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Humans subconsciously 'mimic accents'


Still Waters

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It is interesting how people mimic others. I think people mimic others much more than they realise and in more ways than just with accents.

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I change my voice/accent all the time depending on who I am speaking too.

I went to a rough school and have a fairly clipped "posh" voice, I stuck out like sore thumb, I learnt quickly to change my voice to suit those I was around so as not to stick out.

So if i am speaking to somone with an East-end accent I will alter my voice to sound more "East-end", if meeting a new person, say a future employer or a docter/professional I will tone up my voice to sound posher, more of an "Oxoford" type voice.

Around friends and family I use my normal voice.

Its kind of sad i guess.... but I got so used to altering my voice in such a manner that now it is pure reflex, i dont even notice I am doing it lol.

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I've lived in Kentucky for all thirty years of my life and have always been told by people in my area that I talk like a city boy, granted I am from Louisville, but I have far less accent than even the people in my city. On the other hand, it's about 50/50 when I talk to people from other places on whether or not they think I have an accent. And I pretty much never seem to adapt to accents around me. Be that from where I live or elsewhere. I do think I'm starting to gradually pick it up more the older I get though.

And on the opposite end. I have a friend from Alberta Canada who I talk to on the phone a lot. And according to her I have a slight "southern drawl" that she's starting to pick up.

I have noticed I pick up slang words from other people very easily though. Especially from her and the guy I sit next to at work. I've teased both of them for changing my vocabulary.

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I think in a British accent after watching Top Gear. :lol:

Top-Gear-Returns.jpg

Hahaha. I totally do that after watching something with people who have a different accent. It's hard not to.

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It's possible to adapt another accent or dialect in a different geographic environ, if you lived there long enough :blink: ...and it's a sign of cultural immersion into the new culture you're in. I'm a native Southern Californian my whole life, but I been told I sound Midwestern or from the Northeast U.S. and some words I seemingly picked up from Oklahoman and Southeastern relatives. "Ah ain't makin'et yup, y'all git mah drift". :innocent:

Edited by Desert Man
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  • 4 months later...

So to me this means, as countries become more and more multi-cultural, people will start devaloping more of a 'world accent' as time goes by. Which is a good thing to bring people together.

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This is true, i have documented some instances of this :D

I tested my friends, teachers, and family members.

What i did was, without any warning, i would start to speak in a British accent. They would ALL soon do the same. They would laugh about it.. But it happened (:

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  • 6 years later...

I've always loved how the different accents and colloquialisms of English around the world add color and variety to the language. An accent is to be cherished not disparaged. To imitate one, whether accidentally or deliberately is often motivated by the conscious or unconscious desire to "fit in", be on the same wavelength and communicate more effectively. In America, the upwardly mobile often adopt the standard American English accent we hear on television from the various media outlets. I suppose that delightful non rhotic lisp of the British upper crust serves the same purpose, there.

Edited by Hammerclaw
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  • 1 month later...
On 8/7/2010 at 5:45 PM, Still Waters said:
www.telegraph.co.uk said:
People who interact with a person with a different accent subconsciously mimic their twang because they want to “empathise” with their conversation partner, psychologists claim.

American researchers have found human brains imitate the speech patterns of other people, even complete strangers, without meaning to.

They say a humans want to “bond” with others, even when a voice cannot be heard or, somewhat embarrassingly, even if another person is a foreigner.

Scientists from the University of California, Riverside, found the subconscious copying of an accent comes from an inbuilt urge of the brain to “empathise and affiliate”.

arrow3.gifRead more...

I think this falls into two aspects: 1) It's a subconscious effort in trying to mirror the person you're talking to build rapport and empathy and 2) an a**hole who barely spent a week abroad, comes back and tries to show off to his peers by speaking in a foreign accent from the country they were recently at.

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