Way of speaking key to success or failure
May 16th, 2011 - 1:00 am ICT by IANSWashington, May 15 (IANS) The way we speak - fast or slow, animated or dull - seems to sway our listeners and so determine our success or failure in life, say researchers.
A University of Michigan study has thrown up interesting insights about how speech
characteristics influence people’s decisions to participate in surveys.
“Interviewers who spoke moderately fast, at a rate of about 3.5 words per second, were much more successful at getting people to agree than either interviewers who talked very fast or very slowly,” said Jose Benki, investigator at the Michigan Institute for Social Research (ISR).
Using recordings of 1,380 introductory calls made by 100 male and female phone interviewers at the ISR, Benki and colleagues analysed the interviewers’ speech rates, fluency, and pitch, and correlated those variables with their success in convincing people to participate in the survey.
Since people who talk too fast are seen as out to pull the wool over listener’s eyes, and people who talk slow are seen as not too bright or overly pedantic, the finding about speech rates seems to make sense.
But another finding from the study, funded by the National Science Foundation, suggests otherwise.
“We assumed that interviewers who sounded animated and lively, with a lot of variation in the pitch of their voices, would be more successful,” said Benki, a speech scientist with a special interest in psycholinguistics, the psychology of language.
“But in fact we found only a marginal effect of variation in pitch by interviewers on success rates,” he said.
Pitch, the highness or lowness of a voice, is influenced largely by body size and corresponding size of the voice box, Benki says. Typically, males have low-pitched voices and females high-pitched voices.
“It could be that variation in pitch could be helpful for some interviewers but for others, too much pitch variation sounds artificial, like people are trying too hard. So it backfires and puts people off,” added Benki.
Researchers also found that interviewers who engaged in frequent short pauses were more successful than those who were perfectly fluent.
These findings were presented at the annual meeting of the American Association for Public Opinion Research Saturday.
- Users surprisingly candid in text messaging - May 17, 2012
- Teen girls love men with deep voices, while young girls feel intimated - Sep 15, 2009
- Dead tired? Your voice could be a clue - Dec 23, 2010
- 'Kaun si dor' only gem in 'Aarakshan' music (IANS Music Review) - Jul 17, 2011
- Putin booing stirs storm in Russian media - Nov 21, 2011
- 'Jannat 2' a quintessential album for Emraan (IANS Music Review) - Apr 03, 2012
- How songbirds' strategy could shed light on helping rehab patients - Feb 01, 2011
- Want to know if your mate will cheat? Listen to their voice - Mar 05, 2011
- Comparing Indian and classical singing could help find speech disorder cure - Oct 05, 2010
- Women find deep, low male voice appealing - Sep 13, 2011
- 'Mere Brother Ki Dulhan's music interplay of folk and fun (IANS Music Review) - Aug 12, 2011
- Your voice can tell if you are likely to stray - Mar 06, 2011
- Brain wiring lets us differentiate our speech from that of others' - Dec 10, 2010
- We are born with faculty to laugh but learn to cry during life - Nov 12, 2010
- Practicing before females improves males' performance - Feb 26, 2011
Tags: benki, fluency, high pitched voices, highness, interviewers, listener, listeners, lowness, marginal effect, michigan institute, michigan study, national science foundation, pitch variation, psychology of language, special interest, speech characteristics, speech rates, success rates, university of michigan, voice box