
When you speak, you hear your voice through two distinct pathways. Airborne sound travels through the air into your ear canals to vibrate your eardrums, which is how others hear you and how you hear recordings[1][3]. Simultaneously, your voice reaches your inner ear through bone conduction, as vibrations travel directly through your skull bones[1][3].
This internal bone pathway emphasizes lower frequencies, creating a richer, deeper sound that you perceive as your own voice. Microphones, however, only capture the airborne sound, missing the bone-conducted vibrations that shape your self-perception[1][3]. This difference is why your recorded voice often sounds thinner or higher than you expect.
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