Humour styles (HSQ)

The four ways you use humour — to connect, to cope, to tease, or at your own expense — from the research-validated Humor Styles Questionnaire.

The Humor Styles Questionnaire (Martin, Puhlik-Doris, Larsen, Gray & Weir, 2003) is a validated, widely used measure of how people use humour in everyday life. It distinguishes four independent styles along two axes — whether the humour is benign or potentially harmful, and whether it is aimed at the self or at others: affiliative and self-enhancing (the benign styles) and aggressive and self-defeating (the potentially harmful ones). You are scored on all four at once rather than sorted into one type, and researchers tend to link the benign styles to greater wellbeing. This is a descriptive self-report of habits, not a diagnosis or a verdict on your character. (Humor Styles Questionnaire (HSQ; Martin, Puhlik-Doris, Larsen, Gray & Weir, 2003))

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