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View Poll Results: Do you subvocalize? | |||
Yes, (almost) always. No matter what I read, my internal lector speaks to me. |
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44 | 51.76% |
Yes, but only when I read stories. |
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12 | 14.12% |
Only when I've got time to spend. It's faster to just "know" the words. |
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7 | 8.24% |
No, I just don't see the point in doing so. / Never heard of this before. |
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18 | 21.18% |
Voices in your head? You guys are weird... |
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4 | 4.71% |
Voters: 85. You may not vote on this poll |
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#1 |
Evangelist
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When reading, do you subvocalize?
There is no further point to to this poll than satisfy my curiosity - I always assumed that almost everyone would subvocalize during reading, as it's so natural to me that I would have to concentrate on not doing it.
Perhaps I should attempt to add an explanation for those who never heard that word before. It seems there is no clear definition, at least what I consider subvocalization isn't explicitely mentioned on the wikipedia page - unless I actually move throat muscles without realizing it? Anyway, subvocalizing means that you create a "voice" inside your head which speaks the words you read - changing pitch and inflection and such. Which, to me, makes text infinitely more enjoyable, especially stories of course. (And also means I'm very vulnerable to typos that change the sound of a word.) The opposite is to just "know" the meaning. Perhaps a good reference can be the study of a foreign language - at first you likely had to translate each word and sentence before you understood it - after a while you merely hear the word and instantly know the meaning even though if asked you might not be able to translate it. Personally, I am able to read without subvocalizing - I often do when I skim a page - but I think it helps remembering what I read. [edit]Just to clarify - the last poll option, while certainly an attempt at humor, is actually meant to be a serious option. To someone who NEVER even heard of this and is used to just "know" the words, this certainly must seem very weird. When I asked a colleague about it, he certainly thought it was weird. Last edited by Cyberman tM; 04-06-2011 at 05:52 AM. |
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#2 |
Canucklehead in Malaysia
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You mean some people don't have a narrator in their head reading for them? Seems kind of a pain to actually have to read everything myself.
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#3 |
Grand Sorcerer
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#4 |
Hi There!
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Good poll, lots to discuss. My inner reader has accents also.
Last edited by DixieGal; 04-06-2011 at 07:25 AM. Reason: Typo |
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#5 |
Canucklehead in Malaysia
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I have more than one, the old British butler for those stodgy old books. The fast happy girl for those quick reads and of course the Xavier Hollinder voice for, well umm you know
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#6 |
Hi There!
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I wish whoever voted "never heard of it" would describe what reading is like for him or her.
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#7 | |
Evangelist
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Quote:
(I.e. hysterical voice on the fringe of collapsing. Usually these request are as important as they are well-written. Usually it's the equivalent of a stubbed toe...) |
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#8 |
Bah! Humbug!
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When I read a novel after seeing a film made from it, I usually "hear" the dialogue spoken in the actors' voices, or "hear" the descriptive/narrative text spoken as a voice-over. But only if I liked the film version (considered it true to the text).
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#9 |
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It may be possible that we form some kind of schematic auditory representation of the narrative voice - and sometimes the voices of characters depending on the representational techniques of the author - without sub-vocalizing. I wrote my master's thesis in part on this - what's really interesting is the step from representing the narrative to representing what the narrative narrates. If a narrative says, for example, when the main character in a novel narrates, "I had a cardboard suitcase that was falling apart.", do we represent the sounds of the words or do we represent the state of affairs represented by the words. If auditory representation is essential what does that imply about people who are deaf reading?
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#10 |
Spork Connoisseur
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Almost all of the books I read have some sort of special (helmet and short-bus special) narrator. Sometimes, it'll be me in my big-boy-reader voice. Other times it's Morgan Freeman. When reading some kind of science-y stuff, I usually get Hubert Farnsworth's voice thrown in somehow.
It makes reading more enjoyable for me, being able to differentiate between the characters and paint a vivid picture in my head of the events in the book. |
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#11 |
Retired
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I would say not really a narrator because the different characters have different voices, also what Poohbear_nc says. I really don't get the speed reading thing that your supposed to just know the words, I tried it and yes you get through the book faster but it's not as enjoyable. I would say not really a narration but a full crew, I usually go into "book land"
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#12 |
The Grand Mouse 高貴的老鼠
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My internal voice is pretty much the same all the time when reading, and isn't very voice-like. Words, yes, but without a great deal of vocal character.
Occasionally, if it's a book I associate with a particular performance, I might hear that actor's voice when reading, but not always even then. One thing I think is fascinating is that not reading aloud was once quite unusual. The classic text that shows that silent reading used to be unusual is in Book 6, Chapter 3 of the Confessions of St Augustine, where he talks about St Ambrose: "Now, as he read, his eyes glanced over the pages and his heart searched out the sense, but his voice and tongue were silent." There can be no reason for St Augustine to include this sentence unless silent reading was unusual. |
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#13 |
Home for the moment
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I always have a female voice in my head when I read or write. I think it's my own, but I am not sure as my brain distorts it.
I read English, German, French, Spanish, Dutch and a little Italian, but I have never--ever an accent in my head. ![]() So actually I could learn from my own ' innervoice'? ![]() |
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#14 | |
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Quote:
As they were leaving Emily said "Have you fed the cat?" , formally the narrator is telling you what Emily said and so, although the words are Emiliy's the voice is the narrator's. |
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#15 |
The Introvert
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