Please follow the attached literature grid and provide an introduction for the five (5) articles listed below.
1. Bänninger-Huber, E., & Salvenauer, S. (2023). Different types of laughter and their function foremotion regulation in dyadic interactions. Current Psychology: A Journal for DiversePerspectives on Diverse Psychological Issues, 42(28), 24249–24259.https://doi-org.proxy-ub.researchport.umd.edu/10.1007/s12144-022-03485-1
2. Cai, C. Q., Lavan, N., Chen, S. H. Y., Wang, C. Z. X., Ozturk, O. C., Chiu, R. M. Y., Gilbert, S. J.,White, S. J., & Scott, S. K. (2024). Mapping the differential impact of spontaneous andconversational laughter on brain and mind: An fMRI study in autism. CerebralCortex, 34(5).
https://doi-org.proxy-ub.researchport.umd.edu/10.1093/cercor/bhae199
3. Plate, R. C., Zhao, S., Katz, C., Graber, E., Daley, G., Corbett, N., All, K., Neumann, C. S., & Waller,R. (2022). Are you laughing with me or at me? Psychopathic traits and the ability todistinguish between affiliation and dominance laughter cues. Journal of Personality, 90(4),631–644.
https://doi-org.proxy-ub.researchport.umd.edu/10.1111/jopy.12687
4. Scott, S. K., Cai, C. Q., & Billing, A. (2022). Robert Provine: the critical human importance oflaughter, connections and contagion. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal SocietyB, 377(1863), 20210178.
https://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2021.0178
5. Weber, M., & Quiring, O. (2019). Is it really that funny? Laughter, emotional contagion, andheuristic processing during shared media use. Media Psychology, 22(2), 173–195.