Communication Theory

Read Complete Research Material

COMMUNICATION THEORY

Communication Theory

Communication Theory

Communication is a fluid concept in today's academia. While many scholars have tried to pin down an overarching definition of communication, we have not yet reached a strong centrally agreed upon generalization that includes all aspects of the term. Each definition offers something similar to the other, while at the same time, building upon it, adding something further. From my research, I would have to agree with Miller in the text reading and say that communication is transactional. It is an act where information is passed from a source which encodes a message, transmitted through a channel to a receiver, whether it be verbal (i.e. speaking, singing, etc.) or nonverbal (body language, sign language, touch, eye contact, facial expressions, writing, and so on) where it is decoded and has an effect.. It is important to include the contexts in which the communication occurs. I would argue that communication can be intentional or unintentional and can be transmitted through many different mediums, it may also involve conventional or unconventional signals, and it may take many forms (linguistic or nonlinguistic). As broad a definition as it may seem I feel it adequately represents what communication is and does on a regular basis. Further focusing it would exclude many aspects of communication that we may not recognize at first glance.

Communication as a whole goes farther than just verbal communication, that is, auditory means that person A has with person B who receives the messages, processes it, and then responds. Brant R. Burleson describes communication, not as a single process, but is “made up of several interrelated, simultaneously functioning sub processes (e.g., message production, message interpretation, nonverbal cue interpretation, turn taking, etc.) His description both defines, and elaborates on communication as a process. He expands to include all aspects of an interaction. His conclusion the “communication is a highly abstract logical function invented to encompass and relate these sub processes” is the best I have read. Without including the various other components that affect the process, you are ignoring a large portion of the context. Communication is an active process involving encoding, transmitting, and decoding intended messages. If you consider the internal process of the original message then you are considering intrapersonal communication (communication with one's self).

Intrapersonal communication happens within ourselves, inside our own head and we have thousands of those thought processes every day. This is very important to the system ...
Related Ads