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Communication Terms and Concepts  
	
	Definition:   "Communication 
	is the process of sharing meaning through continuous flow of symbolic 
	messages." (Froemling 5)
	Communicator (Sender/receiver) - the participants
in communication.  Typically the roles reverse regularly.
	
	
	Message - a single
uninterrupted utterance. Verbal or nonverbal 
	Code - a system suitable for
	creating/carrying messages through a specific medium
	
	
	Channels (verbal, nonverbal,
etc.) - the specific mechanism (“pipeline”) used to transmit the message
	Medium (face-to-face, 
	television, web, phone, etc.) - form or technology of transmission
— determines kind of code used.
	
	
	Noise - interference with message — 
	external (physical), internal (mental) or semantic 
	(misunderstanding/reaction
	
	
	Environment (part of context) - that which surrounds
and provides a basis for the meaning of a message: 
		
		Physical  
		(surroundings)
		
		Temporal (point in time)
		
		Relational (the existing relationship between communicators - friends, 
		strangers, etc.)
		
		Cultural  (language and behavior community the communicator(s) come 
		from)
	
	
	Feedback - checks effects of
messages 
		
		positive feedback - "keep doing what
you’re doing"
		
		negative
feedback - change what you’re doing.
	Levels (contexts) of Communication 
	
	Intrapersonal
	Interpersonal
	Public Communication 
	Mass Communication (non-interactive)
	Computer Mediated Communication 
	(interactive) 
Communication Universals 
	
	You cannot not 
	communicate
	All Communication has 
	content and relationship dimensions 
		
		Content - Literal meaning, information
		Relationship - defines the relationship 
	between sender and receiver.  Features of relationship that get defined 
	in message exchanges include: [ Liking, Responsiveness (intensity), Control, Trust 
	  ]
 
	
	
	Communication is a series of puncuated events
		  Communication is 
	irreversible and unrepeatable.
	Communication is 
	culture-specific. 
"How Americans Communicate"
-- 
A Roper Poll 
Discussion Questions on Terms and Concepts: 
		  
		  Be able to describe 
		  a communication event you have experienced that illustrates each of 
		  the five "Communication Universals."  Explain how.
		  What makes someone 
		  and effective Communicator?  How will being an effective 
		  communicator be valuable in your life as you see it? 
		  Think of at least 
		  three examples of "codes," one each in three different media.
		  Come up with 
		  examples of how variations in each of the four types of "environment" 
		  can affect and alter meaning (e.g. How could the same words mean 
		  something different in different environments?) Works Cited Froemling, Kristin, et al..  Communication: 
The Handbook.  
Boston, MA: Allyn & Bacon, 2011. Print |