New study finds that frequent humor from managers can lead to emotional exhaustion and decreased job satisfaction among employees, especially in workplaces where hierarchical relationships are more pronounced.

Related Stories

Cardiac arrest deaths among marathoners have decreased, study finds

Veteran lawmakers are more effective and bipartisan, study finds

Lonely individuals are more likely to be sick, study finds

Study suggests that adolescents who become more grateful over time are less likely to experience depression—especially when their gratitude boosts their self-esteem

Shopify CEO says before hiring anyone new, employees must prove AI can't do the job better

Democrats are more likely to trust their personal doctors and follow their doctors’ advice than Republicans, new research finds

Microsoft mulls more job cuts, this time focused on managers and non-coders, not just low performers, sources say

A study finds that opposition to critical race theory often stems from a lack of racial knowledge

New research shows your AI chatbot might be lying to you - convincingly | A study by Anthropic finds that chain-of-thought AI can be deceptive

Investing in COVID-19 vaccination more than paid off for U.S., study finds

Where can I teach people how to code?

Fake job seekers are flooding US companies that are hiring for remote positions

New study finds that over 95% of sponsored influencer posts on Twitter (now X) were not disclosed

where are the proofs!

Research found people who hold strong moral convictions about political issues make decisions more quickly—but that these choices are shaped by both emotional brain responses and metacognitive ability

Study finds strongest evidence yet that shingles vaccine helps cut dementia risk

Global study that asked 66,000+ participants to distinguish between real and fake news headlines identifies groups that are most susceptible to misinformation.

In defense of ruthless managers

Symbolic Curvature Fields: Where Programs Are Geometry and Halting Is Death

Where does air pollution come from?

Access to abortion services in Ontario substantially increased in five years after mifepristone made available, study finds

In a new extensive systematic review of 182 meta-analyses from 2000 to 2023, researchers identified 17 modifiable risk factors that are shared by stroke, dementia, and late-life depression

A study from researchers at CU Anschutz reveals that nearly one in five U.S

From where should i start AI & ML?

Knowing where your engineer salary comes from

A study shows that individuals who have lied once are likely to lie again in similar situations, whereas honest and humble people lie less often

Remote Work's Long-Term Effects: Why Dell and Amazon Are Bringing Employees Back

A new way to make graphs more accessible to blind and low-vision readers

A new study finds that 70% of countries face lower overall energy trade risks under net-zero scenarios – but 82% could see increased risks in electricity or transport due to critical material imports.

Tech companies are telling immigrant employees on visas not to leave the U.S.