encounters. Journal of Economic Psychology, 29(2), 160-179.
Wood, R. E., Beckmann, N., & Rossiter, J. R. (2011). Management humor: Asset or
liability? Organizational Psychology Review, 1(4), 316-338. doi:
10.1177/2041386611418393.
Young, D. G. (2008). The privileged role of the late-night joke: Exploring humor's role
in disrupting argument scrutiny. Media Psychology, 11(1), 119-142. doi:
10.1080/15213260701837073
Young, T. S. (2006). Towards a humour translation checklist for students of translation.
Interlingüística, 17, 981-988.
Ziyaeemehr, A., Kumar, V., & Abdullah, F. S. (2011). Use and non-use of humor in
academic ESL classrooms. English Language Teaching, 4(3), 111-119. doi:
10.5539/elt.v4n3p111

Cited in Books

Baumgartner, J. C. (2008). American youth and the effects of online political humor. In J. C.
Baumgartner & J. S. Morris (Eds.), Laughing matters: Humor and American politics
in the media age (pp.131-147). New York: Routledge.
Jackob, N. (2005). Öffentliche Kommunikation bei Cicero: Publizistik und Rhetorik in
der späten römischen Republik [Public communication according to Cicero:
Journalism and rhetoric in the late Roman Republic] (Vol. 1). Baden-Baden: Nomos.
Jones, R. L., Potrac, P., & Cushion, C. (2011). The sociology of sports coaching. Florence,
KY: Taylor & Francis.
Lewis, P. (2006). Cracking up: American humor in a time of conflict. Chicago: University
of Chicago Press.
Martin, R. A. (2007). The social psychology of humor. In R. A. Martin (Ed.), The
psychology of humor: An integrative approach (pp. 113-150). San Diego:
Academic Press.
Michels, S., & Ventimiglia, M. (2007). Can the Daily Show save democracy? Jon Stewart
as the gadfly of Gotham. In J. Holt (Ed.), The Daily Show and philosophy: Moments
of Zen in the art of fake news (pp. 81-92). Oxford, UK: Blackwell.
Niven, D., Lichter, S. R., & Amundson, D. (2008). Our first cartoon president: Bill Clinton
and the politics of late night comedy. In, J. C. Baumgartner & J. S. Morris (Eds.),
Laughing matters: Humor and American politics in the media age (pp.131-147).
New York: Routledge.
Painter-Morland, M. (2008). Business ethics as practice: Ethics as the everyday business
of business. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
Robert, C., & Yan, W. (2007). The case for developing new research on humor and culture
in organizations: Toward a higher grade of manure. In J. J. Martocchio (Ed.),
Research in personnel and human resources management (Vol. 26, pp. 205-267).
Amsterdam: Elsevier.
Rockwell, P. A. (2006). Sarcasm and other mixed messages: The ambiguous ways people
use language. Edwin Mellen Press.
Wijewardena, N., Härtel, C. E. J., & Samaratunge, R. (2000). A laugh a day is sure to keep
the blues away: Managers' use of humor and the construction and destruction of
employees' resilience. In W. J. Zerbe, C. E. J. Härtel & N. M. Ashkanasy (Eds.),
Emotions and organizational dynamism (Vol. 6, pp. 259-278). Westport, CT:
Emerald Group.

Cited at Conferences

Anderson, K. A., & Brewer, A. (2008, November 21). Beyond 'Rock the Vote': A mixed
methods approach to understanding the young nonvoter. Paper presented at the
94th annual convention of the National Communication Association in San Diego, CA.
Bergqvist, T., & Strömberg, S. (2009). Information, communication and the use of humour:
Creating flexibility in changing organisations. Paper presented at the 15th World
Congress of the International Labour and Employment Relations Association,
Sydney, Australia.
Cihasky, C. A. (2006, April 21). Who's laughing now? Late night comedy's influence on
perceptions of Bush and Gore in 2000. Paper presented at the the 64th annual
meeting of the Midwest Political Science Association in Chicago, IL.
Compton, J., & Pfau, M. (2005). Effects of late night political comedy on candidate image
during campaigns. Paper presented at the 55th annual meeting of the International
Communication Association, New York.
Dyrud, M. A. (2006). Industrial ethics training: A look at ethics games. Paper presented
at the ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition: Excellence in Education, Chicago, IL.
Krasner, M. A. (2004, September 1). Quips, jokes, and power: Humor as weapon in
presidential campaigns. Paper presented at the 3rd annual pre-APSA Conference
on Political Communication.
Krasner, M. A. (2009, July 14). Humor in the 2008 American presidential campaign.
Paper presented at the 32nd annual scientific meeting of the International Society
of Political Psychology in Dublin, Ireland.
Raza, A. (2008). Humor and work? You got to be serious. Paper presented at the 16th
annual conference on Pacific Basin Finance, Economics, Accounting and
Management, Queen's University of Technology, Brisbane, Australia.
Ritchie, G. (2005). Computational mechanisms for pun generation. In Proceedings of the
10th European Natural Language Generation workshop (pp. 125-132).
Aberdeen, Scotland: SIGGEN.
Sampietro, M. (2007). Humor in project management. Paper presented at the 3rd International
Project Management Conference, Tehran, Iran.

Cited Elsewhere

Alexander, P. (2006). Electronic word-of-mouth communication: Factors that influence the
forwarding of e-mail messages (Unpublished doctoral dissertation). Touro University.
Arendt, L. A. (2006). Leaders' use of positive humor: Effects on followers' self-efficacy
and creative performance (Unpublished doctoral dissertation). University of
Wisconsin, Milwaukee.
Collins, D. (2009). Reducing ethical risks: An organization systems solution (Working
paper). Edgewood College. Madison, WI.
Dahn, A. (2010, September 3). Studies on humor and laughter: Comedy, the comic,
and the like [Weblog]. Retrieved from http://alvindahn.blogspot.com
Delhomme, P., Dobbeleer, W. D., Forward, S., Simões, A., Adamos, G., Areal, A.,
et al. (2009). Manual for designing, implementing, and evaluating road safety
communication campaigns: Part 1 Campaigns and awareness-raising strategies
in traffic safety (Vol. D3.2a): Institut Belge pour la Sécurité Routière (IBSR).
Gijsbers, W. (2010). Managing humor in organizations: Handling the double-edged
sword (Unpublished masters thesis). Maastricht University, Netherlands.
Huang, S.-H. (2009). Co-constructed humor: Creating sense in nonsense (Unpublished
masters thesis). Providence University, Taichung City, Taiwan.
In the trenches: As it was portrayed in The Office, humour is a poor fit for the white-collar
world. (2006). In the black, 76(7), 24-27.
Kreuger, H., & van Dijk, A. (2005). Rideo, ergo cogito [I laugh, therefore I think].
Philosophy. Urecht, Netherlands: Universiteit Utrecht.
Lake, E. (2008). Leading with humor: A quantitative, correlational study of humor styles
and organizational culture (Unpublished doctoral thesis). University of Phoenix,
Phoenix, AZ.
Lelchook, A. M. (2010). The use of humor by leaders in response to situational stressors
(Unpublished masters thesis). Wayne State, Dayton, OH.
Ling, P. T. B. (2007). A study of humour in the workplace and business from a
Singapore perspective (Unpublished masters thesis). University of Nottingham, UK.
Millear, P. M. R. (2010). Adapting to the work-life interface: the influence of individual
differences, work and family on well-being, mental health and work engagement
(unpublished doctoral dissertation). Queensland University of Technology.
Miznikova, J., & Schönfeldt, S. N. (2010). The serious business of humor: A qualitative
study of humor as a management tool. (Unpublished masters thesis). Umeå
Universitet, Sweden.
Oral, D. G. (2010). Egitimde mizahin rolü ve önemi [The role and importance of humor in
education] Akdeniz Üniversitesi.
Pruim, D. E. (2001). A reformed perspective on humor. In J. S. Benton (Ed.), The stromata
(Vol. 42-2, pp. 37-44). Grand Rapids, MI: Calvin Theological Seminary.
Qin, S. (2009). The uses, gratifications and political knowledge young adults obtain from
watching network newscasts and late night comedy shows (unpublished masters
thesis). Iowa State University, Ames, IA.
Rauterberg, M. (2004). Entertainment technology and human behaviour: Literature study.
Eindhoven, Netherlands: Technical University of Eindhoven.
Siebörger, F. (2006). Funktionelle Neuroanatomie des Textverstehens: Kohärenzbildung bei
Witzen und anderen ungewöhnlichen Texten (Vol. 83). Leipzig: Max Planck Institute
for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences.
Souza, C. M. d. (2011). Consumer response to the use of humor in services: The roles of
threat, credibility, and familiarity (unpublished doctoral dissertation). Getulio Vargas
Foundation, São Paulo, Brazil.
Strother, J. (2011). (Not) just for laughs: Humor in the legal workplace serves many purposes,
but be smart. Legal Management, 30(6), 29-33.
Taylor, J. M. (2008). Towards informal computer human communication: Detecting humor
in a restricted domain (Unpublished doctoral dissertation). University of Cincinnati.
Tower, M. A. (2009). Developing healthy and balanced minds: How creative, critical,
and moral thinking promote good cognition (Unpublished masters thesis).
University of Massachusetts, Boston.
Ulleberg, P., Vaa, T., Ausserer, K., Carstensen, G., Forward, S., Krol, B., et al. (2009).
Road user model: Campaigns and awareness raising strategies in traffic safety
(Vol. D1.4): Institut Belge pour la Sécurité Routière (IBSR).
Why all the office jokes shouldn't be on David Brent. (2007, April 25). London Daily Mail,
p. 24.

Acknowledged

Bishop, J. D. (Ed.). (2000). Ethics and capitalism. Toronto, Canada: University of Toronto
Press.
Fischer, E., Reuber, A. R., Hababou, M., Johnson, W., & Lee, S. (1997). The role of
socially constructed temporal perspectives in the emergence of rapid-growth
firms. Entrepreneurship: Theory and Practice, 22(2) 13-30.
Johnson, W. H. A. (2011). Managing university technology development using organizational
control theory. Research Policy, 40(6), 842-852. doi: 10.1016/j.respol.2011.04.001
Johnson, W. H. A. (2002). Assessing organizational knowledge creation theory in collaborative
R&D projects. International Journal of Innovation Management 6(6) 387-418.
Johnson, W. H. A. (1999). An integrative taxonomy of intellectual capital: measuring the stock
and flow of intellectual capital components in the firm. International Journal of
Technology Management 18(5/6/7/8) 562-575.
Kornreich, J. (2009). The relationships of humor to defensive maturity, aggression, and
interpersonal relatedness (Unpublished doctoral dissertation). Long Island
University: Brooklyn, NY.
North Alberta Institute of Technology. (2008). MLA examples (p. 5): Author.
Wankel, C. (forthcoming). Management through collaboration: Teaming in a networked
world. New York: Routledge.


© 2011, Jim Lyttle, Ph.D.