Yes, it's far too soon to be able to judge how she is going to normally act. It can take some birds months to years to fully settle-in to a new home, they're all different...You're still basically a "stranger" to her, so she may very well not be talking around you purposely...Try talking to her when you're out of the room, see if that works...
My Bowie talks constantly too, but when I'm downstairs and he's upstairs, or vice-versa, he always starts yelling to me loudly over and over again, and then as soon as I come back to him he settles down; he's actually trying to keep contact with me when he can't see me but he knows I'm still in the house, birds do that, they "contact call" to their flockmates, just like they do in the wild. Birds who are in the same flock are constantly "contact calling" their flockmates who are in the same tree or a neighboring tree, just to make sure they're still with them and haven't been left behind, killed by a predator, etc.
She'll come around, it is just going to take time. I don't know your bird's prior history, but something else to think about is relocating her cage from your bedroom to the "main room" of your home, where all the people that live in your house spend most of their time when they're home. I know this might not be possible, but with a new bird, at least for the first few months, it's a really good idea to keep their cage in the room of the home where the "action" is, because simply having people sitting in the same room as the bird, walking back and forth past the cage a lot, hearing multiple different people talking to each other, etc., all of this helps tremendously with socializing the bird and helping them to feel safe, secure, and comfortable around people...Some people put their new bird's "main cage", or large cage with their toys, in the "main room" of the house, usually the living room, family room, TV room, den, etc., so that the bird is always around people when they are home,