speech of any personalties]
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Personality is perhaps the most exciting theme in Psychology.
Since ancient times, across cultures and throughout the centuries - philosophers, doctors, mystics, artists, scientists and psychologists were fascinated by the concept of classifying people into a certain number of groups, based upon their characteristic behaviors.
Hundreds of personality theories were invented over the years. Personality classification is widely used professionally and unprofessionally in many fields - psychology, medicine, education, human resources, sales, training, advertising and many more.
Nevertheless, measuring personality is very complex and sometimes even doubtful as it requires an assessment of the person as a whole. There are no objective means for such an assessment; it is not like measuring blood pressure. Therefore personality evaluation relies heavily on subjective measures such as questionnaires or personal evaluation, or on controversial projective tools such as Rorschach inkblot testing.
Speech analysis offers a unique approach to personality classification as it explores typical speech patterns that are characteristic of an individual. People tend to have typical and consistent speech patterns. These patterns often reflect typical behavioral tendencies of the individual.
Since speech patterns are based on objective physiological measures of the individual's voice, rather than subjective evaluations, Speech analysis holds the promise of offering an objective indication of personality tendencies.
The term Speech Personality was mentioned already in 1941, by Elwood Murray, who suggested a method to achieve social change through change of the speech behavior.
We adopted this term as we find it exceptionally adequate: The recurring speech patterns of a person often reflect certain aspects of his or her personality and may therefore be termed as the person's Speech Personality.
Moreover, when a person uses different speech patterns in a specific interaction it usually reflects a certain mood or attitude relevant to that situation and it is therefore not less interesting as being indicative of his or her current state.
SpeechAware's speech engine classifies the typical speech patterns into distinctive speech styles. It also determines the speaker's speech temper.
The combination of speech style and speech temper represents the speech personality of a person. It reflects the manners by which an individual tends to speak, to sound and to be perceived by others. It is strongly related to the person's actual personality.
Since ancient times, across cultures and throughout the centuries - philosophers, doctors, mystics, artists, scientists and psychologists were fascinated by the concept of classifying people into a certain number of groups, based upon their characteristic behaviors.
Hundreds of personality theories were invented over the years. Personality classification is widely used professionally and unprofessionally in many fields - psychology, medicine, education, human resources, sales, training, advertising and many more.
Nevertheless, measuring personality is very complex and sometimes even doubtful as it requires an assessment of the person as a whole. There are no objective means for such an assessment; it is not like measuring blood pressure. Therefore personality evaluation relies heavily on subjective measures such as questionnaires or personal evaluation, or on controversial projective tools such as Rorschach inkblot testing.
Speech analysis offers a unique approach to personality classification as it explores typical speech patterns that are characteristic of an individual. People tend to have typical and consistent speech patterns. These patterns often reflect typical behavioral tendencies of the individual.
Since speech patterns are based on objective physiological measures of the individual's voice, rather than subjective evaluations, Speech analysis holds the promise of offering an objective indication of personality tendencies.
The term Speech Personality was mentioned already in 1941, by Elwood Murray, who suggested a method to achieve social change through change of the speech behavior.
We adopted this term as we find it exceptionally adequate: The recurring speech patterns of a person often reflect certain aspects of his or her personality and may therefore be termed as the person's Speech Personality.
Moreover, when a person uses different speech patterns in a specific interaction it usually reflects a certain mood or attitude relevant to that situation and it is therefore not less interesting as being indicative of his or her current state.
SpeechAware's speech engine classifies the typical speech patterns into distinctive speech styles. It also determines the speaker's speech temper.
The combination of speech style and speech temper represents the speech personality of a person. It reflects the manners by which an individual tends to speak, to sound and to be perceived by others. It is strongly related to the person's actual personality.
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