The curate shouted, the landlady screamed, her daughter
wailed, Maritornes wept, Dorotea was dumfounded, Luscinda terrified, and Dona
Clara ready to faint. --Miguel de Cervantes (Don Quixote,
1605:407)
The young pastor's voice was tremulously
sweet, rich, deep, and broken. The feeling that it so evidently manifested,
rather than the direct purport of the words, caused it to vibrate in all hearts,
and brought the listeners into one accord of sympathy.
--Nathaniel Hawthorne (The Scarlet
Letter)
Stella! --Marlon Brando (Streetcar Named Desire, 1951)
Usage: Tone of voice reflects psychological arousal, emotion, and mood. It may also carry social information,
as in a sarcastic, superior, or submissive manner of
speaking.
Aprosodia. Like aphasia (the dominant, left-brain
hemisphere's inability to articulate or comprehend speech), aprosodia is an
inability to articulate or comprehend emotional voice tones. Aprosodia is due to
damage to the right-brain's temporal-lobe language areas. Patients with
aprosodia miss the affective (or "feeling") content of speech. Persons with
damage to the right frontal lobe speak in flat or monotone voices devoid of
normal inflection.
Dominance. 1. "The more threatened or aggressive
an animal becomes, the lower and harsher its voice turns--thus, the bigger it
seems" (Hopson 1980:83). 2. According to Kent State University
researchers Stanford W. Gregory, Jr. and Stephen Webster, people unconsciously
adapt to each other's voice tones (a phenomenon studied by students of
"communication accommodation theory"). "The researchers suggest that when two
people converse, the person whose low-frequency [i.e., dominant] vocal
characteristics change the least is perceived by both as having the higher
social status" (Schwartz 1996:A4).
Evolution. According to Eugene
Morton of the National Zoological Park in Washington, D.C., almost all mammalian
sounds are blends of three basic vocalizations: growls, barks, and whines
(Hopson 1980). Our own vocalizations, e.g., at a conference
table (both while speaking and apart from speech), reflect these basic
three sound modes, as in using a low-pitched, low and loud, or high-pitched
voice to argue a discussion point.
FAQs: A significant number of
voice qualities are universal across all human cultures (though they are also
subject to cultural modification and shaping). 1. Around the world, e.g.,
adults use higher pitched voices to speak to infants and young children. The
softer pitch is innately "friendly," and suggests a nonaggressive, nonhostile
pose. 2. With each other, men and women use higher pitched voices in
greetings and in courtship, to show harmlessness and to invite physical
closeness. 3. In almost every language, speakers use a rising intonation
to ask a question. The higher register appeases the request for information, and
is often accompanied by diffident palm-up gestures and by submissive shoulder-shrugs (for neurological links between tone of
voice and these cues, see SPECIAL VISCERAL NERVE). 4. The human brain is
programmed to respond with specific emotions to specific vocal sounds (see,
e.g., CRY, Infancy; MUSIC,
Neuro-notes I; STARTLE REFLEX,
Neuro-notes).
Literature. 1. "They [the young
Englishmen at Gatsby's party] were at least agonizingly aware of the easy money
in the vicinity and convinced that it was theirs for a few words in the right
key" (F. Scott Fitzgerald, The Great Gatsby). 2. "Gazing at Pearl,
Hester Prynne often dropped her work upon her knees, and cried out with an agony
which she would fain have hidden, but which made utterance for itself, betwixt
speech and a groan." (Nathaniel Hawthorne, The Scarlet Letter
[1850])
Media. "There's a hidden battle for dominance waged in
almost every conversation--and the way we modulate the lower frequencies of our
voices shows who's on top" (Washington Post [Schwartz
1996:A4]).
Primatology. "Probably the commonest kind of sound [in
wild baboons] is the grunt" (Hall and DeVore 1972:158).
Ritual.
Human beings use emotional, nonvocal sounds in their ceremonies, rites, and
rituals. In Japan, e.g., the rhythmic clacking of cherry wood clappers (known as
hyoshigi) is used to begin traditional sumo contests. "The rhythm is
oddly disturbing," biologist Lyall Watson writes. "It is precisely that which,
as laboratory studies show, stimulates the right hemisphere of the brain, the
one that generates emotions instead of logic"
[220B].
Salesmanship. "Deeper voices carry more authority for men
and women. Everything you say somehow seems truer or more important" (Delmar
1984:39).
U.S. politics. "Would Martin Luther King's 'dream' have
captured the imagination of white and black Americans alike had he pronounced
his vision in a squeaking soprano? Doubtful" (Blum
1988:3-8).
RESEARCH REPORTS:
1. Research on "tone of voice" emerged in 1951 with the study
of paralanguage, in the pioneering research of George Trager and Henry Lee Smith
(Trager 1958). 2. In 1953, researchers noted that language was
accompanied by two other communication systems, kinesics (i.e.,
body-motion signs) and the extra-linguistic noises of paralanguage
(Hall and Trager 1953). 3. In 1958, paralanguage was defined to
include voice qualities ("modifications of language and other noises")
and vocalizations ("noises not having the structure of language")
(Trager 1958:4). 4. In 1960, the most intensive study of vocal
pauses, hems, haws, sighs, gasps, coughs, throat-clearings, speech rate,
register, volume, and tone quality--performed on a film of an initial
psychiatric interview--was completed; despite voluminous data, it offered few
conclusions about tone of voice or paralanguage (Pittenger, Hockett, and Danehy
1960). 5. "When speaking to babies [and in courtship] we give a friendly smile and raise the pitch
of our voices" (Eibl-Eibesfeldt 1971:8). 6. "In Japan, the paralinguistic
features which indicate respect and politeness are breathiness, openness,
lowered volume, and raised level of pitch" (Key 1975:151).
See also EMOTION CUE, KINESICS.
YouTube Video: Listen to these sweet, emotional, very nonverbal voice tones.Copyright 1998 - 2013 (David B. Givens/Center for Nonverbal Studies)
Illustration of musculature of vocal folds (copyright 1990 by Oxford University Press)