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Inner speech [PDF]

open access: yesWiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Cognitive Science, 2021
Inner speech travels under many aliases: the inner voice, verbal thought, thinking in words, internal verbalization, “talking in your head,” the “little voice in the head,” and so on.
Peter Langland-Hassan
exaly   +1 more source
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Inner speech

WIREs Cognitive Science, 2020
AbstractInner speech travels under many aliases: the inner voice, verbal thought, thinking in words, internal verbalization, “talking in your head,” the “little voice in the head,” and so on. It is both a familiar element of first‐person experience and a psychological phenomenon whose complex cognitive components and distributed neural bases are ...
openaire   +3 more sources

Prayer and Inner Speech: Is There a Connection?

Psychological Reports, 2004
The present study explored the relation between frequency of prayer, inner speech, and self-efficacy for a sample of 134 Germany adults (88 women and 46 men). It was hypothesized that prayer activity by adults is functionally related to inner speech, and both might result in higher self-efficacy, but the findings challenge the notion that inner speech ...
openaire   +2 more sources

Inner speech captures the perception of external speech

The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 2013
Talking silently to ourselves occupies much of our mental lives, yet the mechanisms underlying this experience remain unclear. The following experiments provide behavioral evidence that the auditory content of inner speech is provided by corollary discharge. Corollary discharge is the motor system's prediction of the sensory consequences of its actions.
Mark, Scott   +3 more
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Ictal inner speech jargon

Epilepsy & Behavior, 2013
We report on the case of a woman with jargon aphasic seizures who provided a careful written report of inner speech jargon occurring during her seizures. This inner speech jargon description is an unusual finding since in most aphasic disorders, patients also suffer from anosognosia.
Laurent, Vercueil   +1 more
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Language in the absence of inner speech

Neuropsychologia, 1982
A 54-year-old man abruptly became mute with mild right hemiparesis. Written expression, comprehension of speech and print, calculating ability, and verbal short-term recall, although slow, were largely preserved. Extensive studies demonstrated complete loss of inner speech.
D N, Levine, R, Calvanio, A, Popovics
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'Inner Speech' in Conduction Aphasia

Archives of Neurology, 1986
It has been suggested by Kurt Goldstein, MD, that conduction aphasia is a disturbance of "inner speech." We tested this hypothesis in five patients who had conduction aphasia with similar speech disturbances. The patients were presented with pictures and were required to perform, without overt vocalization, comparisons of word length and homophonic and
T E, Feinberg   +2 more
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Errors in Inner Speech

1992
Many people have the feeling that they can hear a little voice inside their heads. This inner speech accompanies reading and writing and often co-occurs with activities that involve mental planning such as problem solving (Sokolov, 1972). Clearly, inner speech is ubiquitous in our mental lives, and so it is not surprising that it has played a large ...
Gary S. Dell, Renee J. Repka
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Inner Speech as the Internalization of Outer Speech

2018
This chapter aims to clear a path for the thesis that inner speech, in the very languages we speak, is the sole medium of all conceptual thought. First, it is argued that inner speech should not be identified with the auditory imagery of speech. Since they are distinct, there may be many more episodes of inner speech than those that are accompanied by ...
openaire   +1 more source

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