UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — Phonetic convergence, or phonetic imitation, is a form of speech production in which a talker’s speech becomes similar to the person they are talking to. In a recent article published in the journal Speech Communication, researchers studied whether and how people working together begin to sound more like each other as they work.
Authors Tifani Biro, postdoctoral fellow at the University of Pennsylvania; Navin Viswanathan, professor of communication sciences and disorders at Penn State; and Joseph C. Toscano, associate professor of psychological and brain sciences at Villanova University, found that phonetic convergence was more likely when people participated in interesting work than when they were doing something less engaging. Though the phenomenon of phonetic convergence is well documented, researchers are still studying how and why is occurs.
“One of the interesting questions in speech communication is how speakers are able to make distinctions for their listeners,” said Viswanathan.
Participants in this study were paired together and given a highly engaging or less engaging task to complete together. The study participants worked with each other to navigate a computer game. Without being able to see each other, one person was given a list of words which were vocalized to the other person in order to complete a series of puzzles throughout the game. The highly engaging task in the activity took place in the game Minecraft, where the participants had to use the words to maneuver a character through a graphical environment. The less engaging task in the activity presented the same words in blocks with no graphical environment.