1Attardo, Salvatore. Humorous Texts: A Semantic and Pragmatic Analysis[M]. Berlin/New York: Mouton de Gruyter, 2001.
2Attardo, Salvatore, et al. Script oppositions and logical mechanisms: Modeling incongruities and their resolutions[J]. Humor: International Journal of Humor Research, 2002,(15-1): 3-46.
3Attardo, Salvatore. Introduction: the pragmatics of humor[J]. Journal of Pragmatics, 2003,(35).
4Coulson, S. The Menendez brothers virus: analogical mapping in blended spaces[A]. In Adele Goldberg (ed.) Conceptual Structure, Discourse and Language[C]. Stanford: CSLI Publications, 1996.
5Coulson, S. Semantic leaps: frame-shifting and conceptual blending in meaning construction[M]. Cambridge: CUP, 2000.
6Coulson, S. What's so funny: conceptual blending in humorous examples[A]. In V. Herman (ed.) The Poetics of Cognition: Studies of Cognitive Linguistics and Verbal Arts[C]. New York: CUP, 2001.
7Curco, C. Some oberservations on the pragmatics of humorous interpretations: A relevance-theoretic approach[J]. UCL Working Papers in Linguistics, 1995,(7).
8Curco, C. The implicit expression of attitudes, mutual manifestness, and verbal humor[J]. UCL Working Papers in Linguistics, 1996,(8).
9Fauconnier, G. & M. Turner. Conceptual integration networks[J]. Cognitive Science, 1998,(22-2):133-187.
10Fauconnier, G. & M. Turner. The Way We Think[M]. New York: Basic Books, 2002.