Toward a phenomenology of inner speaking

Conscious Cogn. 2013 Dec;22(4):1477-94. doi: 10.1016/j.concog.2013.10.003. Epub 2013 Oct 31.

Abstract

Inner speaking is a common and widely discussed phenomenon of inner experience. Based on our studies of inner experience using Descriptive Experience Sampling (a qualitative method designed to produce high fidelity descriptions of randomly selected pristine inner experience), we advance an initial phenomenology of inner speaking. Inner speaking does occur in many, though certainly not all, moments of pristine inner experience. Most commonly it is experienced by the person as speaking in his or her own naturally inflected voice but with no sound being produced. In addition to prototypical instances of inner speaking, there are wide-ranging variations that fit the broad category of inner speaking and large individual differences in the frequency with which individuals experience inner speaking. Our observations are discrepant from what many have said about inner speaking, which we attribute to the characteristics of the methods different researchers have used to examine inner speaking.

Keywords: Descriptive Experience Sampling; Inner hearing; Inner speaking; Inner speech; Phenomenology; Pristine inner experience; Self talk; Sensory awareness; Unsymbolized thinking.

MeSH terms

  • Awareness*
  • Humans
  • Speech*
  • Thinking*