It’s not just you. We’re talking to each other less than we did a decade ago. The number of words we speak out loud to other humans fell nearly 28 percent from 2005 to 2019, according to researchers ...
SANTIAGO, Chile — As darkness fell on a festival that had filled the streets all day, the party shifted indoors, to the tiny restaurants and bars around the hilly park called Cerro Santa Lucía.
When we replace verbal communication with text, we miss out on nuance—and human connection.
Technology has removed many of the reasons people had for talking to each other like ordering food or asking for directions A new study from the University of Missouri-Kansas City reveals that people ...
Immediately after a keynote speaker I was coaching for a large conference finished her rehearsal, I pulled her aside. “How much of your script was written by AI?” I asked. She looked up at me out of ...
My husband, Don, will talk to anyone. In line at a store, on a plane, in a parking lot; it doesn’t matter where we’re at, he’ll engage. In fact, I have my current job because he was gregarious enough ...
In today's Asking Eric column, R. Eric Thomas responds to someone who has realized they talk too much and is seeking advice ...
When was the last time you engaged in friendly banter with your barista, chatted with your neighbor or called your mother? Chances are, you placed your latte order on an app and ignored your neighbor ...