What’s in a laugh? A baby laughs before it understands language. A dog repeats behaviors that make humans laugh, even when those behaviors serve no obvious purpose within its own ecology. Across species, across contexts, and across levels of cognition, the same signal appears—robust, flexible, and often dismissed as trivial. This paper argues that it is anything but. Drawing on a unified framework of persistence, noise, and behavioral regulation, laughter is reframed as a cross-species control signal that enables living systems to engage with variability without losing coherence. Rather than treating laughter as a byproduct of humor or emotion, this work positions it as part of the machinery by which systems survive under continuous perturbation. Living systems do not exist in stable environments. They persist under noise. This creates a fundamental constraint: variability must be engaged for adaptation to occur, but unbounded variability leads to instability. As a result, behavior is not freely expressed, but gated—regulated through fast, pre-cognitive processes that determine when and how systems can safely explore uncertainty. Within this context, laughter emerges as a signal that modifies the conditions of interaction. It reduces ambiguity, biases interpretation toward safety, and allows systems to expand their behavioral range without triggering collapse. It is produced without symbolic understanding, actively sought out across species, and appears in both play and stress—indicating a shared regulatory function rather than a domain-specific meaning. By integrating insights from neuroscience, ethology, and information-theoretic models of persistence, this paper proposes that laughter operates within a shared regulatory space, shifting interacting systems toward states that permit controlled variability. In doing so, it enables coordination under uncertainty and contributes directly to the persistence of structured behavior. This reframing positions laughter not as an incidental feature of cognition, but as a fundamental component of how living systems regulate their relationship to noise. The next time you hear a baby laugh—or watch an animal do something absurd just to get a reaction—consider that you may be witnessing one of the simplest mechanisms by which life learns to survive uncertainty.
T HUNT (Sat,) studied this question.