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MIT researchers studying brain speech planning just
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came up with the hardest tongue twister in the world.
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Anthony and Trace here for DNews.
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Toy boat, toy boat, toy boat, toy boat, toy boat.
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What are you doing?
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I'm practicing tongue twisters.
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It's going to be the world's hardest tongue
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twister that's just come out.
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And I'm going to get it.
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I'm going to get it.
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OK.
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You know, it's weird that tongue twisters even exist,
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if you think about it, right?
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Because these are sounds that we make all the time.
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These are words that we say all the time.
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We're planning what we're going to say in advance.
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Why do we get tripped up?
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That's what the MIT researchers were looking to find.
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And before you can find the cause of something,
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you have to figure out the specific effects and what
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actual things are happening that get our tongues so twisted.
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So they got this group of volunteers,
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and they gave them a whole list of these classic tongue
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twisters, and recorded them trying to read them.
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And they isolated the most common pronunciation errors
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in an effort to start tracing back
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the cause of our brain/mouth confusion.
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So do toy boat again.
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OK.
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Toy boat, toy boat, toy boat, toboy, toboy--
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See?
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It becomes like toy boy, right?
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Yeah, it's weird.
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Now listen to top cop.
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Got it.
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Top cop, top cop, ta-cop, ta-cop--
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So the sounds are blending together
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and they're kind of sounding crazy, actually.
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And there's always some blending,
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but there's also always some space.
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Well, sometimes, right?
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And it varies.
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You either crush them or you space them out.
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And that happens in both short word twisters and longer phrase
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ones.
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Like, the sixth sick sheik's sixth sheep's seek six.
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Exactly what I was going to say.
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That's bad.
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Or, Susie sits in a shoe shine shop
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where she shits-- where she sits she shines, where she shines,
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she sits.
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OK.
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We're really bad at this.
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But what's causing the errors, though?
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They don't know.
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But they do know that the quick blending, like ta-cop,
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happens more in short word twisters.
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And the spaced out blending, ta cop, happens more in phrases.
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And that might be because the toy boat twisters have
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that more-- the shorter words in a regular rhythm,
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whereas the sentences have more irregular timing, overall.
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So both errors happen in both kinds of tongue twisters,
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meaning we use the same brain processes
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for both parts of speech.
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That is interesting.
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But the most interesting thing that they found
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came about when they were trying to devise different tests.
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They created their own tongue twisters,
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and there was one that they created that messed people up
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so badly, they didn't even blend sounds together.
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They just locked up and stopped speaking entirely.
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Ready?
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Pad kid poured curd pulled cod.
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Pad kid poured curd pulled cod.
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[UNISON] Pad kid poured curd pulled cod.
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Pad kid poured--
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Cold.
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Curd cod.
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Poured cold.
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Curd.
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Pad.
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I don't know.
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Does it feel harder to you?
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They are all extremely hard for me.
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If any of you guys want to record it,
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we would love to see you trying to do it 10 times fast
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and see if you fare better than we do.
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You can leave them on our Facebook page,
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or you can tweet them to us at DNews.
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And anyone who does it, they can win five Internets.
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Five Internets is the most Internets
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that we are allowed to give out legally,
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without a license from the government.
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So that is a big prize.
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Enjoy it.
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Pad kid pulled cod.
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Curd.