People are talking far less than they did at the start of the smartphone era, a multi-year analysis shows. Researchers from the University of Missouri–Kansas City and the University of Arizona examined audio from nearly 2,200 people across 22 studies between 2005 and 2019. They found the average number of words spoken per day fell almost 28%, from about 16,632 to 11,900. Participants did not know their daily word counts would be analyzed, reducing the chance they changed behavior because they were being observed, according to The Wall Street Journal.
The decline appears concentrated among younger adults. Those under 25 lost an average of 451 spoken words per day. Those over 25 used 314 fewer words.
Experts point to a broad shift in daily life. App-based interactions have replaced many in-person exchanges. Texting and social media have taken center stage. Tasks once handled face-to-face—asking for help in a store, getting directions, chatting with a neighbor—have moved online.
Psychologists warn the losses may extend beyond loneliness or exposure to unhealthy information cycles. Face-to-face conversations carry presence and tone that typed messages do not. Basic conversational skills—such as turn-taking and reading subtle cues—may be weakening alongside the drop in daily word count.
In an observation-based research, findings showed mothers spoke 16% fewer words to their infants when using smartphones. Screen engagement can displace even short, high-value exchanges with children.
Talking is an active, demanding behavior. Effective conversation requires paying attention to another person. It requires rapidly formulating a response and regulating physical reactions in about 200 milliseconds.
Across the aggregated studies, women spoke more words per day on average—over 13,000—than men, who were near 12,000. This pattern flipped among older adults.
Researchers and clinicians say the trajectory can change with modest adjustments. Parents are encouraged to build more live conversation into daily routines with their children. Households can consider nudges like installing a landline to normalize voice calls. Individuals can take periodic breaks from smartphones to create more opportunities for spontaneous talk. A renewed embrace of voice calls over messaging can help restore social signals lost to text.
“If each of us just talked to one more person each day, we could reverse this trend,” said Valeria Pfeifer, a co-author of the study.
Source:
www.jpost.com





