Researchers say we’re talking less than ever

April 25, 2026 Terrence O’Brien

Sam Neill and Isabelle Adjani seated in a cafe facing away from each other in 1981’s Possession.
Nobody is talking. | Image: Metrograph Pictures

Researchers at the University of Missouri-Kansas City and the University of Arizona say that between 2005 and 2019, the number of words we speak out loud to another human being fell by nearly 28 percent. And that has likely only gotten worse following the pandemic.

The researchers actually counted the number of words we were speaking on average (16,632 in 2005). They looked at data from 22 studies in which over 2,000 people recorded audio of their daily lives. Over time, as ordering through apps became the norm, texting increased, and our lives became increasingly online, they found that number had dropped dramatically. By 2019, we were onl …

Read the full story at The Verge.

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