Computational humor and Christie Davies’ basis for joke comparison

While historically computational humor paid very little attention to sociology and mostly took into account subparts of linguistics and some psychology, Christie Davies wrote a number of papers that should affect the study of computational humor directly. This paper will look at one paper to illustr...

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Main Author: Julia Rayz
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Cracow Tertium Society for the Promotion of Language Studies 2017-12-01
Series:The European Journal of Humour Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.europeanjournalofhumour.org/index.php/ejhr/article/view/252
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author Julia Rayz
author_facet Julia Rayz
author_sort Julia Rayz
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description While historically computational humor paid very little attention to sociology and mostly took into account subparts of linguistics and some psychology, Christie Davies wrote a number of papers that should affect the study of computational humor directly. This paper will look at one paper to illustrate this point, namely Christie’s chapter in the Primer of Humor Research.  With the advancements in computational processing and big data analysis/analytics, it is becoming possible to look at a large collection of humorous texts that are available on the web. In particular, older texts, including joke materials, that are being scanned from previously published printed versions. Most of the approaches within computational humor concentrated on comparison of present/existing jokes, without taking into account classes of jokes that are absent in a given setting. While the absence of a class is unlikely to affect classification – something that researchers in computational humor seem to be interested in – it does come into light when features of various classes are compared and conclusions are being made. This paper will describe existing approaches and how they could be enhanced, thanks to Davies’s contributions and the advancements in data processing.
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spelling doaj.art-0412992f6e7e4ce9b4005b04409fc4412022-12-21T20:33:51ZengCracow Tertium Society for the Promotion of Language StudiesThe European Journal of Humour Research2307-700X2017-12-015416917810.7592/EJHR2017.5.4.rayz186Computational humor and Christie Davies’ basis for joke comparisonJulia Rayz0Purdue UniversityWhile historically computational humor paid very little attention to sociology and mostly took into account subparts of linguistics and some psychology, Christie Davies wrote a number of papers that should affect the study of computational humor directly. This paper will look at one paper to illustrate this point, namely Christie’s chapter in the Primer of Humor Research.  With the advancements in computational processing and big data analysis/analytics, it is becoming possible to look at a large collection of humorous texts that are available on the web. In particular, older texts, including joke materials, that are being scanned from previously published printed versions. Most of the approaches within computational humor concentrated on comparison of present/existing jokes, without taking into account classes of jokes that are absent in a given setting. While the absence of a class is unlikely to affect classification – something that researchers in computational humor seem to be interested in – it does come into light when features of various classes are compared and conclusions are being made. This paper will describe existing approaches and how they could be enhanced, thanks to Davies’s contributions and the advancements in data processing.https://www.europeanjournalofhumour.org/index.php/ejhr/article/view/252computational humorjoke comparison
spellingShingle Julia Rayz
Computational humor and Christie Davies’ basis for joke comparison
The European Journal of Humour Research
computational humor
joke comparison
title Computational humor and Christie Davies’ basis for joke comparison
title_full Computational humor and Christie Davies’ basis for joke comparison
title_fullStr Computational humor and Christie Davies’ basis for joke comparison
title_full_unstemmed Computational humor and Christie Davies’ basis for joke comparison
title_short Computational humor and Christie Davies’ basis for joke comparison
title_sort computational humor and christie davies basis for joke comparison
topic computational humor
joke comparison
url https://www.europeanjournalofhumour.org/index.php/ejhr/article/view/252
work_keys_str_mv AT juliarayz computationalhumorandchristiedaviesbasisforjokecomparison