HUMOR STYLES, CREATIVE PERSONALITY TRAITS, AND CREATIVE THINKING IN A HONG KONG SAMPLE.

Xiao Dong Yue, Anna Na Hui
Author Information
  1. Xiao Dong Yue: 1 Department of Applied Social Sciences, City University of Hong Kong.
  2. Anna Na Hui: 1 Department of Applied Social Sciences, City University of Hong Kong.

Abstract

Humor is found to be an essential element of creative thinking in Western culture. In Eastern culture, however, the relationship between creativity and humor is ambivalent. This study examined the relationship among humor styles, creative personality traits, and creative thinking abilities. A sample of 118 Chinese undergraduates in Hong Kong was recruited to complete the Humor Styles Questionnaire, the three Creative Personality subscales of the Chinese Personality Assessment Inventory-2 (CPAI-2), and the Verbal Test of the Wallach-Kogan Creativity Tests. Results show that humor styles are uncorrelated with creative thinking abilities of flexibility, fluency, and originality, but affiliative humor and aggressive humor are correlated with creative personality traits of novelty and diversity. A hierarchical multiple regression shows that both humor styles and creative personality traits of novelty and diversity account for non-significant variance on creative thinking abilities. These findings largely support a hypothesized non-association between humor styles and creative measures. They also pose a sharp contrast to findings obtained in the West, in which humor styles are typically correlated with both creative thinking abilities and creative personality traits.

MeSH Term

Adolescent
Adult
Creativity
Female
Hong Kong
Humans
Male
Middle Aged
Personality
Personality Inventory
Students
Surveys and Questionnaires
Thinking
Wit and Humor as Topic
Young Adult

Word Cloud

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