Deck 9: Vocalics Paralanguage

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Question
This aspect of sound that is produced during speech or conversation says that you will not speak in a monotone, the most deadly vocal characterizer for many public figures. Which is it?

A) Duration.
B) Articulation.
C) Pitch.
D) Regularity.
E) None of the above.
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Question
This aspect of sound that is produced during speech or conversation has you using a tempo and rate that seems normal for the listeners. It is neither too slow nor fast, with a rhythm that seems normal for the listeners. Which is it?

A) Duration.
B) Articulation.
C) Pitch.
D) Regularity.
E) None of the above.
Question
This factor of paravocal communication is another definition for vocalics, although in reality, it is not an absolutely correct label. Which is it?

A) Voice Set.
B) Content-free Speech.
C) Voice Qualities.
D) Vocalizations.
E) None of the above.
Question
This factor of paravocal communication is the one that lets you establish a context for the voice being used. There is also a recognition aspect of this, meaning you do recognize people you know well by their voices. Which is it?

A) Voice Set.
B) Content-free Speech.
C) Voice Qualities.
D) Vocalizations.
E) None of the above.
Question
This factor of vocalizations includes non-language sounds that are placed along a continuum from positive to negative evaluations. They include laughing, crying, whimpering, yelling, sneezing, moaning, groaning, belching, and voice breaking. We often recognize people by these. Which is it?

A) Vocal Characterizers.
B) Voice Qualifiers.
C) Vocal Segregates.
D) Voice Set.
E) None of the above.
Question
This factor of vocalizations includes intensity and loudness of your voice, the pitch height you have, and the duration of the sounds you make. Which is it?

A) Vocal Characterizers.
B) Voice Qualifiers.
C) Vocal Segregates.
D) Voice Set.
E) None of the above.
Question
Breathy, tense, breathy-tense, nasal, denasal, orotund, flat, thin, throaty, fronted. What concepts do these belong to?

A) Aspects of "Voice Typing."
B) Major vocal areas that influence stereotypes.
C) Subjective measures of the ideal voice for attractiveness.
D) Qualities an ideal speaker seems to have.
E) None of the above.
Question
Nasality, screeching, softness, monotone, and speed. What concepts do these factors belong to?

A) Aspects of "Voice Typing."
B) Major vocal areas that influence stereotypes.
C) Subjective measures of the ideal voice for attractiveness.
D) Qualities an ideal speaker seems to have.
E) None of the above.
Question
Pitch, pitch range, shrillness, loudness, loudness range, monotonousness, resonance, and deepness. What concepts do these factors belong to?

A) Aspects of "Voice Typing."
B) Major vocal areas that influence stereotypes.
C) Subjective measures of the ideal voice for attractiveness.
D) Qualities an ideal speaker seems to have.
E) None of the above.
Question
Each individual's voice is unique, similar to fingerprints, and this can now be used for identification purposes. This technology is new, and it is becoming more and more reliable. What concept does this refer to?

A) Aspects of "Voice Typing."
B) Major vocal areas that influence stereotypes.
C) Subjective measures of the ideal voice for attractiveness.
D) Qualities an ideal speaker seems to have.
E) None of the above.
Question
This turn cue for regulating the conversation has you creating a rising intonation pattern, or creating a falling intonation pattern, or just stopping speaking. Which is it?

A) Turn-maintaining.
B) Turn-suppressing.
C) Turn-yielding.
D) Turn-taking.
E) None of the above.
Question
This turn cue for regulating the conversation has you taking an audible breath, using a sustained intonation pattern, speeding up your rate, or using vocalized pauses or fillers. Which is it?

A) Turn-maintaining.
B) Turn-suppressing.
C) Turn-yielding.
D) Turn-taking.
E) None of the above.
Question
This form of pause is seen when the turn changes from one person to the next. Which is it?

A) Hesitation Pauses.
B) Switch Pauses.
C) Filled Pauses.
D) Imposed Pauses.
E) None of the above.
Question
This form of pause is governed by some rule or norm; we pause because we think we're supposed to. Which is it?

A) Hesitation Pauses.
B) Switch Pauses.
C) Filled Pauses.
D) Imposed Pauses.
E) None of the above.
Question
Tell the ways vocalics can contribute to meaning.
Question
Tell what factors make up voice quality.
Question
Tell the findings about "bad voices" and establishing relationships.
Question
Give two examples of vocal segregates.
Question
Tell the speech rate and volume factors that influence how speakers are perceived.
Question
Tell three characteristics of an ideal speaker's voice qualities.
Question
Tell the general findings about specific accents and/or dialects.
Question
Tell the findings based on the credibility of a given speaker's dialect.
Question
Tell the speech disturbances.
Question
Tell the impacts of turns.
Question
Tell two ways to vocally indicate your desire to take your turn.
Question
Tell two ways to vocally deny (or suppress) your turn.
Question
Tell the encoding and decoding aspects of vocalics.
Question
Using an example, discuss how you have used voice set to recognize someone you know well to recognize him/her, to judge his/her mood/disposition, or like things.
Question
Using an example, discuss how you have seen someone ruin his/her presentation by the use of vocal segregates, or do a wonderful presentation due to the lack of them.
Question
Using an example, discuss how you have seen an accent and/or dialect create communication problems for the speaker.
Question
Using an example, discuss how you have seen someone's voice either match his/her body shape and size or not match it and what that communicated to you.
Question
Discuss how verbal fluency can have a down side.
Question
Using an example, discuss how you have seen an emotional message become obvious to you through the use of voice.
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Deck 9: Vocalics Paralanguage
1
This aspect of sound that is produced during speech or conversation says that you will not speak in a monotone, the most deadly vocal characterizer for many public figures. Which is it?

A) Duration.
B) Articulation.
C) Pitch.
D) Regularity.
E) None of the above.
C
2
This aspect of sound that is produced during speech or conversation has you using a tempo and rate that seems normal for the listeners. It is neither too slow nor fast, with a rhythm that seems normal for the listeners. Which is it?

A) Duration.
B) Articulation.
C) Pitch.
D) Regularity.
E) None of the above.
D
3
This factor of paravocal communication is another definition for vocalics, although in reality, it is not an absolutely correct label. Which is it?

A) Voice Set.
B) Content-free Speech.
C) Voice Qualities.
D) Vocalizations.
E) None of the above.
B
4
This factor of paravocal communication is the one that lets you establish a context for the voice being used. There is also a recognition aspect of this, meaning you do recognize people you know well by their voices. Which is it?

A) Voice Set.
B) Content-free Speech.
C) Voice Qualities.
D) Vocalizations.
E) None of the above.
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k this deck
5
This factor of vocalizations includes non-language sounds that are placed along a continuum from positive to negative evaluations. They include laughing, crying, whimpering, yelling, sneezing, moaning, groaning, belching, and voice breaking. We often recognize people by these. Which is it?

A) Vocal Characterizers.
B) Voice Qualifiers.
C) Vocal Segregates.
D) Voice Set.
E) None of the above.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 33 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
This factor of vocalizations includes intensity and loudness of your voice, the pitch height you have, and the duration of the sounds you make. Which is it?

A) Vocal Characterizers.
B) Voice Qualifiers.
C) Vocal Segregates.
D) Voice Set.
E) None of the above.
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Unlock for access to all 33 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
Breathy, tense, breathy-tense, nasal, denasal, orotund, flat, thin, throaty, fronted. What concepts do these belong to?

A) Aspects of "Voice Typing."
B) Major vocal areas that influence stereotypes.
C) Subjective measures of the ideal voice for attractiveness.
D) Qualities an ideal speaker seems to have.
E) None of the above.
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Unlock for access to all 33 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
Nasality, screeching, softness, monotone, and speed. What concepts do these factors belong to?

A) Aspects of "Voice Typing."
B) Major vocal areas that influence stereotypes.
C) Subjective measures of the ideal voice for attractiveness.
D) Qualities an ideal speaker seems to have.
E) None of the above.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 33 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
Pitch, pitch range, shrillness, loudness, loudness range, monotonousness, resonance, and deepness. What concepts do these factors belong to?

A) Aspects of "Voice Typing."
B) Major vocal areas that influence stereotypes.
C) Subjective measures of the ideal voice for attractiveness.
D) Qualities an ideal speaker seems to have.
E) None of the above.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 33 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
Each individual's voice is unique, similar to fingerprints, and this can now be used for identification purposes. This technology is new, and it is becoming more and more reliable. What concept does this refer to?

A) Aspects of "Voice Typing."
B) Major vocal areas that influence stereotypes.
C) Subjective measures of the ideal voice for attractiveness.
D) Qualities an ideal speaker seems to have.
E) None of the above.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 33 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
This turn cue for regulating the conversation has you creating a rising intonation pattern, or creating a falling intonation pattern, or just stopping speaking. Which is it?

A) Turn-maintaining.
B) Turn-suppressing.
C) Turn-yielding.
D) Turn-taking.
E) None of the above.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 33 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
This turn cue for regulating the conversation has you taking an audible breath, using a sustained intonation pattern, speeding up your rate, or using vocalized pauses or fillers. Which is it?

A) Turn-maintaining.
B) Turn-suppressing.
C) Turn-yielding.
D) Turn-taking.
E) None of the above.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 33 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
This form of pause is seen when the turn changes from one person to the next. Which is it?

A) Hesitation Pauses.
B) Switch Pauses.
C) Filled Pauses.
D) Imposed Pauses.
E) None of the above.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 33 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
This form of pause is governed by some rule or norm; we pause because we think we're supposed to. Which is it?

A) Hesitation Pauses.
B) Switch Pauses.
C) Filled Pauses.
D) Imposed Pauses.
E) None of the above.
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Unlock for access to all 33 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
Tell the ways vocalics can contribute to meaning.
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16
Tell what factors make up voice quality.
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17
Tell the findings about "bad voices" and establishing relationships.
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18
Give two examples of vocal segregates.
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19
Tell the speech rate and volume factors that influence how speakers are perceived.
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20
Tell three characteristics of an ideal speaker's voice qualities.
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21
Tell the general findings about specific accents and/or dialects.
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22
Tell the findings based on the credibility of a given speaker's dialect.
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23
Tell the speech disturbances.
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24
Tell the impacts of turns.
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25
Tell two ways to vocally indicate your desire to take your turn.
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26
Tell two ways to vocally deny (or suppress) your turn.
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27
Tell the encoding and decoding aspects of vocalics.
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28
Using an example, discuss how you have used voice set to recognize someone you know well to recognize him/her, to judge his/her mood/disposition, or like things.
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Unlock for access to all 33 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
29
Using an example, discuss how you have seen someone ruin his/her presentation by the use of vocal segregates, or do a wonderful presentation due to the lack of them.
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Unlock for access to all 33 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
30
Using an example, discuss how you have seen an accent and/or dialect create communication problems for the speaker.
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Unlock for access to all 33 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
Using an example, discuss how you have seen someone's voice either match his/her body shape and size or not match it and what that communicated to you.
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Unlock for access to all 33 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
Discuss how verbal fluency can have a down side.
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33
Using an example, discuss how you have seen an emotional message become obvious to you through the use of voice.
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