Study suggests "the bias is real but socially constructed, rather than grounded in how women actually sound."
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I did notice uptalk in Australia, but I most clearly remember unintentionally cracking up an entire doctor's waiting room by asking how people pronounced "Bourke Street" and then imitating the gentleman who demonstrated it by saying "Beeehhhhhhhhk" with a whole side of fries.Protip: don’t visit Australia.
John Nix said:Fry may be one way to communicate such effort, or honest, raw emotions.
especially MelbourneProtip: don’t visit Australia.
It's when people try to speak with a deeper voice than they actually have. It comes out very croaky. Adding vibrato where it doesn't belong because you can't hold a note is a different thing.So it's a warbling, scratchy voice?
I (50m) use uptalk when I'm making a statement that I'm unsure about?It doesn't bother me. Uptalk does though. It doesn't bother me so much if I know the person and am familiar with them and their speech patterns. But when I am talking to someone I don't know that well, or at all, which is most of my working day, I just need to know when something that sounds like a question is actually a question.
Like Hugh Laurie in a bit of fry and Laurie vs Dr. House.It's when people try to speak with a deeper voice than they actually have. It comes out very croaky. Adding vibrato where it doesn't belong because you can't hold a note is a different thing.
I like watching Law and Order from time to time, but not the new ones. Anyway, the ADA in the newer series is played by Hugh Dancy, who is English. When he affects an American accent there's a lot of fry in it to the point that his voice keeps breaking and he sounds like he's constantly on the verge of breaking into tears.
That's what it's for.I (50m) use uptalk when I'm making a statement that I'm unsure about?
The study is nonsense until it's published. At the very least, I'd need MUCH more description of the methodology for choosing this ridiculously small sample.Brown collected speech examples of 49 Canadians from online sources
Almost all speech patterns are that.I never knew it had a name, but I've experienced this before in listening to teenage girls speak. It's like an end of the sentence lowering of their voice. I'm curious why they do it or if they even know they're doing it? Is it a learned behavior that they pick up from each other?
But men naturally have lower voices than women, on average, because of having longer vocal cords. So if you associate it with pitch, you're going to find lower pitches in men than women even if where they speak within their registers is the same.“Creaky voice is more associated with low-frequency noise, whereas something like breathiness is related to high-frequency noise,” said Brown.
The results: Not only did men use vocal fry more than women, but the use of creaky voice increased with the speaker’s age.
Offtopic: I love that you can tell an Aussie from a Kiwi with the simple phrase "fish and chips". An Aussie sounds like "feesh and cheeps" while a Kiwi says "fush and chups".Protip: don’t visit Australia.
But he’s an asshole who’s often saying what we’re all thinking.we should all keep in mind that Loudermilk is an asshole.
Nor is vocal fry exclusively used by female singers: Justin Bieber, Tim Storms (who holds the world record for lowest note produced by a human), and gospel bassists like Mike Holcomb have also used it.
The studies that found women used vocal fry more often were from the US. This one finding that men use it more often is from Canada. Unless I missed something, it seems like based on what we have available to us it's possible that which gender uses vocal fry more depends on which country you're talking about and doesn't support a universal claim about women vs men on this.
So you're saying it was misogyny all along? [my shocked face]
I once worked with someone who habitually ended sentences with "d'you know what I mean?".It doesn't bother me. Uptalk does though. It doesn't bother me so much if I know the person and am familiar with them and their speech patterns. But when I am talking to someone I don't know that well, or at all, which is most of my working day, I just need to know when something that sounds like a question is actually a question
I do suspect it's more the pitch than the gender that makes vocal fry more noticable. I'd imagine people wouldn't notice as much vocal fry from deep talking ladies like Lucille Ball or Bea Arthur as much as if it came from Minnie Mouse.
PItch bias is an interesting thought, I hate incessant dog barking, but I'd take a boofer over the shrill barks of the average small dog or howl from a husky.
It’s never sexy. In all cases, it’s grating beyond all description.when a sexy person does a thing it's sexy, when a subjectively less sexy person does a thing it's less sexy, film at eleven
I think I was most aware of it when listening to Sarah Vowell on This American Life:There's a graph in the piece w/ some links (I think the first one specifically mentions young women, I only glanced at it though).
Anecdotally, it had a whole moment in The Discourse (TM, US Edition) like 10-20??? years ago- Often speculated as being due to the influence of reality TV stars like Paris Hilton and Kim Kardashian, as a sort of newfangled "valley girl" accent for the social media age. This wasn't just vocal fry in general but, like, a specific pattern of deploying fry to varying degrees of exaggeration within sentence structures etc...
I never heard it all that often IRL but think it has kind of trickled down in less exagerrated form into more common use by people of any gender especially anyone who was young around that time. Many people seem to use fry similarly to, or in combination with, filler words (uhm, ah, like, etc...).
Broadcasters fall into it when they use long sentences and start to run out of breath -- and hide it behind a bit of pitch and pacing rather than letting their vocalization thin out as they run out of air. All of us who've ever worked in the industry fall prey to it at one time or another. The NPR style is quite verbose -- Glass will fall into the trap from time to time. From his own admission as another commenter pointed out, he'll use it constructively. May as well; the NPR style of longer, more complex sentences will largely force you to internalize it to some degree. (To be fair, long-winded professors are highly guilty of it...)I think I was most aware of it when listening to Sarah Vowell on This American Life:
https://www.thisamericanlife.org/118/what-you-lookin-at/act-one-0
P.S. Turns out, Ira Glass does a bit of vocal fry, too.
A quick bit of googling would have improved your post considerably.Yes, and on top of that the sample size of 50 is very tiny and can easily have other demographic biases which would cause a problem even in a published paper. However, this is not even a published paper! This article is reporting on a talk someone gave with no published data or methodology!
Man, I thought I was taking crazy pills. This “study” makes a random biotech Phase 1 trial look like an act of divinely revealed truth.I have a hard time supporting the headline "Men use “vocal fry” more than women" when according to the article it is based upon an analysis of recordings of 49 Canadians. Do better, Ars.
Plenty of words have a meaning defined within a specific jargon and also a meaning, which can be similar or quite different, in the broader ordinary language. If you never noticed that, you haven't thought about language for more than two seconds.Feel like you shot yourself in the foot by opening with "Vocal fry has a clear established definition in a scientific sense".