Here’s why we ape others’ talking style, speed and even accents
August 6th, 2010 - 1:20 pm ICT by ANIWashington, Aug 6 (ANI): Ever noticed how your friend suddenly starts copying your style of talking? It’s unintentional and is bound to happen with those we talk frequently to - says a new study.
New research by the University of California, Riverside shows that unintentional speech imitation can even make us sound like people whose voices we never hear.
UCR psychology professor Lawrence D. Rosenblum and graduate students Rachel M. Miller and Kauyumari Sanchez found that when people lipread from a talker and say aloud what they’ve lip-read, their speech sounds like that of the talker.
That finding is evidence that unintentional speech imitation extends to lip-reading, even for normal hearing individuals with no formal lip-reading experience.
“Whether we are hearing or lip-reading speech articulations, a talker’s speaking style has subtle influences on our own manner of speaking,” says Rosenblum.
“Specifically, it adds to evidence that the speech brain is sensitive to - and primed by - speech articulation, whether heard or seen,” he added.
He said that a familiar talker’s speaking style helps us recognize words.
The find is published in the August issue of the journal Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics. (ANI)
- Humans subconsciously mimic other accents - Aug 08, 2010
- Speech perception involves multiple senses, not just hearing - Feb 12, 2009
- Computers now better at lip-reading than humans - Sep 10, 2009
- Device hushes talkative bores into silence - Mar 04, 2012
- Lip readers spot what William told Kate - Apr 29, 2011
- Voice analysis could enable early detection of Parkinson's disease - Apr 20, 2010
- Lip-reading cellphone allows for soundless communication - Mar 05, 2010
- What we see increases our understanding of what we hear by six-fold - Mar 04, 2009
- It's easier to understand others if you imitate their accents - Dec 07, 2010
- Act of focusing shuts out noisy world - May 29, 2011
- A software that teaches you how to read - Jul 25, 2011
- Ed Miliband likened to lizard for bizarre way he licks his lips - Feb 04, 2011
- How noise affects nervous system's ability to transcribe sounds key to reading skills - Jul 14, 2009
- No link between dyslexia and lack of musical ability - Apr 09, 2010
- Bedtime stories 'improve children's vocabulary, spelling abilities' - Nov 06, 2010
Tags: amp, articulations, brain, graduate students, perception, professor lawrence, psychology professor, rachel m miller, reading experience, reading speech, rosenblum, speech articulation, subtle influences, university of california, university of california riverside, voices