Friday 22 May 2015

kinaesthetic/esia

kinaesthetic/esia

(Sometimes spelt kinaesthetic.) When the brain instructs the body to produce some action or movement, it usually checks to see that the movement is carried out correctly. It is able to do this through receiving feedback through the nervous system. One form of feedback is auditory: we listen to the sounds we make, and if we are prevented from doing this (for example as a result of loud noise going on near us), our speech will not sound normal. But we also receive feedback about the movements themselves, from the muscles and the joints that are moved. This is kinaesthetic feedback, and normally we are not aware of it. However, a phonetics specialist must become conscious of kinaesthetic information: if you are learning to produce the sounds of an unfamiliar language, you must be aware of what you are doing with your articulators, and practical phonetic training aims to raise the learner’s sensitivity to this feedback.

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