--- name: voice-analysis description: "Extract and document a writer's distinctive voice patterns for consistent reproduction. Use when you need to capture writing voice, analyze writing style, create a voice guide, or write in someone's established style. Keywords: voice, tone, style, writing analysis, fingerprint." license: MIT metadata: author: jwynia version: "1.0" type: utility mode: evaluative domain: fiction --- # Voice & Tone Analysis ## Purpose Extract and document a writer's distinctive voice patterns for consistent reproduction. Creates a "voice guide" that enables authentic writing that sounds like the source, not a generic approximation. ## Core Principle **Capture spirit, not just mechanics.** The goal is writing that makes the source say "yes, that's me" not "I guess that's accurate." --- ## Phase 1: Sample Collection ### Gather 5-10 Examples from Each Category **Peak Voice** - Writing they identify as "most them" **Off-Voice** - Writing that doesn't represent them well **Different Contexts:** - Technical/instructional content - Persuasive/argumentative pieces - Narrative/storytelling - Casual communication (emails, messages) - Formal communication - Emotional/vulnerable content ### Self-Report Prompts **Rewrite Exercise:** Ask: "Rewrite this neutral paragraph in your voice:" > "The new policy will be implemented next month. It includes several changes to current procedures. Employees should review documentation and submit questions by the deadline." **Rule Breaking:** "What writing 'rules' do you consistently ignore? Why?" **Pet Peeves:** "What writing choices immediately signal something wasn't written by you?" **Evolution:** "How has your writing changed in 5 years? What stayed constant?" --- ## Phase 2: Linguistic Analysis ### Sentence Level | Pattern | What to Track | |---------|---------------| | Average length | Words per sentence | | Range | Shortest to longest | | Fragments | Usage frequency, contexts | | Run-ons | Tendency, intentionality | | Opening patterns | How sentences typically start | | Closing patterns | How sentences typically end | ### Paragraph Architecture | Element | What to Track | |---------|---------------| | Average length | Sentences per paragraph | | Topic sentences | Beginning, middle, end, absent | | Transitions | Explicit words, implicit flow, abrupt | | Information order | Build-up, front-load, circular | ### Punctuation Signature | Mark | Track Usage Pattern | |------|---------------------| | Em dash | Interruption, emphasis, list, asides | | Parentheses | Frequency, content type | | Semicolon | Presence, absence, alternative | | Ellipsis | Trailing, pause, omission | | Exclamation | Frequency, contexts | | Rhetorical questions | Frequency, function | --- ## Phase 3: Lexical Fingerprinting ### Word Choice Matrix | Category | Preferred | Avoided | Signature Examples | |----------|-----------|---------|-------------------| | Technical terms | | | | | Colloquialisms | | | | | Intensifiers | very, extremely, quite... | | | | Hedging | perhaps, might, seems... | | | | Abstract/concrete | | | | ### Register Analysis - [ ] Consistent register (formal/informal throughout) - [ ] Deliberate register mixing (formal content, casual asides) - [ ] Context-dependent shifting (formal for X, casual for Y) ### Recurring Constructions List phrases/patterns appearing 3+ times: 1. ___ 2. ___ 3. ___ --- ## Phase 4: Conceptual DNA ### Metaphor Mapping | Source Domain | Target Domain | Example | Frequency | |---------------|---------------|---------|-----------| | (war, journey, building...) | (ideas, processes...) | | | ### Reference Pool - **Cultural touchstones:** (movies, books, memes, history...) - **Time period:** (contemporary, 90s, classic...) - **Accessibility level:** (mainstream, niche, insider) - **Domains drawn from:** (sports, cooking, science...) ### Reasoning Patterns Rate 1-5 for prevalence: - [ ] Analogical reasoning (like X, therefore Y) - [ ] First principles (from basics up) - [ ] Empirical evidence (data, studies) - [ ] Personal anecdote (I experienced...) - [ ] Hypotheticals (imagine if...) - [ ] Socratic questioning (but what if...?) --- ## Phase 5: Emotional Texture ### Enthusiasm Spectrum | Low | Medium | High | |-----|--------|------| | (understated) | (balanced) | (expressive) | ### Criticism Styles | Style | When Used | Markers | |-------|-----------|---------| | Direct | | "This is wrong because..." | | Diplomatic | | "One consideration might be..." | | Humorous | | "Well, that's one way to..." | | Analytical | | "The issue breaks down to..." | ### Vulnerability Patterns - **Admission phrases:** "I'll admit...", "honestly..." - **Uncertainty markers:** "I think...", "not sure but..." - **Personal revelation style:** Direct? Buried in humor? Rare? --- ## Phase 6: Reader Dynamics ### Positioning The writer positions as: - [ ] Expert/teacher (I know, let me explain) - [ ] Peer/collaborator (we're figuring this out together) - [ ] Student/learner (I'm working through this) - [ ] Challenger/provocateur (conventional wisdom is wrong) - [ ] Guide/facilitator (here's how to navigate) ### Assumed Context - **Shared knowledge level:** Assumes expertise? Explains basics? - **Cultural assumptions:** In-group references? Universal? - **Relationship warmth:** Distant professional? Familiar? ### Interactive Patterns - Questions per 1000 words: ___ - Direct address frequency ("you"): ___ - Imperative usage (commands): ___ - Inclusive language ("we/us"): ___ --- ## Phase 7: Voice Guide Synthesis ### Core Voice Statement _In 2-3 sentences, capture the essence:_ ### The Rules That Matter Most **Always:** - **Never:** - **Usually, unless:** - ### Sentence Construction Guide - **Preferred length:** - **Variety pattern:** - **Opening moves:** - **Power positions:** (where key info lands) ### Word Selection Principles - **Go-to words for [concept]:** - **Banned words/phrases:** - **Register rules:** ### Structural Signatures - **Paragraph rhythm:** - **Transition style:** - **Information architecture:** ### Emotional Register - **Default tone:** - **Excitement expression:** - **Criticism approach:** - **Vulnerability threshold:** ### The Litmus Test A piece captures this voice when: 1. 2. 3. ### Red Flags Definitely NOT this voice when: 1. 2. 3. --- ## Phase 8: Validation Before finalizing the voice guide: - [ ] Can identify the author in a blind test? - [ ] Guided writing feels authentic, not performative? - [ ] Patterns are descriptive, not prescriptive? - [ ] Captures spirit, not just mechanics? - [ ] Source would say "yes, that's me"? --- ## Quick Reference Template ### In Every Piece - - - ### The Heart of the Voice _[Single paragraph essence]_ ### Emergency Voice Recovery When writing has gone generic, add: 1. 2. 3. --- ## Usage Notes ### For AI Writing Once the voice guide is complete, include relevant sections in the prompt to guide generation toward authentic voice reproduction. ### For Self-Analysis Writers can use this framework to understand their own voice, identify what makes their writing distinctive, and consciously apply those patterns. ### For Editing Use the voice guide as a checklist when editing to ensure consistency and authenticity. --- ## Anti-Patterns ### 1. Mechanics Over Spirit **Pattern:** Cataloging every linguistic feature without understanding what makes the voice feel distinctive. **Why it fails:** A perfect inventory of word frequencies and sentence lengths can produce writing that's technically accurate but feels like a parody. Voice is gestalt, not components. **Fix:** Start from "what makes this voice feel like this?" Work backward to mechanics. The inventory serves understanding; understanding doesn't emerge from inventory alone. ### 2. Single-Context Capture **Pattern:** Analyzing voice from one type of writing, then applying it to all contexts. **Why it fails:** Writers shift voice across contexts. Technical writing voice differs from casual email voice. Capturing one context and forcing it everywhere creates uncanny artifacts. **Fix:** Sample across contexts. Map how voice shifts. Include context-switching rules in the voice guide. Understand which elements are constant vs. context-dependent. ### 3. Frequency as Rule **Pattern:** If they use em-dashes 8% of the time, the voice guide prescribes 8% em-dash usage. **Why it fails:** Frequency is a statistical average, not a style rule. Forced frequency creates awkward placement. Natural writers don't count punctuation. **Fix:** Understand when they use em-dashes, not how often. "Uses em-dashes for dramatic interjections, rarely for lists" is actionable. "8% em-dashes" is not. ### 4. Imitation Artifacts **Pattern:** Voice-guided writing that feels like someone doing an impression—technically accurate but overperformed. **Why it fails:** Distinctive features become tics when isolated. Real voice balances distinctive and neutral. Guides that catalog only distinctive features produce caricature. **Fix:** Include neutral baseline alongside distinctive features. Most sentences should sound natural, with distinctive features emerging at appropriate moments, not constantly. ### 5. Frozen Voice **Pattern:** Treating the voice guide as permanent, not updating as the writer evolves. **Why it fails:** Writers change. A voice guide from 2020 may not fit 2025 writing. Using outdated guides produces writing that feels like an old version of the person. **Fix:** Note the capture date. Plan periodic updates. Include the writer's own reflections on how their voice has evolved. Treat the guide as living documentation. ## Integration ### Inbound (feeds into this skill) | Skill | What it provides | |-------|------------------| | (writing samples) | Raw material for analysis | | prose-style | Sentence-level craft framework for analysis | ### Outbound (this skill enables) | Skill | What this provides | |-------|-------------| | prose-style | Voice-specific sentence construction guidance | | dialogue | Voice patterns for character speech | | (AI generation) | Voice guides for consistent AI-assisted writing | ### Complementary | Skill | Relationship | |-------|--------------| | prose-style | Voice-analysis captures what; prose-style provides how. Use voice-analysis first to understand the target, then prose-style to achieve it | | dialogue | Voice-analysis for authorial voice; dialogue skill for character voices within fiction |