Israeli researchers have discovered that human speech follows a natural rhythm worldwide, with people pausing and emphasizing words in consistent timing patterns, the Hebrew University of Jerusalem said Wednesday in a statement.
The study, published in peer-reviewed multidisciplinary scientific journal PNAS, analyzed over 650 recordings in 48 languages and found that people naturally organize speech into Intonation Units, or short rhythmic units, occurring roughly every 1.6 seconds, the university said.
This pattern helps listeners follow conversations, take turns speaking, and process information effectively, it said.
Remarkably, this rhythm remains consistent across ages, languages, and cultures, even in endangered languages spoken in remote regions, which suggests that speech rhythm is not only cultural but deeply biological, linked to how human brains handle memory, attention and voluntary action, it said.
The findings could improve language learning methods, speech technology development, and treatments for speech disorders, it noted.