Periodic Rhythms in Conversational Speech

Spectral analysis of the on-off vocal activity patterns from six conversations indicates that spontaneous speech tends to alternate regularly between periods of high and low activity. These regular cycles are approximately 3 minutes and 6 minutes long. These interaction rhythms may be an emergent property of social systems, or they may be due to internal cognitive or physiological rhythms that affect readiness to initiate activity. The 3-and 6-minute cycles are too long to be accounted for in terms of the existing research on cognitive planning cycles of turn-taking. These cycles are an instance of a nonobvious temporal regularity in speech, which coexists with the turn-taking and grammatical regularities that are apparent to naive observers.

[1]  F. G. Eisler Speech-breathing activity and content in psychiatric interviews. , 1956, The British journal of medical psychology.

[2]  Brian Butterworth,et al.  Hesitation and semantic planning in speech , 1975 .

[3]  Cindy Gallois,et al.  Turn Taking: Social Personality and Conversational Style , 1975 .

[4]  F. Goldman-Eisler The determinants of the rate of speech output and their mutual relations. , 1956, Journal of psychosomatic research.

[5]  F. Goldman-Eisler Individual differences between interviewers and their effect on interviewees' conversational behaviour. , 1952, The Journal of mental science.

[6]  E. A. Thomas,et al.  Analyses of Parent-Infant Interaction. , 1976 .

[8]  Donald P. Hayes,et al.  Substantive conclusions are dependent upon techniques of measurement , 1970 .

[9]  J. Makhoul,et al.  Linear prediction: A tutorial review , 1975, Proceedings of the IEEE.

[10]  Arthur S. Iberall,et al.  The Organizing Principle of Complex Living Systems , 1969 .

[11]  H. Birch,et al.  The origin of personality. , 1970, Scientific American.

[12]  B Wranne,et al.  Cyclical variations in FRC and other respiratory variables in resting man. , 1973, Journal of applied physiology.

[13]  J. Mead,et al.  Control of ventilation during speech. , 1971, Journal of applied physiology.

[14]  J Jaffe,et al.  Random Generation of Apparent Speech Rhythms , 1972, Language and speech.

[15]  P F OSTWALD,et al.  ACOUSTIC METHODS IN PSYCHIATRY. , 1965, Scientific American.

[16]  A I Henderson Time Patterns in Spontaneous Speech—Cognitive Stride or Random Walk? A Reply to Jaffe, Et Al. (1972) , 1974, Language and speech.

[17]  F. Goldman-Eisler,et al.  Sequential Temporal Patterns and Cognitive Processes in Speech , 1967, Language and speech.

[18]  Albyn Knight Mark,et al.  On Culture and Biological Man , 1975, Current Anthropology.

[19]  R. Kimberly Rhythmic Patterns in Human Interaction , 1970, Nature.

[20]  E. Braehler,et al.  Artifacts in the Registration and Interpretation of Speech-Process Variables , 1975, Language and speech.

[21]  F. Goldman-Eisler,et al.  Speech-breathing activity--a measure of tension and affect during interviews. , 1955, British journal of psychology.

[22]  M. Takala Consistencies of psychomotor styles in interpersonal tasks , 1975 .

[23]  D. P. Hayes,et al.  Interpersonal judgments based on talkativeness: I. Fact or artifact? , 1972 .

[24]  D. Bowden,et al.  Ultradian rhythms of solitary and social behavior in rhesus monkeys , 1976, Physiology & Behavior.