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How and Why Human Sound is change in Recorded

How and Why Human Sound is change in Recorded

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Why and How Human Sound Changes in a Recording?

Have you ever noticed that your voice sounds different when recorded? This happens due to two main reasons: the way we hear ourselves and technical factors in recording.

1. How We Normally Hear Our Own Voice?

When we speak, we hear our voice in two ways:
Bone Conduction: Vibrations travel through the bones of our skull to the inner ear, making our voice sound deeper and fuller.
Air Conduction: Sound waves travel through the air, enter the ear, and reach the eardrum.

This combination makes our voice sound richer and different from what others hear!

2. Why Does Your Recorded Voice Sound Different?

Lack of Bone Conduction:

Microphone Quality & Recording Device:

Compression & Sound Processing:

Echo & Room Acoustics:

3. How to Improve Recorded Voice Quality?

Use a Good Microphone: A condenser mic captures a richer sound than a phone mic.
Proper Mic Distance: Keep the mic 6–12 inches away for clear audio.
Reduce Background Noise: Use soundproofing or noise reduction software.
Post-Processing: Use tools like EQ (Equalization), Noise Reduction, and Reverb to enhance clarity.

 Conclusion:

Your voice sounds different in a recording because you usually hear it through bone and air conduction, but a microphone captures only air conduction. Factors like microphone type, recording format, and acoustics further influence how your voice is recorded.

Would you like tips on audio editing software to improve your recordings?

Great question! Let’s break it down simply:


Why Does Your Voice Sound Different in a Recording?

When you hear a recording of your voice, it often sounds weird, shrill, or thinner than what you expect. That happens for two main reasons:


1. You Normally Hear Your Voice Differently (Bone vs Air Conduction)

When You Speak:

You hear your own voice through two ways:

This bone-conduction adds depth and bass to your voice.

When You Hear a Recording:


2. Microphone & Recording Quality Matter

Microphones aren’t perfect:

Software Compression:


Live Example:

If you say: β€œHello, how are you?”


Why Does It Matter?


How to Make Your Voice Sound Better in Recordings:

  1. Use a better microphone (condenser mic or lapel mic)

  2. Record in a quiet room

  3. Use pop filter to avoid harsh β€œP” and β€œS” sounds

  4. Add a little EQ: boost bass, reduce nasal mid-range (1k–2k Hz)

  5. Practice speaking confidently and slowly


Summary:

Why it changes What happens
Bone conduction not in recording Voice sounds thinner
Mic limitations Some tones are lost or altered
Audio processing Removes natural highs/lows

If you want:

Let me know β€” I’ll prepare it for you!

How and Why Human Sound is change in Recorded

HUMAN PERCEPTION and REACTION TO SOUND