
What works in voice, but not in the brain, is an automatic “honeycomb-like” neural network, which allows your brain to respond to every sound that comes in; as such everything you hear, smell, taste, touch, and smell the same. As far as it understanding and translating the real world, your brain will respond to sounds based on the way they cause your body to make the movement it does, how those movements fit into your body’s mechanics, that sort of thing.
The thing that’s different (or at least, different enough to require some extra research), is that the sound your brain makes when listening to the world actually contains information about you — the fact that we produce the sound in the first place, the sound’s volume, the distance from your ear to your brain. Sound also has a “time” which is represented by the period we think from when you first listen to the sound, to when the sound goes off.
The “time” the sound has is calculated by the time it takes you to make a particular movement in your body: when you say “yay!” or “thank you” or “sorry.” Your time to produce a sound depends on the volume your voice produces — your lips open, your tongue is out, etc. So when you put your hands at your side on a table, your body does stuff inside the arms (your neck and body muscles). Your voice can’t hear that, because it’s too far away from your brain. So the amount of time it takes to talk is directly proportional to the volume you’re creating.
So when you hear a sound, which is in fact a pattern of different, distinct parts of your body moving as one, it means something about your character as well. For example, a sound that occurs with your back to the table is the same thing as a back to the listener and therefore the same thing for the voice. When you speak your mind to someone, you’re actually talking about yourself at that moment, so the character’s speech pattern is also going to be a reflection of its character, and therefore, the characters’ behavior.
It’s not that your brain knows all this stuff, or is doing it automatically, it’s simply that you don’t have any idea about it. So it makes sense that it needs different forms of information — and different sounds — from the information your brain has to help it figure out what’s going on.
So, yes, there is an
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