There was nothing very interesting in Katherine Rankin’s study of sarcasm — at least, nothing worth your important time. All she did was use an M.R.I. to find the place in the brain where the ability to detect sarcasm resides. But then, you probably already knew it was in the right parahippocampal gyrus.

What you may not have realized is that perceiving sarcasm, the smirking put-down that buries its barb by stating the opposite, requires a nifty mental trick that lies at the heart of social relations: figuring out what others are thinking. Those who lose the ability, whether through a head injury or the frontotemporal dementias afflicting the patients in Rankin’s study, just do not get it when someone says during a hurricane, “Nice weather we’re having…”

So is it possible that Jon Stewart, who wields sarcasm like a machete on “The Daily Show,” has an unusually large right parahippocampal gyrus?

“His is probably just normal,” Rankin said. “The right parahippocampal gyrus is involved in detecting sarcasm, not being sarcastic.”

But, she quickly added, “I bet Jon Stewart has a huge right frontal lobe; that’s where the sense of humor is detected on M.R.I.”

A spokesman for Stewart said he would have no comment — not that a big-shot television star like Jon Stewart would care about the size of his neuroanatomy.

Good thing our readers always click through to each and every article to read and understand the details of what we post instead of blurting out the first nutball hack remark that comes to mind.




  1. James Hill says:

    This is a very insightful thread.

  2. #27 – bobbo,

    Its taking me a long time to be a sweet loving human being as I demonstrate here nightly.

    Excellent job giving up sarcasm!

  3. Shin says:

    bobbo,

    You’re right, I’ve done all the same things, except..I don’t seem able to learn. I’m passive/aggressive in both ways you mention, and I know it, and I still can’t stop. Oh well, it’s probably kept me out of as many bad relationships as it’s cost me possible good ones. That’s what I tell myself anyway.

    And yes..excellent job giving up sarcasm..^_^

  4. bobbo says:

    #33–Shin==I didn’t learn it real fast. Actually it wasn’t until I heard Dr Phil ask his subjects “How is that working out for you?” and “Do you want to be right, or do you want to work the relationship out?” that I had an expressible thought in my head as to what had been going on.

    Then a year later I read somewhere that empathy increased with intelligence. So—if I’m so smart, how come I hurt other people’s feelings when I don’t really want to?

    Dealing with reality is shit.

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