{"items": [{"author": "David", "source_link": "https://www.facebook.com/jefftk/posts/631665804542?comment_id=631668109922", "anchor": "fb-631668109922", "service": "fb", "text": "Fun idea - if you get it to work on your own voice, definitely post comparison audio files!", "timestamp": "1381800727"}, {"author": "Daniel", "source_link": "https://www.facebook.com/jefftk/posts/631665804542?comment_id=631676128852", "anchor": "fb-631676128852", "service": "fb", "text": "This does have a lot to do with EQ. While I certainly couldn't give you specific bandwidths or conversions (they probably would vary to some extent from person to person), generally speaking we hear more lower frequencies in our own voices than anyone else would. There's some resonation that occurs in our skulls, other bones and such, which we hear but which doesn't project out into the world for others to perceive.", "timestamp": "1381804819"}, {"author": "Clara", "source_link": "https://www.facebook.com/jefftk/posts/631665804542?comment_id=631676143822", "anchor": "fb-631676143822", "service": "fb", "text": "My understanding has been that we don't like the recorded sounds of our own voices because the sound that travels through the air (i.e. to a tape recorder) is different from the sound that we hear through bony conduction to our ears.  Yes, that's an EQ difference, so you could probably adjust a recorder to sound like how you hear your own voice, but it then might not be recognizable to other listeners who are accustomed to the through-the-air version of your voice.", "timestamp": "1381804848"}, {"author": "Josh", "source_link": "https://www.facebook.com/jefftk/posts/631665804542?comment_id=631677585932", "anchor": "fb-631677585932", "service": "fb", "text": "I suspect that other people as-they-sound-to-themselves would sound very weird to you -- much like most people with somewhat asymmetrical faces (due to how they part their hair, or whatever) think they look weird in photos, but if you flip the photo (like a mirror image), it looks good to them but weird to everyone else.", "timestamp": "1381805807"}, {"author": "Josh", "source_link": "https://www.facebook.com/jefftk/posts/631665804542?comment_id=631677615872", "anchor": "fb-631677615872", "service": "fb", "text": "(I used this trick once to help a friend pick a picture of herself: She hated all of them, so we mirror-flipped them all, and she suddenly liked them all a lot better, and was able to pick one that she liked best.)", "timestamp": "1381805847"}, {"author": "Alexander", "source_link": "https://www.facebook.com/jefftk/posts/631665804542?comment_id=800184880962", "anchor": "fb-800184880962", "service": "fb", "text": "I was just wondering the exact same thing! and besides, it would be nice to be able to show others how I hear myself. Sadly I haven't found anything on how to simulate this. Did you by any chance? would appreciate it a lot! Cheers! :D", "timestamp": "1468855891"}]}