There is a serious article by Stefano Mammola et al. in the Royal
Society Proceedings B for March 2026 (Volume 293, Number 2067) titled Statistically
significant chuckles: who is using humor at scientific conferences? The abstract
says that:
“We’ve all been there: 11.47, swamped by a long stretch of
dense scientific talks at a conference. Six slides into a hyper-technical
presentation, the speaker suddenly cracks a joke. The room erupts. Shoulders
relax. Minds re-engage. Humour is a powerful but underused tool in scientific
communication, often sidelined by academic norms that view levity as
unprofessional. Social biases can further shape who feels safe joking without
risking credibility.
At 14 biology-related conferences, we collected data on humour
use across 531 talks. Jokes clustered at the beginnings and ends of talks, with
an extra bump in successful jokes midway through. Most jokes (66%) earned only
polite chuckles. Humour success was unrelated to the type of joke or form of
delivery; however, male speakers told about 0.35 more jokes per talk, and both
male and native speakers had a 10% higher probability of eliciting laughter.
This suggests how social dynamics influence who feels comfortable using humour
and whose jokes resonate with the audience. Until academia reckons with these
biases, humour will remain a privilege. Still, for those brave enough or
granted the social licence, a well-placed zinger can turn a forgettable talk
into one people actually remember—and perhaps even enjoy.”
There were only 870 unique jokes, with 223 speakers telling
none. 367 jokes were about situational hiccups, 161 were about subject matter,
only 52 were about popular culture unrelated to academia, and 30 were inside
jokes about the academic community or conference. 707 were delivered orally,
133 relied on visuals, and just 30 used physical comedy.
I found out about this article from another by Phie Jacobs
at Science on March 17, 2026 titled Scientific conferences can be a bore.
Can jokes liven them up? Yet another is by Nicola James at Nature on March 18,
2026 titled Knock knock, no one’s there. Study finds scientists’ jokes mostly
fall flat.
The cartoon audience was modified from a couple and another couple at OpenClipArt.