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Main Authors: Ma, Yuxi, Peng, Yongqian, Lyu, Junchen, Zhang, Chi, Zhu, Yixin
Format: Preprint
Published: 2026
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2605.00143
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author Ma, Yuxi
Peng, Yongqian
Lyu, Junchen
Zhang, Chi
Zhu, Yixin
author_facet Ma, Yuxi
Peng, Yongqian
Lyu, Junchen
Zhang, Chi
Zhu, Yixin
contents Humor is a fundamental cognitive phenomenon in which humans derive pleasure from the expectation violations and their resolution, exemplifying the brain's dynamic capacity for predictive processing. Classical humor theories emphasize semantic incongruity as the primary driver of amusement, yet overlook temporal dynamics despite comedians' intuition that "timing is everything." The extent to which temporal structure contributes to humor appreciation and how it interacts with semantic content remains poorly understood. Here, we propose the Dual Prediction Violation (DPV) framework to capture the interplay between content and timing. By analyzing 828 professional Chinese stand-up performances, we show that temporal features substantially outweigh semantic incongruity in predicting audience appreciation. Specifically, we find that peak semantic violations matter more than average incongruity levels, and pauses systematically lengthen before high-surprise punchlines--a strategic coupling that distinguishes successful from unsuccessful performances. These findings reframe humor as temporally scaffolded, where timing and semantic content operate in strategic coordination rather than independently. Our DPV framework bridges humor theory with predictive processing, demonstrating that temporal structure plays a central role in naturalistic humor appreciation with implications for understanding multi-scale prediction integration in linguistic processing.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2605_00143
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Timing is Everything: Temporal Scaffolding of Semantic Surprise in Humor
Ma, Yuxi
Peng, Yongqian
Lyu, Junchen
Zhang, Chi
Zhu, Yixin
Computation and Language
Humor is a fundamental cognitive phenomenon in which humans derive pleasure from the expectation violations and their resolution, exemplifying the brain's dynamic capacity for predictive processing. Classical humor theories emphasize semantic incongruity as the primary driver of amusement, yet overlook temporal dynamics despite comedians' intuition that "timing is everything." The extent to which temporal structure contributes to humor appreciation and how it interacts with semantic content remains poorly understood. Here, we propose the Dual Prediction Violation (DPV) framework to capture the interplay between content and timing. By analyzing 828 professional Chinese stand-up performances, we show that temporal features substantially outweigh semantic incongruity in predicting audience appreciation. Specifically, we find that peak semantic violations matter more than average incongruity levels, and pauses systematically lengthen before high-surprise punchlines--a strategic coupling that distinguishes successful from unsuccessful performances. These findings reframe humor as temporally scaffolded, where timing and semantic content operate in strategic coordination rather than independently. Our DPV framework bridges humor theory with predictive processing, demonstrating that temporal structure plays a central role in naturalistic humor appreciation with implications for understanding multi-scale prediction integration in linguistic processing.
title Timing is Everything: Temporal Scaffolding of Semantic Surprise in Humor
topic Computation and Language
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2605.00143