The groundbreaking science of how and why we talk, and how this ability impacts every area of our lives
Humans are the only species that can transform internal ideas into talk, whether through speech, writing, or sign language. But why do we have this almost magical, special talent? It turns out that while talking allows us to share ideas and connect with one another, it isn’t just for communication. Other benefits of talking stem from the fact that it is hard work:we can understand speech up to 50 percent faster than we can create it ourselves. The complex processes in the brain that allow us to talk spill over and impact other areas of our lives in surprising ways. In this groundbreaking book, Maryellen MacDonald, a researcher and psycholinguist, explores the marvel and mental task of talking and offers an eye-opening look at how it shapes everything from our attention, memory, and the way we learn to how we regulate our emotions and our cognitive health as we age. Filled with fascinating insights, More Than Words
how languages all over the world bend to the demands of talking how talking helps us set goals and acts as a learning engine the link between speech patterns and mental illness why conversations in classrooms are crucial how talking can amplify the talker’s political polarization how talking can slow cognitive decline as we age Engaging and illuminating, More Than Words has lessons that have the power to transform education policy, parenting, psychology, and more. It is a sweeping and provocative look at a fundamental human behavior we take for granted.
This book reminded me how much we tend to take talking for granted. MacDonald shows that every chat, self pep-talk, or bedtime story is an active brain training. From baby babble to conversations that keep us sharp in later years, she reveals that talking shapes what we notice, steady our emotions, and keeps our minds agile.
4.5⭐️! this book is so accessible to a general audience while still conveying important research on language! i would highly recommend, even to people who aren’t interested in developmental psychology or language learning!
Interesting premise and argument. I think her argument about talking being uniquely human would have benefited from discussing bird communication and how it differs from human language, instead of only considering dogs and chimps. What songbirds and parrots do is more analogous, in some ways, than how those other species communicate. This was only discussed in one chapter, and I didn't even think it was that critical for her overall point, but it was the first non-intro chapter and it hung over the whole book for me.