The twenty-first century is likely to witness Asia’s two largest civilizations, China and India, join the United States in an elite club of global superpowers. ... Google Books
Originally published: January 1, 2013
Cold Peace: China–India Rivalry in the Twenty-First Century
Cold peace - Wikipedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cold_peace
書名Cold Peace: China–India Rivalry in the Twenty-First Century 的 Cold Peace是pun
Scientific American magazine
The brain's left and right hemispheres play different roles in processing puns, ultimately requiring communication between them for the joke to land.
Your Pun-Divided Attention: How the Brain Processes Wordplay
To understand puns, the left and right brain hemispheres have to work…
SCIENTIFICAMERICAN.COM|由 RONI JACOBSON 上傳
Your Pun-Divided Attention: How the Brain Processes Wordplay
To understand puns, the left and right brain hemispheres have to work together
By Roni Jacobson | Scientific American December 2016 Issue
Credit: Thomas Fuchs
Puns are divisive in comedy. Critics groan that they are the “lowest form of wit,” a quote attributed to various writers. Others—including Shakespeare—pun with abandon. The brain itself seems divided over puns, according to a recent study published in Laterality: Asymmetries of Body, Brain and Cognition. The results suggest the left and right hemispheres play different roles in processing puns, ultimately requiring communication between them for the joke to land.
To observe how the brain handles this type of humor, researchers at the University of Windsor in Ontario presented study participants with a word relating to a pun in either the left or right visual field (which corresponds to the right or left brain hemisphere, respectively). They then analyzed a subject's reaction time in each situation to determine which hemisphere was dominant. “The left hemisphere is the linguistic hemisphere, so it's the one that processes most of the language aspects of the pun, with the right hemisphere kicking in a bit later” to reveal the word's dual meanings, explains Lori Buchanan, a psychology professor and co-author of the study.
This interaction enables us to “get” the joke because puns, as a form of word play, complete humor's basic formula: expectation plus incongruity equals laughter. In puns—where words have multiple, ambiguous meanings—the sentence context primes us to interpret a word in a specific way, an operation that occurs in the left hemisphere. Humor emerges when the right hemisphere subsequently clues us in to the word's other, unanticipated meaning, triggering what Buchanan calls a “surprise reinterpretation.”
The study jibes with previous observations that brain injuries to the right hemisphere can be associated with humor deficits in some people, who understand a joke's meaning but “don't think things are funny anymore,” Buchanan says. She hopes this and future studies may lead to rehabilitative training to help such individuals get back their sense of humor. Bottom line: puns get on everyone's nerves.
This article was originally published with the title "Your Pun-Divided Attention"
NOUN
informal- [mass noun] Cannabis:‘we smoked pot at football games’
Origin
1930s: probably from Mexican Spanish potiguaya cannabis leaves.
- pot (or crock) of gold
- A large but distant or imaginary reward:‘the prospect of a pot of gold when the statue was sold’
weed
1.2informal [mass noun] Cannabis.
spread like wildfire
PHRASE
- Spread with great speed:‘the news had spread like wildfire’
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