Where did the word communication come from

Communication is usually defined as the transmission of information. The term can also refer to the message itself, or the field of inquiry studying these transmissions, also known as communication studies. There are some disagreements about the precise definition of communication — for example, whether unintentional or failed transmissions are also included and whether communication does not just transmit meaning but also create it. Models of communication aim to provide a simplified overview of its main components and their interaction. Many models include the idea that a source uses a coding system to express information in the form of a message. The source uses a channel to send the message to a receiver who has to decode it in order to understand its meaning. Channels are usually discussed in terms of the senses used to perceive the message, like hearing, sight, smell, touch, and taste.

Communication can be classified based on whether information is exchanged between humans, members of other species, or non-living entities such as computers. For human communication, a central distinction is between verbal and non-verbal communication. Verbal communication involves the exchange of messages in linguistic form. This can happen through natural languages, like English or Japanese, or through artificial languages, like Esperanto. Verbal communication includes spoken and written messages as well as the use of sign language. Non-verbal communication happens without the use of a linguistic system. There are many forms of non-verbal communication, for example, using body language, body position, touch, and intonation. Another distinction is between interpersonal and intrapersonal communication. Interpersonal communication happens between distinct individuals, such as greeting someone on the street or making a phone call. Intrapersonal communication, on the other hand, is communication with oneself. This can happen internally, as a form of inner dialog or daydreaming, or externally, for example, when writing down a shopping list or engaging in a monologue.

Non-human forms of communication include animal and plant communication. Researchers in this field often formulate additional criteria for their definition of communicative behavior, like the requirement that the behavior serves a beneficial function for natural selection or that a response to the message is observed. Animal communication plays important roles for various species in the areas of courtship and mating, parent-offspring relations, social relations, navigation, self-defense, and territoriality. In the area of courtship and mating, for example, communication is used to identify and attract potential mates. An often-discussed example concerning navigational communication is the waggle dance used by bees to indicate to other bees where flowers are located. Due to the rigid cell walls of plants, their communication often happens through chemical means rather than movement. For example, various plants, like maple trees, release so-called volatile organic compounds into the air to warn other plants of a herbivore attack. Most communication takes place between members of the same species since its purpose is usually some form of cooperation, which is not as common between species. However, there are also forms of interspecies communication, mainly in cases of symbiotic relationships. For example, many flowers use symmetrical shapes and colors that stand out from their surroundings in order to communicate to insects where nectar is located to attract them. Humans also practice interspecies communication, for example, when interacting with pets.

The field of communication includes various other issues, like communicative competence and the history of communication. Communicative competence is the ability to communicate well and applies both to the capability to formulate messages and to understand them. Two central aspects are that the communicative behavior is effective, i.e. that it achieves the individual’s goal, and that it is appropriate, i.e. that it follows social standards and expectations. Human communication has a long history and how people exchange information has changed over time. These changes were usually triggered by the development of new communication technologies, such as the invention of writing systems (first pictographic and later alphabetic), the development of mass printing, the use of radio and television, and the invention of the internet.

Definitions[edit]

The word «communication» has its root in the Latin verb «communicare», which means «to share» or «to make common».[1] Communication is usually understood as the transmission of information.[2][3][4] In this regard, a message is conveyed from a sender to a receiver using some form of medium, such as sound, paper, bodily movements, or electricity.[5][6][7] In a different sense, the term «communication» can also refer just to the message that is being communicated or to the field of inquiry studying such transmissions.[2][4] There is a lot of disagreement concerning the precise characterization of communication and various scholars have raised doubts that any single definition can capture the term accurately. These difficulties come from the fact that the term is applied to diverse phenomena in different contexts, often with slightly different meanings.[8][9] The issue of the right definition affects the research process on many levels. This includes issues like which empirical phenomena are observed, how they are categorized, which hypotheses and laws are formulated as well as how systematic theories based on these steps are articulated.[8]

Some theorists, like Frank E. X. Dance, consider very broad definitions of communication that encompass unconscious and non-human behavior.[8] In this regard, many animals communicate within their own species and even plants like flowers may be said to communicate by attracting bees.[5] Other researchers restrict communication to conscious interactions among human beings.[8][5] Some definitions focus on the use of symbols and signs while others emphasize the role of understanding, interaction, power, or transmission of ideas. Various characterizations see the communicator’s intent to send a message as a central component. On this view, the transmission of information is not sufficient for communication if it happens unintentionally.[8][10] One version of this view is given by Paul Grice, who identifies communication with actions that aim to make the recipient aware of the communicator’s intention.[11] One question in this regard is whether only the successful transmission of information should be regarded as communication.[8] For example, distortion may interfere and change the actual message from what was originally intended.[6] A closely related problem is whether acts of deliberate deception constitute communication.[8]

According to an influential and broad definition by I. A. Richards, communication happens when one mind acts upon its environment in order to transmit its own experience to another mind.[12][13][14] Another characterization is due to Claude Shannon and Warren Weaver. On their view, communication involves the interaction of several components, such as a source, a message, an encoder, a channel, a decoder, and a receiver.[15][16] Various contemporary scholars hold that communication is not just about the transmission of information but also about creating meaning. This way, communication shapes the participant’s experience by conceptualizing the world, and making sense of their environment and themselves.[17] In regard to animal and plant communication, researchers focus less on meaning-making but often include additional requirements in their definition, for example, that the communicative behavior plays a beneficial role in natural selection or that some kind of response to the message is observed.[18][19][20] The paradigmatic form of communication happens between two or several individuals. However, it can also take place on a larger level, for example, between organizations, social classes, or nations.[5] Niklas Luhmann rejects the view that communication is, on its most fundamental level, an interaction between two distinct parties. Instead, he holds that «only communication can communicate» and tries to provide a conceptualization in terms of autopoietic systems without any reference to consciousness or life.[21]

Models of communication[edit]

Models of communication are conceptual representations of the process of communication.[22] Their goal is to provide a simplified overview of its main components. This makes it easier for researchers to formulate hypotheses, apply communication-related concepts to real-world cases, and test predictions.[23][24] However, it is often argued that many models lack the conceptual complexity needed for a comprehensive understanding of all the essential aspects of communication. They are usually presented visually in the form of diagrams showing various basic components and their interaction.[25][23][26]

Models of communication are often categorized based on their intended applications and how they conceptualize communication. Some models are general in the sense that they are intended for all forms of communication. They contrast with specialized models, which aim to describe only certain forms of communication, like models of mass communication.[27] An influential classification distinguishes between linear transmission models, interaction models, and transaction models.[24][28][23] Linear transmission models focus on how a sender transmits information to a receiver. They are linear because this flow of information only goes in one direction.[25][29] This view is rejected by interaction models, which include a feedback loop. Feedback is required to describe many forms of communication, such as a regular conversation, where the listener may respond by expressing their opinion on the issue or by asking for clarification. For interaction models, communication is a two-way-process in which the communicators take turns in sending and receiving messages.[25][29][30] Transaction models further refine this picture by allowing sending and responding to happen at the same time. This modification is needed, for example, to describe how the listener in a face-to-face conversation gives non-verbal feedback through their body posture and their facial expressions while the other person is talking. Transaction models also hold that meaning is produced during communication and does not exist independent of it.[30][25][31]

Diagram of Lasswell's model

Lasswell’s model is based on five questions corresponding to five basic components.

All the early models, developed in the middle of the 20th century, are linear transmission models. Lasswell’s model, for example, is based on five fundamental questions: «Who?», «Says What?», «In What Channel?», «To Whom?», and «With What Effect?».[27][32][33] The goal of these questions is to identify the basic components involved in the communicative process: the sender, the message, the channel, the receiver, and the effect.[34][35][36] Lasswell’s model was initially only conceived as a model of mass communication, but it has been applied to various other fields as well. Some theorists, like Richard Braddock, have expanded it by including additional questions, like «Under What Circumstances?» and «For What Purpose?».[37][38][39]

Diagram of the Shannon–Weaver model

The Shannon–Weaver model focuses on how a message is first translated into a signal and then back into a message.

The Shannon–Weaver model is another influential linear transmission model.[40][23][41] It is based on the idea that a source creates a message, which is then translated into a signal by a transmitter. Noise may interfere and distort the signal. Once the signal reaches the receiver, it is translated back into a message and made available to the destination. For a landline telephone call, the person calling is the source and their telephone is the transmitter. It translates the message into an electrical signal that travels through the wire, which acts as the channel. The person taking the call is the destination and their telephone is the receiver.[42][40][43] The Shannon–Weaver model includes an in-depth discussion of how noise can distort the signal and how successful communication can be achieved despite noise. This can happen, for example, by making the message partially redundant so that decoding is possible nonetheless.[42][44][45] Other influential linear transmission models include Gerbner’s model and Berlo’s model.[46][47][48]

Diagram of the feedback loop in Schramm's model of communication

Central to Schramm’s model are the processes of encoding and decoding as well as feedback.

The earliest interaction model is due to Wilbur Schramm.[30][49][50] For him, communication starts when a source has an idea and expresses it in the form of a message. This process is called encoding and happens using a code, i.e. a sign system that is able to express the idea, for example, through visual or auditory signs.[51][30][52] The message is sent to a destination, who has to decode and interpret it in order to understand it.[53][52] In response, they formulate their own idea, encode it into a message and send it back as a form of feedback. Another innovation of Schramm’s model is that previous experience is necessary to be able to encode and decode messages. For communication to be successful, the fields of experience of source and destination have to overlap.[51][54][52]

Diagram of Barnlund's model of interpersonal communication

Barnlund’s model of interpersonal communication. The orange arrows show how the communicators decode cues and the yellow arrows symbolize their behavioral responses.

The first transactional model was proposed by Dean Barnlund. He understands communication as «the production of meaning, rather than the production of messages».[31] Its goal is to decrease uncertainty and arrive at a shared understanding.[55][56][57] This happens in response to external and internal cues. Decoding is the process of ascribing meaning to them and encoding consists in producing new behavioral cues as a response.[56][58][59]

Human[edit]

There are many forms of human communication. Often discussed distinctions concern whether language is used, as in the contrast between verbal and non-verbal communication, and whether one communicates with others or with oneself, as in the contrast between interpersonal and intrapersonal communication.[60][61] The field studying human communication is known as anthroposemiotics.[62]

Mediums[edit]

Verbal[edit]

Verbal communication is the exchange of messages in linguistic form or by means of language.[63][64] Some of the difficulties in distinguishing verbal from non-verbal communication come from the difficulties in defining what exactly language means. Language is usually understood as a conventional system of symbols and rules used for communication. Such systems are based on a set of simple units of meaning that can be combined with each other to express more complex ideas. The rules for combining the units into compound expressions are called grammar. This way, words are combined to form sentences.[65][66] One hallmark of human language, in contrast to animal communication, lies in its complexity and expressive power. For example, it can be used to refer not just to concrete objects in the here-and-now but also to spatially and temporally distant objects and to abstract ideas.[67][68] The academic discipline studying language is called linguistics. Significant subfields include semantics (the study of meaning), morphology (the study of word formation), syntax (the study of sentence structure), pragmatics (the study of language use), and phonetics (the study of basic sounds).[66]

A central distinction among languages is between natural and artificial or constructed languages. Natural languages, like English, Spanish, and Japanese, developed naturally and for the most part unplanned in the course of history. Artificial languages, like Esperanto, the language of first-order logic, C++, and Quenya, are purposefully designed from the ground up.[69] Most everyday verbal communication happens using natural languages. Central forms of verbal communication are speech and writing together with their counterparts of listening and reading.[70][71] Spoken languages use sounds to produce signs and transmit meaning while for writing, the signs are physically inscribed on a surface.[70][72][73] Sign languages, like American Sign Language, are another form of verbal communication. They rely on visual means, mostly by using gestures with hands and arms, to form sentences and convey meaning.[70][73] In colloquial usage, verbal communication is sometimes restricted to oral communication and may exclude writing and sign languages. However, in the academic sense, the term is usually used in a wider sense and encompasses any form of linguistic communication, independent of whether the language is expressed through speech, writing, or gestures.[63][73][74] Humans have a natural tendency to acquire their native language in childhood. They are also able to learn other languages later in life, so-called second languages. But this process is less intuitive and often does not result in the same level of linguistic competence.[75][76]

Verbal communication serves various functions. One key function is to exchange information, i.e. an attempt by the speaker to make the audience aware of something, usually of an external event. But language can also be used to express the speaker’s feelings and attitudes. A closely related role is to establish and maintain social relations with other people. Verbal communication is also utilized to coordinate one’s behavior with others and influence them. In some cases, language is not employed for an external purpose but only for entertainment or because it is enjoyable.[64][77][78] One aspect of verbal communication that stands out in comparison to non-verbal communication is that it helps the communicators conceptualize the world around them and themselves. This affects how perceptions of external events are interpreted, how things are categorized, and how ideas are organized and related to each other.[79][80]

Non-verbal[edit]

Photo of a handshake

Non-verbal communication is the exchange of information through non-linguistic modes, like facial expressions, gestures, and postures.[81] However, not every form of non-verbal behavior constitutes non-verbal communication and some theorists, like Judee Burgoon, hold that the existence of a socially shared coding system for interpreting the meaning of the behavior is relevant for whether it should be regarded as non-verbal communication.[82] A lot of non-verbal communication happens unintentionally and unconsciously, like sweating or blushing. But there are also conscious intentional forms, like shaking hands or raising a thumb.[83][82][84] Traditionally, most research focused on verbal communication. However, this paradigm has shifted and a lot of importance is given to non-verbal communication in contemporary research.[85][86] For example, many judgments about the nature and behavior of other people are based on non-verbal cues, like their facial expressions and tone of voice.[82] Some theorists claim that the majority of the ideas and information conveyed happens this way.[87][88] According to Ray Birdwhistell, for example, 65% of communication happens non-verbally.[82] Other reasons for its significance are that it is present in almost every communicative act to some extent, that it is able to fulfill many different functions, and that certain parts of it are universally understood.[89] It has also been suggested that human communication is at its core non-verbal and that words can only acquire meaning because of non-verbal communication.[88] The earliest forms of human communication are non-verbal, like crying to indicate distress and later also babbling, which conveys information about the infant’s health and well-being.[90][91] Non-verbal communication is studied in various fields besides communication studies, like linguistics, semiotics, anthropology, and social psychology.[82]

Non-verbal communication has many functions. It frequently contains information about emotions, attitudes, personality, interpersonal relationships, and private thoughts.[92][82][83] It often happens simultaneously with verbal communication and helps optimize the exchange through emphasis and illustration or by adding additional information. Non-verbal cues can also clarify the intent behind a verbal message.[92] Communication is usually more effective if several modalities are used and their messages are consistent.[88][93] But in some cases, the different modalities contain conflicting messages, for example, when a person verbally agrees with a statement but presses their lips together, thereby indicating disagreement non-verbally.[84]

There are many forms of non-verbal communication. They include kinesics, proxemics, haptics, paralanguage, chronemics, and physical appearance.[94][83] Kinesics investigates the role of bodily behavior in conveying information. It is commonly referred to as body language, even though it is, strictly speaking, not a language but belongs to non-verbal communication. It includes many forms, like gestures, postures, walking styles, and dance.[82][83][95] Facial expressions, like laughing, smiling, and frowning, all belong to kinesics and are expressive and flexible forms of communication.[96] Oculesics is another subcategory of kinesics in regard to the eyes. It covers questions like how eye contact, gaze, blink rate, and pupil dilation form part of communication.[97] Some kinesic patterns are inborn and involuntary, like blinking, while others are learned and voluntary, like giving a military salute.[84] Proxemics studies how personal space is used in communication. For example, the distance between the speakers reflects their degree of familiarity and intimacy with each other as well as their social status.[97] Haptics investigates how information is conveyed using touching behavior, like handshakes, holding hands, kissing, or slapping. Many of the meanings associated with haptics reflect care, concern, anger, and violence. For example, handshaking is often seen as a symbol of equality and fairness, while refusing to shake hands can indicate aggressiveness. Kissing is another form often used to show affection and erotic closeness.[97][98]

Paralanguage, also known as vocalics, concerns the use of voice in communication. It depends on verbal communication in the form of speech but studies how something is said instead of what is said. It includes factors like articulation, lip control, rhythm, intensity, pitch, fluency, and loudness.[99][83] In this regard, saying something loudly and in high pitch may convey a very different meaning than whispering the same words. Paralanguage is mainly concerned with spoken language but also includes aspects of written language, like the use of colors and fonts as well as the spatial arrangement in paragraphs and tables.[100] Chronemics concerns the use of time, for example, what messages are sent by being on time or being late for a meeting.[101] The physical appearance of the communicator also carries a lot of information, like height, weight, hair, skin color, gender, odors, clothing, tattooing, and piercing.[102][81] It is an important factor for first impressions but is more limited as a mode of communication since it is less changeable.[102] Some forms of non-verbal communication happen using artifacts, such as drums, smoke, batons, or traffic lights.[103]

Channels[edit]

Picture of the five senses

Channels of communication are often discussed in terms of the five senses as the sensory modes of perceiving the message.

For communication to be successful, the message has to travel from the sender to the receiver. The channel is the way this is accomplished. In this regard, the channel is not concerned with the meaning of the message but only with the technical means of how the meaning is conveyed.[104][42] Channels are often understood in terms of the senses used to perceive the message, i.e. hearing, seeing, smelling, touching, and tasting.[104][105][106] But in the widest sense, channels encompass any form of transmission, including technological means like books, cables, radio waves, telephones, or television.[104][107] Naturally transmitted messages usually fade rapidly whereas many messages using artificial channels have a much longer lifespan, like books or sculptures.[107]

The physical characteristics of a channel have an impact on the code and cues that can be used to express the information. For example, telephone calls are restricted to the use of verbal language and paralanguage but exclude facial expressions. It is often possible to translate messages from one code into another to make them available to a different channel, for example, by writing down words instead of speaking them or by using sign language.[108] For many technical purposes, the choice of channels matters regarding the amount of information that can be transmitted. For example, a wired Ethernet connection may have a higher capacity for data transfer than a wireless WiFi connection, making it more suitable for transferring large amounts of data. The same is true for fiber optic cables in contrast to copper cables.[106][109][110]

The transmission of information can occur through multiple channels at once. For example, regular face-to-face communication combines the auditory channel to convey verbal information with the visual channel transmitting non-verbal information using gestures and facial expressions. Employing multiple channels can enhance the effectiveness of communication by helping the audience better understand the subject matter.[93][111] The choice of channels often matters since the receiver’s ability to understand may vary depending on the chosen channel. For example, a teacher may decide to present some information orally and other information visually, depending on the content and the student’s preferred learning style.[112][111]

Interpersonal[edit]

Photo of a conversation between Kathy Matayoshi and Mazie Hirono

Interpersonal communication happens between two or more distinct individuals, like during a conversation.

Interpersonal communication is communication between distinct individuals. Its typical form is dyadic communication between two people but it can also refer to communication within groups.[113][114][115] It can be planned or unplanned and occurs in many different forms, like when greeting someone, during salary negotiations, or when making a phone call.[114][116] Some theorists, like Virginia M. McDermott, understand interpersonal communication as a fuzzy concept that manifests in degrees.[117] On this view, an exchange is more or less interpersonal depending on how many people are present, whether it happens face-to-face rather than through telephone or email, and whether it focuses on the relationship between the communicators.[118] In this regard, group communication and mass communication are less typical forms of interpersonal communication and some theorists treat them as distinct types.[107][114][118]

Various theories of the function of interpersonal communication have been proposed. Some focus on how it helps people make sense of their world and create society while others hold that its primary purpose is to understand why other people act the way they do and to adjust one’s behavior accordingly.[119] A closely related approach is to focus on information and see interpersonal communication as an attempt to reduce uncertainty about others and external events.[120] Other explanations understand it in terms of the needs it satisfies. This includes the needs of belonging somewhere, being included, being liked, maintaining relationships, and influencing the behavior of others.[120][121] On a practical level, interpersonal communication is used to coordinate one’s actions with the actions of others in order to get things done.[122] Research on interpersonal communication concerns such topics as how people build, maintain, and dissolve relationships through communication, why they choose one message rather than another, what effects these messages have on the relationship and on the individual, and how to predict whether two people would like each other.[123]

Interpersonal communication can be synchronous or asynchronous. For asynchronous communication, the different parties take turns in sending and receiving messages. An example would be the exchange of letters or emails. For synchronous communication, both parties send messages at the same time.[113] This happens, for example, when one person is talking while the other person sends non-verbal messages in response signaling whether they agree with what is being said.[25] Some theorists, like Sarah Trenholm and Arthur Jensen, distinguish between content messages and relational messages. Content messages express the speaker’s feelings toward the topic of discussion. Relational messages, on the other hand, demonstrate the speaker’s feelings toward their relationship with the other participants.[124]

Intrapersonal[edit]

Painting of a woman engaged in daydreaming

Daydreaming is a form of intrapersonal communication.

Intrapersonal communication is communication with oneself.[125][116][126] In some cases this manifests externally, like when engaged in a monologue, taking notes, highlighting a passage, and writing a diary or a shopping list. But many forms of intrapersonal communication happen internally in the form of inner dialog, like when thinking about something or daydreaming.[125]

Intrapersonal communication serves various functions. As a form of inner dialog, it is usually triggered by external events and may happen in the form of articulating a phrase before expressing it externally, planning for the future, or as an attempt to process emotions when trying to calm oneself down in stressful situations.[114][127] It can help regulate one’s own mental activity and outward behavior as well as internalize cultural norms and ways of thinking.[128] External forms of intrapersonal communication can aid one’s memory, like when making a shopping list, help unravel difficult problems, as when solving a complex mathematical equation line by line, and internalize new knowledge, like when repeating new vocabulary to oneself. Because of these functions, intrapersonal communication can be understood as «an exceptionally powerful and pervasive tool for thinking.»[129]

Based on its role in self-regulation, some theorists have suggested that intrapersonal communication is more fundamental than interpersonal communication. This is based on the observation that young children sometimes use egocentric speech while playing in an attempt to direct their own behavior. On this view, interpersonal communication only develops later when the child moves from their early egocentric perspective to a more social perspective.[130][131] Other theorists contend that interpersonal communication is more basic. They explain this by arguing that language is used first by parents to regulate what their child does. Once the child has learned this, it can apply the same technique on itself to get more control over its own behavior.[128][132]

Contexts and purposes[edit]

There are countless other categorizations of communication besides the types discussed so far. They often focus on the context, purpose, and topic of communication. For example, organizational communication concerns communication between members of organizations such as corporations, nonprofits, or small businesses. Central in this regard is the coordination of the behavior of the different members as well as the interaction with customers and the general public.[133][134] Closely related terms are business communication, corporate communication, professional communication, and workspace communication.[135][136] Political communication is communication in relation to politics. It covers topics like electoral campaigns to influence the voters and legislative communication, like letters to a congress or committee documents. Specific emphasis is often given to propaganda and the role of mass media.[137] Intercultural communication is relevant to both organizational and political communication since they often involve attempts to exchange messages between communicators from different cultural backgrounds.[138] In this context, it is crucial to avoid misunderstandings since the cultural background affects how messages are formulated and interpreted.[139][54] This is also relevant for development communication, which is concerned with the use of communication for assisting in development, specifically concerning aid given by first-world countries to third-world countries.[140][141] Another significant field is health communication, which is about communication in the field of healthcare and health promotion efforts. A central topic in this field is how healthcare providers, like doctors and nurses, should communicate with their patients.[142][143]

Many other types of communication are discussed in the academic literature. They include international communication, non-violent communication, strategic communication, military communication, aviation communication, risk communication, defensive communication, upward communication, interdepartmental communication, scientific communication, environmental communication, and agricultural communication.[144][145][146]

Other species[edit]

Besides human communication, there are many other forms of communication found, for example, in the animal kingdom and among plants. The field of inquiry studying these forms of communication is called biosemiotics.[147][114] There are additional difficulties in this field for judging whether communication has taken place between two individuals. For example, acoustic signals are often easy to notice and analyze for scientists but additional difficulties come when judging whether tactile or chemical changes should be understood as communicative signals rather than as other biological processes.[148]

For this reason, researchers often use slightly altered definitions of communication in order to facilitate their work. A common assumption in this regard comes from evolutionary biology and holds that communication should somehow benefit the communicators in terms of natural selection.[18][19] In this regard, «communication can be defined as the exchange of information between individuals, wherein both the signaller and receiver may expect to benefit from the exchange.»[149] So the sender should benefit by influencing the receiver’s behavior and the receiver should benefit by responding to the signal. It is often held that these benefits should exist on average but not necessarily in every single case. This way, deceptive signaling can also be understood as a form of communication. One problem with the evolutionary approach is that it is often very difficult to assess the influence of such behavior on natural selection.[150] Another common pragmatic constraint is to hold that it is necessary to observe a response by the receiver following the signal when judging whether communication has occurred.[151]

Animals[edit]

Animal communication is the process of giving and taking information among animals.[152] The field studying animal communication is called zoosemiotics.[153] There are many parallels to human communication. For example, humans and many animals express sympathy by synchronizing their movements and postures.[92] Nonetheless, there are also significant differences, like the fact that humans also engage in verbal communication while animal communication is restricted to non-verbal communication.[153][154] Some theorists have tried to distinguish human from animal communication based on the claim that animal communication lacks a referential function and is thus not able to refer to external phenomena. However, this view is often rejected, especially for higher animals.[155] A different approach is to draw the distinction based on the complexity of human language, especially its almost limitless ability to combine basic units of meaning into more complex meaning structures. For example, it has been argued that recursion is a property of human language that sets it apart from all non-human communicative systems.[156] Another difference is that human communication is frequently associated with a conscious intention to send information, which is often not discernable for animal communication.[157]

Photo of a firefly

Many species of fireflies communicate with light to attract mates.

Animal communication can take a variety of forms, including visual, auditory, tactile, olfactory, and gustatory communication. Visual communication happens in the form of movements, gestures, facial expressions, and colors, like movements seen during mating rituals, the colors of birds, and the rhythmic light of fireflies. Auditory communication takes place through vocalizations by species like birds, primates, and dogs. It is frequently used to alert and warn. Lower animals often have very simple response patterns to auditory messages, reacting either by approach or avoidance.[158][153] More complex response patterns are observed for higher species, which may use different signals for different types of predators and responses. For example, certain primates use different signals for airborne and land predators.[64] Tactile communication occurs through touch, vibration, stroking, rubbing, and pressure. It is especially relevant for parent-young relations, courtship, social greetings, and defense. Olfactory and gustatory communication happens chemically through smells and tastes.
[158][153]

There are huge differences between species concerning what functions communication plays, how much it is realized, and the behavior through which they communicate.[159] Common functions include the fields of courtship and mating, parent-offspring relations, social relations, navigation, self-defense, and territoriality.[160] One part of courtship and mating consists in identifying and attracting potential mates. This can happen through songs, like grasshoppers and crickets, chemically through pheromones, like moths, and through visual messages by flashing light, like fireflies.[161][159] For many species, the offspring depends for its survival on the parent. One central function of parent-offspring communication is to recognize each other. In some cases, the parents are also able to guide the offspring’s behavior.[162][163] Social animals, like chimpanzees, bonobos, wolves, and dogs, engage in various forms of communication to express their feelings and build relations.[164] Navigation concerns the movement through space in a purposeful manner, e.g. to locate food, avoid enemies, and follow a colleague. In bats, this happens through echolocation, i.e. by sending auditory signals and processing the information from the echoes. Bees are another often-discussed case in this respect since they perform a dance to indicate to other bees where flowers are located.[165] In regard to self-defense, communication is used to warn others and to assess whether a costly fight can be avoided.[166][167] Another function of communication is to mark and claim certain territories used for food and mating. For example, some male birds claim a hedge or part of a meadow by using songs to keep other males away and attract females.[168]

Two competing theories in the study of animal communication are nature theory and nurture theory. Their conflict concerns to what extent animal communication is programmed into the genes as a form of adaptation rather than learned from previous experience as a form of conditioning.[64][19] To the degree that it is learned, it usually happens through imprinting, i.e. as a form of learning that only happens in a certain phase and is then mostly irreversible.[169]

Plants, fungi, and bacteria[edit]

Plant communication refers to plant processes involving the sending and receiving of information.[170] The field studying plant communication is called phytosemiotics.[171] This field poses additional difficulties for researchers since plants are very different from humans and other animals: they lack a central nervous system and have rigid cell walls.[172][173][174] These walls restrict movement and make it impossible for plants to send or receive signals that depend on rapid movement.[151] However, there are various similarities as well since plants face many of the same challenges as other animals, like finding resources, avoiding predators and pathogens as well as finding mates and ensuring that their offspring survives.[175] Many of the evolutionary responses to these challenges are analogous to those in animals but are implemented using different means.[176] One crucial difference is that chemical communication is much more prominent for plant communication in contrast to the importance of visual and auditory communication for animals.[177]

Diagram of the steps of plant communication

Steps of plant communication

Communication is a form of behavior. In regard to plants, the term behavior is usually not defined in terms of physical movement, as is the case for animals, but as a biochemical response to a stimulus. This response has to be short relative to the plant’s lifespan. Communication is a special form of behavior that involves conveying information from a sender to a receiver and is distinguished from other types of behavior, like defensive reactions and mere sensing.[178] Theorists usually include additional requirements, like that there is some form of response in the receiver and that the communicative behavior benefits both sender and receiver in terms of natural selection.[20][179] Richard Karban distinguishes three steps of plant communication: the emission of a cue by a sender, the perception of the cue by a receiver, and their response.[180] It is not relevant to what extent the emission of a cue is intentional but it should be possible for the receiver to ignore the signal.[181]

Plant communication happens in various forms. It includes communication within plants, i.e. within plant cells and between plant cells, between plants of the same or related species, and between plants and non-plant organisms, especially in the root zone. Plant roots also communicate with rhizome bacteria, fungi, and insects within the soil.[182] A prominent form of communication is airborne and happens through so-called volatile organic compounds (VOCs). For example, many plants, like maple trees, release VOCs when they are attacked by a herbivore to warn neighboring plants, which then react accordingly by adjusting their defenses.[183][184][185] Another form of plant-to-plant communication happens through mycorrhizal fungi. These fungi form underground networks, sometimes referred to as the Wood-Wide Web, and connect the roots of different plants. The plants use the network to send messages to each other, specifically to warn other plants of a pest attack and to help prepare their defenses.[186]

Communication can also be observed for fungi and bacteria. Some fungal species communicate by releasing pheromones into the external environment. For example, they are used to promote sexual interaction (mating) in several aquatic fungal species, like Allomyces macrogynus, the Mucorales fungus Mucor mucedo, Neurospora crassa and the yeasts Saccharomyces cerevisiae, Schizosaccharomyces pombe, and Rhodosporidium toruloides.[187][188][189] One form of communication between bacteria is called quorum sensing. It happens by releasing hormone-like molecules, which other bacteria detect and respond to. This process is used to monitor the environment for other bacteria and to coordinate population-wide responses, for example, by sensing the density of bacteria and regulating gene expression accordingly. Other possible responses include the induction of bioluminescence and the formation of biofilms.[190][191][192]

Interspecies[edit]

Most communication happens between members within a species as a form of intraspecies communication. This is because the purpose of communication is usually some form of cooperation, which happens mostly within a species while different species are often in conflict with each other in their competition over resources.[193] However, there are also some forms of interspecies communication.[194][193] This occurs especially when there are symbiotic relationships and significantly less for parasitic or predator-prey relationships.[195][196]

Photo of a honey bee on the Cosmos bipinnatus flower

Many flowers use vivid colors to signal to insects that they offer food like nectar.

Interspecies communication plays a key role for various plants that depend for their reproduction on external agents.[197] For example, flowers need insects for pollination and provide resources like nectar and other rewards in return.[198] They use various forms of communication to signal their benefits and attract visitors, for example, by using colors that stand out from their surroundings and by using symmetrical shapes.[199][200] This form of advertisement is necessary since different flowers compete for potential visitors.[201] Many fruit-bearing plants rely on plant-to-animal communication to disperse their seeds and move them to a favorable location.[202] This happens by providing nutritious fruits to animals. The seeds are eaten together with the fruit and are later excreted at a different location.[203] Communication is central to make the animals aware of where the fruits are and whether they are ripe. For many fruits, this happens through their color: they have an inconspicuous green color until they ripen and take on a new color that stands in visual contrast to the environment.[204] Another example of interspecies communication is found in the ant-plant relationship.[195][193] It concerns, for example, the selection of seeds by ants for their ant gardens and the pruning of exogenous vegetation as well as plant protection by ants.[205]

Several animal species also engage in interspecies communication, like apes, whales, dolphins, elephants, and dogs.[206] For example, different species of monkeys use common signals to cooperate when threatened by a common predator.[196] An example of interspecies communication involving humans is found in their relation to pets.[207][192] For example, acoustic signals play a central role in communication with dogs. Dogs are able to learn to respond to various commands, like «sit» and «come». They can even learn short syntactic combinations, like «bring X» or «put X in a box». They also react to the pitch and frequency of the human voice by reading off information about emotions, dominance, and uncertainty. Humans can understand dog signals in the form of interpreting and reacting to their emotions, such as aggressiveness, fearfulness, and playfulness.[208][209]

Computer[edit]

Diagram of computer communication from a personal computer to a server

Example of computer communication: modems act as transmitter and receiver while the public telephone network is used as a transmission system.[210]

Computer communication concerns the exchange of data between computers and similar devices.[211][212] For this to be possible, the devices have to be connected through a transmission system that forms a network between them. To access the transmission system, a transmitter is required to send messages and a receiver is required to receive them. For example, a personal computer may use a modem as a transmitter to send information to a server through the public telephone network as the transmission system. The server may use a modem as its receiver.[213][214] To transmit the data, it has to be converted into an electric signal.[215] Communication channels used for transmission are either analog or digital and are characterized by features like bandwidth and latency.[216][217][218]

There are many different forms of computer networks. The most commonly discussed ones are LANs and WANs. LAN stands for local area network, which are computer networks within a limited area, usually with a distance of less than one kilometer.[219][220] For example, connecting two computers within a home or an office building is a form of LAN. This can happen using a wired connection, like Ethernet, or a wireless connection, like WiFi.[221][222] WANs, on the other hand, are wide area networks that span large geographical regions, like the internet.[219][223][220] They may use several intermediate connection nodes to link the different endpoints.[224][225] Further types of computer networks include PANs (personal area networks), CANs (campus area networks), and MANs (Metropolitan area networks).[226][227]

For computer communication to be successful, the involved devices have to follow a common set of conventions governing their exchange. These conventions are known as the communication protocol and concern various aspects of the exchange, like the format of the data exchanged, how to respond to transmission errors, and how the two systems are synchronized, for example, how the receiver identifies the start and end of a signal.[228][229] A significant distinction in this regard is between simplex, half-duplex, and full-duplex systems. For simplex systems, signals flow only in one direction from the sender to the receiver, like in radio, television, or screens displaying arrivals and departures at airports.[225] Half-duplex systems allow two-way exchanges but signals can only flow in one direction at a time, like walkie-talkies or police radios. In the case of full-duplex systems, signals can flow in both directions at the same time, like regular telephone and internet.[230] In either case, it is often important that the connection is secure to ensure that the transmitted data reaches only the intended destination and not an unauthorized third party.[231]

Human-computer communication is a closely related field that concerns the question of how humans interact with computers.[232] This happens through a user interface, which includes the hardware used to interact with the computer, like mouse, keyboard, and monitor, as well as the software used in the process.[233] On the software side, most early user interfaces were command-line interfaces in which the user has to type a command to interact with the computer.[234] Most modern user interfaces are graphical user interfaces, like Microsoft Windows and macOS. They involve various graphical elements through which the user can interact with the computer, like icons representing files and folders as well as buttons used to trigger commands. They are usually much easier to use for non-experts.[235] One aim when designing user interfaces is to simplify the interaction with computers. This helps make them more user-friendly and accessible to a wider audience while also increasing productivity.[236]

Communication studies[edit]

Communication studies, also referred to as communication science, is the academic discipline studying communication. It is closely related to semiotics, with one difference being that communication studies focuses more on technical questions of how messages are sent, received, and processed while semiotics tackles more abstract questions in relation to meaning and hows signs acquire meaning.[64] Communication studies covers a wide area overlapping with many other disciplines, such as biology, anthropology, psychology, sociology, linguistics, media studies, and journalism.[237]

Many contributions in the field of communication studies focus on developing models and theories of communication. Models of communication aim to give a simplified overview of the main components involved in communication. Theories of communication, on the other hand, try to provide conceptual frameworks to accurately present communication in all its complexity.[238][26][239] Other topics in communication studies concern the function and effects of communication, like satisfying physiological and psychological needs and building relationships as well as gathering information about the environment, others, and oneself.[240][121] A further issue concerns the question of how communication systems change over time and how these changes correlate with other societal changes.[241] A related question focuses on psychological principles underlying those changes and the effects they have on how people exchange ideas.[242]

Communication was already studied as early as Ancient Greece. Influential early theories are due to Plato and Aristotle, who emphasized public speaking and the understanding of rhetoric. For example, Aristotle held that the goal of communication is to persuade the audience.[243] However, the field of communication studies only became a separate research discipline in the 20th century, especially starting in the 1940s.[244][245] The development of new communication technologies, such as telephone, radio, newspapers, television, and the internet, has had a big impact on communication and communication studies.[244][246][247] Today, communication studies is a wide discipline that includes many subfields dedicated to topics like interpersonal and intrapersonal communication, verbal and non-verbal communication, group communication, organizational communication, political communication, intercultural communication, mass communication, persuasive communication, and health communication.[244][144][248] Some works in communications studies try to provide a very general characterization of communication in the widest sense while others attempt to give a precise analysis of a specific form of communication.[144]

Communicative competence[edit]

Communicative competence is the ability to communicate effectively or to choose the appropriate communicative behavior in a given situation.[249] It concerns several aspects, like what to say and how to say it as well as when to say it.[250] It includes both the capability to send messages as well as to receive and understand them.[251] Competence is often used as a synonym for ability[252] and contrasted with performance: competence can be present even if it is not exercised while performance consists in the realization of this competence.[253][254][255] However, some theorists reject this distinction and hold instead that whether the behavior is actually performed is highly relevant for whether the competence is possessed. On this view, performance is the observable part and is used to infer competence in relation to future performances.[256] Some researchers define communicative competence subjectively as the individual’s perception of their performance, i.e. whether they managed to realize their own goals.[257] A different approach is to understand it more objectively, judged from the perspective of an observer concerning whether a person meets certain social expectations. These two perspectives are not mutually exclusive and can be combined by achieving one’s personal goals while doing so in a socially appropriate manner.[258]

In this regard, there are two central components to communicative competence: effectiveness and appropriateness.[259][260] Effectiveness is the degree to which the speaker achieves their desired outcomes or the degree to which preferred alternatives are realized.[261][251] This means that whether a communicative behavior is effective does not just depend on the actual outcome but also on the speaker’s intention, i.e. whether this outcome was what they intended to achieve. Because of this, some theorists additionally require that the speaker has a certain background knowledge of what they were doing and should therefore be able to give an explanation of why they engaged in one behavior rather than another.[262] Effectiveness is closely related to efficiency but not identical to it. The difference is that effectiveness is about achieving goals while efficiency is about using few resources (such as time, effort, and money) in the process.[252] Appropriateness means that the communicative behavior meets certain social standards and expectations.[262][260] It is «the perceived legitimacy or acceptability of behavior or enactments in a given context».[252] This means that the speaker is aware of the social and cultural context in order to adapt and express the message in a way that is considered acceptable in the given situation.[263][264][265] For example, to bid farewell to their teacher, a student may use the expression «Goodbye, sir» but not the expression «I gotta split, man», which they may use when talking to a peer.[266][267] To be both effective and appropriate means to achieve one’s preferred outcomes in a way that follows social standards and expectations.[268]

Many additional components of communicative competence have been suggested, such as empathy, control, flexibility, sensitivity, and knowledge.[269][270] It is often discussed in terms of the individual communications skills employed in the process, i.e. the specific behavioral components that make up communicative competence.[271][272] They include nonverbal communication skills and conversation skills as well as message
production and reception skills.[251] Examples of message production skills are speaking and writing while listening and reading are the corresponding reception skills.[71] On a purely linguistic level, communicative competence involves a proper understanding of a language, including its phonology, orthography, syntax, lexicon, and semantics.[267] It impacts many aspects of the individual’s life that depend on successful communication, like ensuring basic necessities of survival as well as building and maintaining relationships.[273] Communicative competence is a key factor regarding whether a person is able to reach their goals in social life, like having a successful career or finding a suitable spouse.[274] Because of this, it can have a big impact on the individual’s well-being.[273][271] The lack of communicative competence, on the other hand, can cause various problems both on the individual and the societal level, including professional, academic, and health problems.[271]

Barriers to effective communication[edit]

Barriers to effective communication can distort the message. This may result in failed communication and cause undesirable effects. Potential sources of distortion include filtering, selective perception, information overload, emotions, communication apprehension, and gender differences.[275] Noise is another negative factor. It concerns influences that interfere with the message on its way to the receiver and distort it.[25][276] For example, crackling sounds during a telephone call are one form of noise. Ambiguous expressions can also inhibit effective communication and make it necessary to disambiguate between the possible interpretation to discern the sender’s intention.[277] These interpretations depend also on the cultural background of the participants. Significant cultural differences constitute additional difficulties and make it more likely that messages are misinterpreted.[53][54][278]

History[edit]

The history of communication investigates how communicative processes evolved and interacted with society, culture, and technology.[279][280] Human communication has a long history and the way people communicate has changed a lot in the process. Many of these changes were triggered by the development of new communication technology and had various effects on how people exchanged ideas.[281][282][283] In the academic literature, the history of communication is usually divided into different ages based on the dominant form of communication in that age. There are some disagreements about the number of ages and the precise periodization but they usually include ages for speaking, writing, and print as well as electronic mass communication and the internet.[284] According to Marshall Poe, the different dominant media for each age can be characterized in relation to accessibility (cost of using the medium), privacy (cost of hiding data from third parties), fidelity (degree to which the medium can express information), volume (amount of data that can be transmitted), velocity (the time it takes to transmit), range (the maximum distance between sender and receiver), persistence (the time the data remains intact), and searchability (how easy it is to find data). Poe argues that subsequent ages usually involve some form of improvement in regard to these characteristics.[285][281]

In early societies, spoken language was the primary form of communication.[107][282] Most knowledge was passed on through it, often in the form of stories or wise sayings. One problem with this form is that it does not produce stable knowledge since it depends on imperfect human memory. Because of this, many details differ from one telling to the next and are presented differently by distinct storytellers.[107] As people started to settle and form agricultural communities, societies grew and there was an increased need for stable records of ownership of land and commercial transactions. This triggered the invention of writing, which is able to solve many of these problems of oral communication.[286][282] It is much more efficient at preserving knowledge and passing it on between generations since it does not depend on human memory.[287][282]

Photo of a sales contract inscribed on a clay tablet using cuneiform

Sales contract inscribed on a clay tablet in pictographic writing using cuneiform

Most early written communication happened through pictograms. Pictograms are graphical symbols that convey meaning by visually resembling real world objects. The first complex pictographic writing system was developed around 3500 BCE by the Sumerians and is called cuneiform.[287][282][288] Pictograms are still in use today, like no-smoking signs and the symbols of male and female figures on bathroom doors.[287] A significant disadvantage of pictographic writing systems is that they require a huge amount of symbols to refer to all the objects one wants to talk about. This problem was solved by the development of alphabetic writing systems, which dominate to this day. Their symbols do not stand for regular objects but for the basic units of sound used in spoken language, so-called phonemes.[287][289][282] Another drawback of early forms of writing, like the clay tablets used for cuneiform, was that they were not very portable. This made it difficult to transport the texts from one location to another to share the information. This changed with the invention of papyrus by the Egyptians around 2500 BCE and was further improved later by the development of parchment and paper.[282][290]

Until the 1400s, almost all written communication was done by hand. Because of this, the spread of writing within society was still rather limited since the cost of copying books by hand was relatively high. The introduction and popularization of mass printing in the middle of the 15th century by Johann Gutenberg resulted in rapid changes in this regard. It quickly increased the circulation of written media and also led to the dissemination of new forms of written documents, like newspapers and pamphlets. One side effect was that the augmented availability of written documents significantly improved the general literacy of the population. This development served as the foundation for revolutions in various fields, including science, politics, and religion.[291][282][292]

Scientific discoveries in the 19th and 20th centuries caused many further developments in the history of communication. They include the invention of telegraphs and telephones, which made it even easier and faster to transmit information from one location to another without the need to transport written documents.[282][293] These communication forms were initially limited to cable connections, which had to be established first. Later developments found ways of wireless transmission using radio signals. They made it possible to reach wide audiences and radio soon became one of the central forms of mass communication.[294][282] Various innovations in the field of photography enabled the recording of images on film, which led to the development of cinema and television.[295][282] The reach of wireless communication was further enhanced with the development of satellites, which made it possible to broadcast radio and television signals to different stations all over the world. This way, information could be shared almost instantly everywhere around the globe.[282] The development of the internet constitutes a further milestone in the history of communication. It made it easier than ever before for people to exchange ideas, collaborate, and access information from anywhere in the world by using a variety of means, such as websites, e-mail, social media, and video conferences.[296][297]

See also[edit]

  • 21st century skills
  • Advice
  • Augmentative and alternative communication
  • Bias-free communication
  • Communication rights
  • Context as Other Minds
  • Cross-cultural communication
  • Data transmission
  • Error detection and correction
  • Information engineering
  • Inter mirifica
  • Intercultural communication
  • Ishin-denshin
  • Group dynamics
  • Proactive communications
  • Sign system
  • Signal
  • Small talk
  • SPEAKING
  • Telepathy
  • Understanding

References[edit]

  1. ^ Rosengren, Karl Erik (11 February 2000). «1.1 On communication». Communication: An Introduction. SAGE. pp. 1–2. ISBN 9780803978379.Cobley, Paul (5 June 2008), «Communication: Definitions and Concepts», in Donsbach, Wolfgang (ed.), The International Encyclopedia of Communication, Chichester, UK: John Wiley & Sons, Ltd, pp. 660–6, doi:10.1002/9781405186407.wbiecc071, ISBN 9781405186407, archived from the original on 7 December 2021, retrieved 20 July 2021Harper, Douglas. «communication». Online Etymology Dictionary. Retrieved 23 June 2013.«An Introduction to Group Communication: 1.2 What Is Communication?». 2012books.lardbucket.org. Archived from the original on 9 December 2021. Retrieved 23 March 2021.

  2. ^ a b Publishers, HarperCollins. «communication». www.ahdictionary.com. Retrieved 27 September 2022.
  3. ^ «communication». www.merriam-webster.com. Retrieved 27 September 2022.
  4. ^ a b «communication». Cambridge Dictionary. Retrieved 27 September 2022.
  5. ^ a b c d Rosengren, Karl Erik (11 February 2000). «1.1 On communication». Communication: An Introduction. SAGE. pp. 1–2. ISBN 9780803978379.
  6. ^ a b Munodawafa, D. (1 June 2008). «Communication: concepts, practice and challenges». Health Education Research. 23 (3): 369–370. doi:10.1093/her/cyn024. PMID 18504296.
  7. ^ Blackburn, Simon (1996). «Meaning and communication». In Craig, Edward (ed.). Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Routledge. doi:10.4324/9780415249126-U024-1. ISBN 9780415073103.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g Dance, Frank E. X. (1 June 1970). «The «Concept» of Communication». Journal of Communication. 20 (2): 201–210. doi:10.1111/j.1460-2466.1970.tb00877.x.
  9. ^ Craig, Robert T. (1999). «Communication Theory as a Field». Communication Theory. 9 (2): 119–161. doi:10.1111/j.1468-2885.1999.tb00355.x. Archived from the original on 30 July 2022. Retrieved 21 July 2021.
  10. ^ Miller, Gerald R. (1 June 1966). «On Defining Communication: Another Stab». Journal of Communication. 16 (2): 88–98. doi:10.1111/j.1460-2466.1966.tb00020.x. ISSN 0021-9916. PMID 5941548. Archived from the original on 30 July 2022. Retrieved 21 July 2021.
  11. ^ Blackburn, Simon (1996). «Intention and communication». In Craig, Edward (ed.). Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Routledge. doi:10.4324/9780415249126-U006-1. ISBN 9780415073103.
  12. ^ Ibekwe-SanJuan, Fidelia; Dousa, Thomas M. (30 August 2013). Theories of Information, Communication and Knowledge: A Multidisciplinary Approach. Springer Science & Business Media. ISBN 9789400769731.
  13. ^ Lyon, Arabella (8 September 1998). Intentions: Negotiated, Contested, and Ignored. Penn State Press. p. 31. ISBN 9780271075839.
  14. ^ Nöth, Winfried (1995). Handbook of Semiotics. Indiana University Press. p. 172. ISBN 9780253209597.
  15. ^ US congress, Office of Technology Assessment (1990). Critical Connections: Communication for the Future. US Government Printing Office. p. 31. ISBN 9781428921825.
  16. ^ Skyttner, Lars (4 January 2006). General Systems Theory: Problems, Perspectives, Practice (2nd ed.). World Scientific. p. 207. ISBN 9789814479981.
  17. ^ Barnlund 2013, p. 48Littlejohn & Foss 2009, p. 179Department of Communication, Indiana State University (2016). «3.4: Functions of Verbal Communication». Introduction to Public Communication. Indiana State University Press.Reisinger, Yvette; Dimanche, Frederic (27 August 2010). International Tourism. Routledge. pp. 166–7. ISBN 9781136438882.

  18. ^ a b Baluška & Ninkovic 2010, p. 1, 3.
  19. ^ a b c Håkansson & Westander 2013, p. 7.
  20. ^ a b Karban 2015, p. 5.
  21. ^ Luhmann, Niklas (August 1992). «What is Communication?». Communication Theory. 2 (3): 251–259. doi:10.1111/j.1468-2885.1992.tb00042.x.
  22. ^ Ruben, Brent D. (2001). «Models Of Communication». Encyclopedia of Communication and Information. pp. 607–8. ISBN 9780028653860.
  23. ^ a b c d McQuail, Denis (2008). «Models of communication». In Donsbach, Wolfgang (ed.). The International Encyclopedia of Communication, 12 Volume Set. Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 3143–9. ISBN 9781405131995.
  24. ^ a b Narula, Uma (2006). «1. Basic Communication Models». Handbook of Communication Models, Perspectives, Strategies. Atlantic Publishers & Dist. pp. 11–44. ISBN 9788126905133.
  25. ^ a b c d e f «1.2 The Communication Process». Communication in the Real World. University of Minnesota Libraries Publishing. 29 September 2016. ISBN 9781946135070.
  26. ^ a b Cobley, Paul; Schulz, Peter J. (30 January 2013). «Introduction». Theories and Models of Communication. De Gruyter Mouton. pp. 1–16. doi:10.1515/9783110240450. ISBN 9783110240450.
  27. ^ a b Fiske, John (2011). «2. Other models». Introduction to Communication Studies. Routledge. pp. 24–38. ISBN 978-0203134313.
  28. ^ Chandler, Daniel; Munday, Rod (10 February 2011). «transmission models». A Dictionary of Media and Communication. OUP Oxford. p. 438. ISBN 9780199568758.
  29. ^ a b Kastberg, Peter (13 December 2019). Knowledge Communication: Contours of a Research Agenda. Frank & Timme GmbH. p. 56. ISBN 9783732904327.
  30. ^ a b c d Littlejohn & Foss 2009, p. 176.
  31. ^ a b Barnlund 2013, p. 48.
  32. ^ Watson, James; Hill, Anne (16 February 2012). «Lasswell’s model of communication». Dictionary of Media and Communication Studies. A&C Black. p. 154. ISBN 9781849665636.
  33. ^ Wenxiu, Peng (1 September 2015). «Analysis of New Media Communication Based on Lasswell’s «5W» Model». Journal of Educational and Social Research: 245–9. doi:10.5901/jesr.2015.v5n3p245. ISSN 2239-978X.
  34. ^ Steinberg 2007, p. 52-3.
  35. ^ Tengan, Callistus; Aigbavboa, Clinton; Thwala, Wellington Didibhuku (27 April 2021). Construction Project Monitoring and Evaluation: An Integrated Approach. Routledge. p. 110. ISBN 9781000381412.
  36. ^ Berger, Arthur Asa (5 July 1995). Essentials of Mass Communication Theory. SAGE. pp. 12–3. ISBN 9780803973572.
  37. ^ Sapienza, Zachary S.; Iyer, Narayanan; Veenstra, Aaron S. (3 September 2015). «Reading Lasswell’s Model of Communication Backward: Three Scholarly Misconceptions». Mass Communication and Society. 18 (5): 599–622. doi:10.1080/15205436.2015.1063666. S2CID 146389958.
  38. ^ Feicheng, Ma (31 May 2022). Information Communication. Springer Nature. p. 24. ISBN 9783031022937.
  39. ^ Braddock, Richard (1958). «An Extension of the «Lasswell Formula»«. Journal of Communication. 8 (2): 88–93. doi:10.1111/j.1460-2466.1958.tb01138.x.
  40. ^ a b Chandler, Daniel; Munday, Rod (10 February 2011). «Shannon and Weaver’s model». A Dictionary of Media and Communication. OUP Oxford. p. 387. ISBN 9780199568758.
  41. ^ Li, Hong Ling (September 2007). «From Shannon-Weaver to Boisot: A Review on the Research of Knowledge Transfer Model». 2007 International Conference on Wireless Communications, Networking and Mobile Computing: 5439–5442. doi:10.1109/WICOM.2007.1332. ISBN 9781424413119. S2CID 15690224.
  42. ^ a b c Fiske, John (2011). «1. Communication theory». Introduction to Communication Studies. Routledge. pp. 6–23. ISBN 978-0203134313.
  43. ^ Shannon, C. E. (July 1948). «A Mathematical Theory of Communication». Bell System Technical Journal. 27 (3): 379–423. doi:10.1002/j.1538-7305.1948.tb01338.x.
  44. ^ Weaver, Warren (1 September 1998). «Recent Contributions to the Mathematical Theory of Communication». The Mathematical Theory of Communication. University of Illinois Press. pp. 1–28. ISBN 9780252725463.
  45. ^ Januszewski, Alan (2001). Educational Technology: The Development of a Concept. Libraries Unlimited. p. 29. ISBN 9781563087493.
  46. ^ Watson, James; Hill, Anne (16 February 2012). «Gerbner’s model of communication». Dictionary of Media and Communication Studies. A&C Black. pp. 112–3. ISBN 9781849665636.
  47. ^ Melkote, Srinivas R.; Steeves, H. Leslie (14 December 2001). Communication for Development in the Third World: Theory and Practice for Empowerment. SAGE Publications. p. 108. ISBN 9780761994763.
  48. ^ Straubhaar, Joseph; LaRose, Robert; Davenport, Lucinda (1 January 2015). Media Now: Understanding Media, Culture, and Technology. Cengage Learning. pp. 18–9. ISBN 9781305533851.
  49. ^ Steinberg, S. (1995). Introduction to Communication Course Book 1: The Basics. Juta and Company Ltd. p. 18. ISBN 9780702136498.
  50. ^ Bowman, J. P.; Targowski, A. S. (1 October 1987). «Modeling the Communication Process: The Map is Not the Territory». Journal of Business Communication. 24 (4): 21–34. doi:10.1177/002194368702400402. S2CID 145236749.
  51. ^ a b Moore, David Mike (1994). Visual Literacy: A Spectrum of Visual Learning. Educational Technology. pp. 90–1. ISBN 9780877782643.
  52. ^ a b c Schramm, Wilbur (1954). «How communication works». The Process and Effects of Mass Communication. University of Illinois Press. pp. 3–26. ISBN 9780252001970.
  53. ^ a b Blythe, Jim (5 March 2009). Key Concepts in Marketing. SAGE Publications. p. 188. ISBN 9781847874986.
  54. ^ a b c Meng, Xiangfei (12 March 2020). National Image: China’s Communication of Cultural Symbols. Springer Nature. p. 120. ISBN 9789811531477.
  55. ^ Barnlund 2013, p. 47.
  56. ^ a b Watson, James; Hill, Anne (22 October 2015). Dictionary of Media and Communication Studies. Bloomsbury Publishing USA. pp. 20–22. ISBN 9781628921496.
  57. ^ Lawson, Celeste; Gill, Robert; Feekery, Angela; Witsel, Mieke (12 June 2019). Communication Skills for Business Professionals. Cambridge University Press. pp. 76–7. ISBN 9781108594417.
  58. ^ Dwyer, Judith (15 October 2012). Communication for Business and the Professions: Strategie s and Skills. Pearson Higher Education AU. p. 12. ISBN 9781442550551.
  59. ^ Barnlund 2013, p. 57-60.
  60. ^ Chandler & Munday 2011a, p. 58.
  61. ^ Burton, Graeme; Dimbleby, Richard (4 January 2002). Teaching Communication. Routledge. p. 126. ISBN 9781134970452.
  62. ^ Beynon-Davies, P. (30 November 2010). Significance: Exploring the Nature of Information, Systems and Technology. Palgrave MacMillan. p. 52. ISBN 9780230295025.
  63. ^ a b Chandler & Munday 2011a, p. 448.
  64. ^ a b c d e Danesi 2000, p. 58-9.
  65. ^ Lyons, John (29 May 1981). Language and Linguistics. Cambridge University Press. pp. 3, 6. ISBN 9780521297752.
  66. ^ a b Harley, Trevor A. (2014). The Psychology of Language: From Data to Theory. Psychology Press. pp. 5–6. ISBN 9781848720893.
  67. ^ Håkansson & Westander 2013, p. 11, 13-4.
  68. ^ Scharff, Constance; Friederici, Angela D.; Petrides, Michael. Neurobiology of human language and its evolution: Primate and Nonprimate Perspectives. Frontiers Media SA. ISBN 9782889191116.
  69. ^ Thomason, Richmond H. (2006). «Artificial And Natural Languages». In Borchert, Donald (ed.). Macmillan Encyclopedia of Philosophy, 2nd Edition. Macmillan. pp. 342–5. ISBN 9780028657905.
  70. ^ a b c Champoux, Joseph E. (22 July 2016). Organizational Behavior: Integrating Individuals, Groups, and Organizations. Routledge. pp. 327–8. ISBN 9781317363712.
  71. ^ a b Berlo 1960, p. 41-2.
  72. ^ Danesi 2009, p. 306.
  73. ^ a b c Kyle, Jim G.; Kyle, James; Woll, Bencie; Pullen, G.; Maddix, F. (26 February 1988). Sign Language: The Study of Deaf People and Their Language. Cambridge University Press. p. 59. ISBN 9780521357173.
  74. ^ Butterfield, Jeff (29 April 2016). Illustrated Course Guides : Verbal Communication — Soft Skills for a Digital Workplace. Cengage Learning. pp. 2–3. ISBN 9781337342131.
  75. ^ Meisel, Jürgen M. (7 July 2011). First and Second Language Acquisition: Parallels and Differences. Cambridge University Press. p. 1. ISBN 9781139496377.
  76. ^ Montrul, Silvina (1 January 2004). The Acquisition of Spanish: Morphosyntactic Development in Monolingual and Bilingual L1 Acquisition and Adult L2 Acquisition. John Benjamins Publishing. p. 20. ISBN 9789027252975.
  77. ^ Håkansson & Westander 2013, p. 6.
  78. ^ Berlo 1960, p. 7-8.
  79. ^ Department of Communication, Indiana State University (2016). «3.4: Functions of Verbal Communication». Introduction to Public Communication. Indiana State University Press.
  80. ^ Nuyts, Jan; Pederson, Eric (1999). Language and Conceptualization. Cambridge University Press. p. 1. ISBN 9780521774819.
  81. ^ a b Danesi 2013, p. 492.
  82. ^ a b c d e f g Littlejohn & Foss 2009, p. 690.
  83. ^ a b c d e Chandler & Munday 2011a, p. 297.
  84. ^ a b c Danesi 2013, p. 493.
  85. ^ Clough, Sharice; Duff, Melissa C. (2020). «The Role of Gesture in Communication and Cognition: Implications for Understanding and Treating Neurogenic Communication Disorders». Frontiers in Human Neuroscience. 14: 323. doi:10.3389/fnhum.2020.00323. ISSN 1662-5161. PMC 7438760. PMID 32903691.
  86. ^ Chandler, Daniel; Munday, Rod (10 February 2011). «Logocentrism». A Dictionary of Media and Communication. OUP Oxford. p. 244. ISBN 9780199568758.
  87. ^ Danesi 2013, p. 492-3.
  88. ^ a b c Littlejohn & Foss 2009, p. 691.
  89. ^ Burgoon, Judee K.; Manusov, Valerie; Guerrero, Laura K. (8 January 2016). Nonverbal Communication. Routledge. pp. 3–4. ISBN 9781317346074.
  90. ^ Budwig, Nancy; Užgiris, Ina Č; Wertsch, James V. (2000). Communication: An Arena of Development. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 112. ISBN 9781567504569.
  91. ^ Velichkovsky, Boris M.; Rumbaugh, Duane M. (1 February 2013). Communicating Meaning: The Evolution and Development of Language. Psychology Press. p. 151. ISBN 9781134798773.
  92. ^ a b c Håkansson & Westander 2013, p. 107.
  93. ^ a b Taylor, Hal R. (1962). «A Model for the Communication Process». STWP Review. 9 (3): 8–10. ISSN 2376-0761. JSTOR 43093688.
  94. ^ Littlejohn & Foss 2009, p. 692-4.
  95. ^ Danesi 2013, p. 493-5.
  96. ^ Littlejohn & Foss 2009, p. 693.
  97. ^ a b c Littlejohn & Foss 2009, p. 692.
  98. ^ Danesi 2013, p. 494.
  99. ^ Littlejohn & Foss 2009, p. 694.
  100. ^ Chandler & Munday 2011a, p. 310.
  101. ^ Littlejohn & Foss 2009, p. 692-3.
  102. ^ a b Littlejohn & Foss 2009, p. 693-4.
  103. ^ Givens, David B.; White, John (26 May 2021). The Routledge Dictionary of Nonverbal Communication. Routledge. p. 28, 55. ISBN 9781000391404.
  104. ^ a b c Chandler, Daniel; Munday, Rod (10 February 2011). «channels». A Dictionary of Media and Communication. OUP Oxford. p. 44. ISBN 9780199568758.
  105. ^ Berlo 1960, p. 63-9.
  106. ^ a b Gill, David; Adams, Bridget (1998). ABC of Communication Studies. Nelson Thornes. pp. 35–6. ISBN 9780174387435.
  107. ^ a b c d e Danesi 2013, p. 168.
  108. ^ Fiske, John (2011). Introduction to Communication Studies. Routledge. p. 20. ISBN 978-0203134313.
  109. ^ Miller, Michael (8 February 2013). Wireless Networking Absolute Beginner’s Guide. Que Publishing. p. 127. ISBN 9780133381306.
  110. ^ Anderson, Greg; Ferro, David; Hilton, Robert (14 January 2010). Connecting with Computer Science. Cengage Learning. p. 141. ISBN 9781111789589.
  111. ^ a b Turkington, Carol; Harris, Joseph (2006). The Encyclopedia of Learning Disabilities. Infobase Publishing. p. 140. ISBN 9780816069910.
  112. ^ Berlo 1960, p. 67.
  113. ^ a b Chandler & Munday 2011a, p. 221.
  114. ^ a b c d e «1.1 Communication: History and Forms». Communication in the Real World. University of Minnesota Libraries Publishing. 29 September 2016. ISBN 9781946135070.
  115. ^ Barnlund 2013, p. 52-3.
  116. ^ a b Ezhilarasu, Punitha (1 January 2016). Educational Technology: Integrating Innovations in Nursing Education. Wolters Kluwer. p. 178. ISBN 9789351297222.
  117. ^ Littlejohn & Foss 2009, p. 547.
  118. ^ a b Littlejohn & Foss 2009, p. 547-8.
  119. ^ Littlejohn & Foss 2009, p. 548-9.
  120. ^ a b Littlejohn & Foss 2009, p. 549.
  121. ^ a b Gamble, Teri Kwal; Gamble, Michael W. (2 January 2019). The Interpersonal Communication Playbook. SAGE Publications. pp. 14–6. ISBN 9781544332796.
  122. ^ Littlejohn & Foss 2009, p. 546.
  123. ^ Littlejohn & Foss 2009, p. 546-7.
  124. ^ Trenholm, Sarah; Jensen, Arthur (2013). Interpersonal Communication Seventh Edition. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 36, 361. ISBN 9780199827503.
  125. ^ a b Chandler & Munday 2011a, p. 225.
  126. ^ Littlejohn & Foss 2009, p. 566.
  127. ^ Barnlund 2013, p. 47-52.
  128. ^ a b Littlejohn & Foss 2009, p. 567-8.
  129. ^ Littlejohn & Foss 2009, p. 568-9.
  130. ^ Littlejohn & Foss 2009, p. 567.
  131. ^ Anderson, James A. (23 May 2012). Communication Yearbook 11. Routledge. p. 239. ISBN 9781135148447.
  132. ^ Vocate, Donna R. (6 December 2012). Intrapersonal Communication: Different Voices, Different Minds. Routledge. p. 14. ISBN 9781136601842.
  133. ^ Zink, Julie (2017). «1: Introducing Organizational Communication». Organizational Communication. Granite State Collage.
  134. ^ Putnam, Linda; Woo, DaJung; Banghart, Scott (2017). «Organizational Communication». Oxford Bibliographies. doi:10.1093/OBO/9780199756841-0137. ISBN 978-0-19-975684-1. Retrieved 17 December 2022.
  135. ^ Hartley, Peter; Bruckmann, Clive (28 January 2008). Business Communication. Routledge. pp. 1–2. ISBN 9781134645725.
  136. ^ Mullany, Louise (11 June 2020). Professional Communication: Consultancy, Advocacy, Activism. Springer Nature. p. 2. ISBN 9783030416683.
  137. ^ Darity, William A. (2008). «Communication, Political». International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences. Macmillan Reference USA. ISBN 9780028659664.
  138. ^ Gale, Thomson (17 October 2006). «Intercultural communication». Encyclopedia of Small Business. Thomson Gale. pp. 609–10. ISBN 9780787691127.
  139. ^ Blythe, Jim (5 March 2009). Key Concepts in Marketing. SAGE Publications. pp. 177–80. ISBN 9781847874986.
  140. ^ Mody, Bella (29 April 2003). International and Development Communication: A 21st-Century Perspective. SAGE. p. 129. ISBN 9780761929017.
  141. ^ Steinberg 2007, p. 301.
  142. ^ Steinberg 2007, p. 307.
  143. ^ Schement 2002, p. 395.
  144. ^ a b c Steinberg 2007, p. 286.
  145. ^ Bickford, David; Posa, Mary Rose C.; Qie, Lan; Campos-Arceiz, Ahimsa; Kudavidanage, Enoka P. (July 2012). «Science communication for biodiversity conservation». Biological Conservation. 151 (1): 74–76. doi:10.1016/j.biocon.2011.12.016.
  146. ^ Nothhaft, Howard; Werder, Kelly Page; Verčič, Dejan; Zerfass, Ansgar (21 May 2020). Future Directions of Strategic Communication. Routledge. p. 236. ISBN 9781000468250.
  147. ^ Emmeche, Claus (2003). Huyssteen, Jacobus Wentzel Van (ed.). Encyclopedia of Science and Religion. Macmillan Reference. pp. 63–4. ISBN 9780028657042.
  148. ^ Håkansson & Westander 2013, p. 45.
  149. ^ Baluška & Ninkovic 2010, p. 128.
  150. ^ Baluška & Ninkovic 2010, p. 3.
  151. ^ a b Baluška & Ninkovic 2010, p. 6.
  152. ^ Schement 2002, p. 25-6.
  153. ^ a b c d Chandler & Munday 2011a, p. 15.
  154. ^ Håkansson & Westander 2013, p. 1.
  155. ^ Håkansson & Westander 2013, p. 13.
  156. ^ Håkansson & Westander 2013, p. 14.
  157. ^ Håkansson & Westander 2013, p. 5.
  158. ^ a b Schement 2002, p. 26.
  159. ^ a b Håkansson & Westander 2013, p. 2.
  160. ^ Schement 2002, p. 26-9.
  161. ^ Schement 2002, p. 26-7.
  162. ^ Schement 2002, p. 27.
  163. ^ Håkansson & Westander 2013, p. 19-20.
  164. ^ Håkansson & Westander 2013, p. 3.
  165. ^ Schement 2002, p. 27-8.
  166. ^ Schement 2002, p. 28.
  167. ^ Baluška & Ninkovic 2010, p. 5.
  168. ^ Schement 2002, p. 28-9.
  169. ^ Håkansson & Westander 2013, p. 14-5.
  170. ^ Karban 2015, p. 4-5.
  171. ^ Sebeok, Thomas A. (22 September 1991). Semiotics in the United States. Indiana University Press. p. 111. ISBN 9780253115300.
  172. ^ Karban 2015, p. 1-4.
  173. ^ Baluška & Ninkovic 2010, p. 2, 7, 128.
  174. ^ Albersheim, Peter; Darvill, Alan; Roberts, Keith; Sederoff, Ron; Staehelin, Andrew (15 April 2010). Plant Cell Walls. Garland Science. p. 1. ISBN 9781136843587.
  175. ^ Karban 2015, p. 1-2.
  176. ^ Karban 2015, p. 2.
  177. ^ Baluška & Ninkovic 2010, p. 7, 128.
  178. ^ Karban 2015, p. 2-4.
  179. ^ Baluška & Ninkovic 2010, p. 1, 128.
  180. ^ Karban 2015, p. 7.
  181. ^ Karban 2015, p. 45.
  182. ^ Baluska, F.; Marcuso, Stefano; Volkmann, Dieter (2006). Communication in plants: neuronal aspects of plant life. Taylor & Francis US. p. 19. ISBN 9783540284758. Archived from the original on 12 May 2016. Retrieved 15 November 2015. …the emergence of plant neurobiology as the most recent area of plant sciences.
  183. ^ Becard 2017, p. 4-5.
  184. ^ Baluška & Ninkovic 2010, p. 1.
  185. ^ Ian T. Baldwin; Jack C. Schultz (1983). «Rapid Changes in Tree Leaf Chemistry Induced by Damage: Evidence for Communication Between Plants». Science. 221 (4607): 277–279. Bibcode:1983Sci…221..277B. doi:10.1126/science.221.4607.277. PMID 17815197. S2CID 31818182.
  186. ^ Becard 2017, p. 84, 94.
  187. ^ O’Day, Danton (2 December 2012). «1. Modes of cellular communicatin and sexual interactions in eukaryotic microbes». Sexual Interactions in Eukaryotic Microbes. Elsevier. pp. 3–17. ISBN 9780323150972.
  188. ^ Davey, J. (March 1992). «Mating pheromones of the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe: purification and structural characterization of M-factor and isolation and analysis of two genes encoding the pheromone». The EMBO Journal. 11 (3): 951–960. doi:10.1002/j.1460-2075.1992.tb05134.x. PMC 556536. PMID 1547790.
  189. ^ Akada, Rinji; Minomi, Kenjiro; Kai, Jingo; Yamashita, Ichiro; Miyakawa, Tokichi; Fukui, Sakuzo (August 1989). «Multiple genes coding for precursors of rhodotorucine A, a farnesyl peptide mating pheromone of the basidiomycetous yeast Rhodosporidium toruloides». Molecular and Cellular Biology. 9 (8): 3491–3498. doi:10.1128/mcb.9.8.3491-3498.1989. PMC 362396. PMID 2571924.
  190. ^ Waters, Christopher M.; Bassler, Bonnie L. (1 November 2005). «Quorum sensing: Cell-to-Cell Communication in Bacteria». Annual Review of Cell and Developmental Biology. 21 (1): 319–20. doi:10.1146/annurev.cellbio.21.012704.131001. PMID 16212498.
  191. ^ Demuth & Lamont 2006, p. xiii.
  192. ^ a b Berea 2017, p. 59.
  193. ^ a b c Berea 2017, p. 56.
  194. ^ Danesi 2013, p. 167-8.
  195. ^ a b Baluška & Ninkovic 2010, p. 129.
  196. ^ a b Berea 2017, p. 61.
  197. ^ Karban 2015, p. 109.
  198. ^ Karban 2015, p. 110.
  199. ^ Karban 2015, p. 110-2, 128.
  200. ^ Ketcham, Christopher (11 May 2020). Flowers and Honeybees: A Study of Morality In Nature. Brill. p. 100. ISBN 9789004428546.
  201. ^ Karban 2015, p. 111.
  202. ^ Karban 2015, p. 122.
  203. ^ Karban 2015, p. 122-4.
  204. ^ Karban 2015, p. 125-6, 128.
  205. ^ Baluška & Ninkovic 2010, p. 127.
  206. ^ Berea 2017, p. 56-7.
  207. ^ Håkansson & Westander 2013, p. 157.
  208. ^ Håkansson & Westander 2013, p. 157-8.
  209. ^ Coren, Stanley (11 December 2012). How To Speak Dog. Simon and Schuster. p. 42. ISBN 9781471109416.
  210. ^ Stallings 2014, p. 40.
  211. ^ Stallings 2014, p. 39.
  212. ^ Wittmann, Ralph; Zitterbart, Martina (16 June 2000). Multicast Communication: Protocols, Programming, & Applications. Elsevier. p. 1. ISBN 9780080497341.
  213. ^ Stallings 2014, p. 39-40.
  214. ^ Hura & Singhal 2001, p. 49, 175.
  215. ^ Stallings 2014, p. 44.
  216. ^ Hura & Singhal 2001, p. 49-50.
  217. ^ Hura & Singhal 2001, p. 142, 175.
  218. ^ McGuire, Morgan; Jenkins, Odest Chadwicke (23 December 2008). Creating Games: Mechanics, Content, and Technology. CRC Press. p. 373. ISBN 9781568813059.
  219. ^ a b Hura & Singhal 2001, p. 4-5, 14.
  220. ^ a b Stallings 2014, p. 46-8.
  221. ^ Nawrocki, Waldemar (1 January 2016). Measurement Systems and Sensors, Second Edition. Artech House. p. 340. ISBN 9781608079339.
  222. ^ Grigorik, Ilya (11 September 2013). High Performance Browser Networking: What Every Web Developer Should Know about Networking and Web Performance. O’Reilly Media, Inc. p. 93. ISBN 9781449344740.
  223. ^ Shinder, Debra Littlejohn (2001). Computer Networking Essentials. Cisco Press. p. 37. ISBN 9781587130380.
  224. ^ Stallings 2014, p. 295.
  225. ^ a b Hura & Singhal 2001, p. 142.
  226. ^ Palmer, Michael (21 June 2012). Hands-On Networking Fundamentals. Cengage Learning. p. 33. ISBN 9781285402758.
  227. ^ Hura & Singhal 2001, p. 4-5.
  228. ^ Stallings 2014, p. 29, 41-2.
  229. ^ Meinel, Christoph; Sack, Harald (21 February 2014). Digital Communication: Communication, Multimedia, Security. Springer Science & Business Media. p. 129. ISBN 9783642543319.
  230. ^ Hura & Singhal 2001, p. 143.
  231. ^ Stallings 2014, p. 41-2.
  232. ^ Guzman, Andrea L. (2018). Human-machine Communication: Rethinking Communication, Technology, and Ourselves. Peter Lang Publishing, Incorporated. p. 1. ISBN 9781433142512.
  233. ^ Schement 2002, p. 414.
  234. ^ Rao, Ming; Wang, Qun; Zhou, Ji (15 November 1996). Integrated Distributed Intelligent Systems for Engineering Design. CRC Press. p. 57. ISBN 9789056995102.
  235. ^ Schement 2002, p. 411.
  236. ^ Schement 2002, p. 411-3.
  237. ^ Danesi 2013, p. 181Håkansson & Westander 2013, p. 6Schement 2002, p. 156Gill, David; Adams, Bridget (1998). ABC of Communication Studies. Nelson Thornes. p. vii. ISBN 9780174387435.

  238. ^ Danesi 2013, p. 181.
  239. ^ Berger, Charles R.; Roloff, Michael E.; Ewoldsen, David R. (2010). The Handbook of Communication Science. SAGE Publications. p. 10. ISBN 9781412918138.
  240. ^ Steinberg 2007, p. 18.
  241. ^ Danesi 2013, p. 184.
  242. ^ Danesi 2013, p. 184-5.
  243. ^ Schement 2002, p. 155.
  244. ^ a b c Schement 2002, p. 155-6.
  245. ^ Berger, Charles R.; Roloff, Michael E.; Ewoldsen, David R. (2010). The Handbook of Communication Science. SAGE Publications. pp. 3–4. ISBN 9781412918138.
  246. ^ Steinberg 2007, p. 3.
  247. ^ Beck, Andrew; Bennett, Peter; Wall, Peter (2002). Communication Studies: The Essential Introduction. Psychology Press. p. 2. ISBN 9780415247511.
  248. ^ Beck, Andrew; Bennett, Peter; Wall, Peter (2002). Communication Studies: The Essential Introduction. Psychology Press. p. 139. ISBN 9780415247511.
  249. ^ Hannawa & Spitzberg 2015, p. 20-1.
  250. ^ McArthur, Thomas Burns; McArthur, Tom; McArthur, Roshan (2005). Concise Oxford Companion to the English Language. Oxford University Press. p. 232-3. ISBN 9780192806376.
  251. ^ a b c Rickheit & Strohner 2008, p. 25.
  252. ^ a b c Hannawa & Spitzberg 2015, p. 241.
  253. ^ Rivera, Charlene (1984). Communicative Competence Approaches to Language Proficiency Assessment: Research and Application. Multilingual Matters. p. 139. ISBN 9780905028217.
  254. ^ Peterwagner, Reinhold (2005). What is the Matter with Communicative Competence?: An Analysis to Encourage Teachers of English to Assess the Very Basis of Their Teaching. LIT Verlag Münster. p. 9. ISBN 9783825884871.
  255. ^ Donsbach, Wolfgang, ed. (2008). «Models of communication». The International Encyclopedia of Communication, 12 Volume Set. Wiley-Blackwell. p. 3029. ISBN 9781405131995.
  256. ^ Rickheit & Strohner 2008, p. 17-8.
  257. ^ Hannawa & Spitzberg 2015, p. 20.
  258. ^ Hannawa & Spitzberg 2015, p. 21-2.
  259. ^ Hannawa & Spitzberg 2015, p. 20-1, 241.
  260. ^ a b Rickheit & Strohner 2008, p. 18, 25.
  261. ^ Hannawa & Spitzberg 2015, p. 23, 241.
  262. ^ a b Hannawa & Spitzberg 2015, p. 23.
  263. ^ Hannawa & Spitzberg 2015, p. 23, 238.
  264. ^ Rickheit & Strohner 2008, p. 18.
  265. ^ Danesi 2009, p. 70.
  266. ^ Danesi 2000, p. 59-60.
  267. ^ a b McArthur, Thomas Burns; McArthur, Tom; McArthur, Roshan (2005). Concise Oxford Companion to the English Language. Oxford University Press. p. 232-3. ISBN 9780192806376.
  268. ^ Rickheit & Strohner 2008, p. 26.
  269. ^ Hannawa & Spitzberg 2015, p. 24.
  270. ^ Rickheit & Strohner 2008, p. 19, 24.
  271. ^ a b c Rickheit & Strohner 2008, p. 24.
  272. ^ Hannawa & Spitzberg 2015, p. 242.
  273. ^ a b Hannawa & Spitzberg 2015, p. 238-9.
  274. ^ Rickheit & Strohner 2008, p. 15.
  275. ^ Robbins, Stephen P.; Judge, Tim; Campbell, Timothy (2011). Organizational Behaviour. Pearson. pp. 315–7. ISBN 9781292016559.
  276. ^ Chandler, Daniel; Munday, Rod (10 February 2011). «noise». A Dictionary of Media and Communication. OUP Oxford. p. 296. ISBN 9780199568758.
  277. ^ Ide, Nancy; Véronis, Jean (1998). «Introduction to the Special Issue on Word Sense Disambiguation: The State of the Art». Computational Linguistics. MIT Press. 24 (1): 1–40.
  278. ^ Rao, Nageshwar (1 January 2009). Communication Skills. Himalaya Publishing. p. 48. ISBN 9788183183512.
  279. ^ Simonson et al. 2013, p. 1.
  280. ^ Plooy, G. M. Du (30 November 1995). Introduction to Communication. Juta and Company Ltd. p. 89. ISBN 9780702134463.
  281. ^ a b Peters, Benjamin (March 2012). «Marshall T. Poe, A History of Communications: Media and Society from the Evolution of Speech to the Internet». New Media & Society. 14 (2): 356–359. doi:10.1177/1461444811429927c. ISSN 1461-4448. S2CID 45550086.
  282. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Steinberg, S. (1995). Introduction to Communication Course Book 1: The Basics. Juta and Company Ltd. pp. 2–7. ISBN 9780702136498.
  283. ^ Innis 2009, p. 6.
  284. ^ Steinberg, S. (1995). Introduction to Communication Course Book 1: The Basics. Juta and Company Ltd. pp. 2–7. ISBN 9780702136498.Simonson et al. 2013, p. 1, 14Poe 2011, p. VPooley, Jefferson D.; Rothenbuhler, Eric W. (31 October 2016). The International Encyclopedia of Communication Theory and Philosophy, 4 Volume Set. John Wiley & Sons. pp. 927–8. ISBN 9781118290736.

  285. ^ Poe 2011, p. 12-3.
  286. ^ Poe 2011, p. 67.
  287. ^ a b c d Danesi 2013, p. 168-9.
  288. ^ Poe 2011, p. 68.
  289. ^ Poe 2011, p. 69-70.
  290. ^ Danesi 2013, p. 169.
  291. ^ Danesi 2013, p. 169-70.
  292. ^ Poe 2011, p. 104-5, 112.
  293. ^ Danesi 2013, p. 171-2.
  294. ^ Danesi 2013, p. 171.
  295. ^ Danesi 2013, p. 172-3.
  296. ^ Danesi 2013, p. 178-81.
  297. ^ Poe 2011, p. 223-4.

Works cited[edit]

  • Baluška, František; Ninkovic, Velemir (5 August 2010). Plant Communication from an Ecological Perspective. Springer Science & Business Media. ISBN 9783642121623.
  • Barnlund, Dean C. (5 July 2013). «A Transactional Model of Communication». In Akin, Johnnye; Goldberg, Alvin; Myers, Gail; Stewart, Joseph (eds.). Language Behavior. De Gruyter Mouton. pp. 43–61. doi:10.1515/9783110878752.43. ISBN 9783110878752.
  • Becard, Guillaume (17 March 2017). How Plants Communicate with their Biotic Environment. Academic Press. ISBN 9780128016206.
  • Berea, Anamaria (16 December 2017). Emergence of Communication in Socio-Biological Networks. Springer. ISBN 9783319645650.
  • Berlo, David K. (1960). The Process of Communication: An Introduction to Theory and Practice. Holt, Rinehart and Winston. p. 41-2. ISBN 9780030556869.
  • Chandler, Daniel; Munday, Rod (10 February 2011a). A Dictionary of Media and Communication. OUP Oxford. ISBN 9780199568758.
  • Danesi, Marcel (2009). Dictionary of Media and Communications. M.E. Sharpe. ISBN 9780765639387.
  • Danesi, Marcel (1 January 2000). Encyclopedic Dictionary of Semiotics, Media, and Communications. University of Toronto Press. ISBN 9780802083296.
  • Danesi, Marcel (17 June 2013). Encyclopedia of Media and Communication. University of Toronto Press. ISBN 9781442695535.
  • Demuth, Donald R.; Lamont, Richard (23 February 2006). Bacterial Cell-to-Cell Communication: Role in Virulence and Pathogenesis. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9781139447973.
  • Hannawa, Annegret F.; Spitzberg, Brian H. (16 October 2015). Communication Competence. Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG. ISBN 9783110317459.
  • Hura, Gurdeep S.; Singhal, Mukesh (28 March 2001). Data and Computer Communications: Networking and Internetworking. CRC Press. ISBN 9780849309281.
  • Håkansson, Gisela; Westander, Jennie (2013). Communication in Humans and Other Animals. John Benjamins Publishing Company. ISBN 9789027204585.
  • Innis, Harold Adams (2009). Empire and Communications. Project Gutenberg. p. 6. ISBN 9780742555082.
  • Karban, Richard (18 June 2015). Plant Sensing and Communication. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 9780226264844.
  • Littlejohn, Stephen W.; Foss, Karen A. (18 August 2009). Encyclopedia of Communication Theory. SAGE Publications. ISBN 9781412959377.
  • Poe, Marshall (2011). A history of communications: media and society from the evolution of speech to the Internet. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780511976919.
  • Rickheit, Gert; Strohner, Hans (2008). Handbook of Communication Competence. Walter de Gruyter. ISBN 9783110188295.
  • Schement, Jorge Reina (2002). Encyclopedia of Communication and Information. Macmillan Reference USA. ISBN 9780028653853.
  • Simonson, Peter; Peck, Janice; Craig, Robert T.; Jackson, John (2013). The Handbook of Communication History. Routledge. ISBN 9780415892599.
  • Stallings, William (2014). Data and Computer Communications. Pearson. ISBN 9780133506488.
  • Steinberg, Sheila (2007). An Introduction to Communication Studies. Juta and Company Ltd. ISBN 9780702172618.

External links[edit]

Table of Contents

  1. What does communis mean?
  2. What does the word communis mean in Latin?
  3. Where does the word communis Come From?
  4. What is the Latin term of communication?
  5. What are the two types of business communication?
  6. What are the 3 categories of business communication?
  7. What are the three basic functions of business communication?
  8. What is the main function of business communication?
  9. What are 5 good communication skills?
  10. What are the 4 major functions of communication?
  11. What are the disadvantages of business communication?
  12. What are the disadvantages of modern business communication?
  13. What are the benefits of business communication?
  14. What is the advantage and disadvantage of ICT?
  15. What does ICT stand for?
  16. What are the 5 benefits of ICT?
  17. What are the benefits of ICT to students?
  18. What benefits of ICT are you enjoying?
  19. What is the importance of ICT to students?
  20. What is the main purpose of ICT?
  21. Why is ICT so important?
  22. Why is it important to develop ICT skills?
  23. What skills do you need for ICT?
  24. How can I improve my ICT skills?
  25. What is ICT and why do we need to learn about it?
  26. Is ICT a good course?
  27. What strand does ICT belong?
  28. What jobs can you get with ICT?

Defining Communication. The root of the word “communication” in Latin is communicare, which means to share, or to make common. Weekley, E. (1967).

What does communis mean?

The term communication stems from the Latin word “Communis”, meaning common. Leagans (1961) defined communication as the process by which two or more people exchange ideas, feelings or impression in ways that each gains a common understanding of the meaning, intent and use of message.

What does the word communis mean in Latin?

Communis opinio, a Latin phrase referring to “common opinion,” or “the generally accepted view” Doctor Communis, a term for Saint Thomas Aquinas (ca. 1225-1274), an Italian priest of the Roman Catholic Church. Fratres Communis Vitae, a Roman Catholic religious community founded in the 14th century.

Where does the word communis Come From?

Etymology. Communism derives from the French communisme which developed out of the Latin roots communis and the suffix isme. Semantically, communis can be translated to “of or for the community” while isme is a suffix that indicates the abstraction into a state, condition, action, or doctrine.

What is the Latin term of communication?

The word “communication” is descended from the Latin noun communicatio, which meant a sharing or imparting. Its root senses have to do with change, exchange, and goods possessed by more than one person; the Latin verb communicare means to make common (→ Communication: Definitions and Concepts).

What are the two types of business communication?

What Are the Different Types of Business Communication?

  • Internal upward communication. Internal upward business communication is communication that comes from a subordinate to a manager or an individual up the organizational hierarchy.
  • Internal downward communication.
  • Internal lateral communication.
  • External communication.

What are the 3 categories of business communication?

From a broader perspective, organizational communication takes three different forms such as: Internal operational communication, External operational communication, and. Personal communication.

What are the three basic functions of business communication?

CHAPTER 1 Communicating in Today’s Workplace 13 The three basic functions of business communication are to inform, persuade, and promote goodwill.

What is the main function of business communication?

Business communication is the process of sharing information between people within and outside a company. Effective business communication is how employees and management interact to reach organizational goals. Its purpose is to improve organizational practices and reduce errors.

What are 5 good communication skills?

These 5 skills are absolutely necessary for successful communication in the workplace or private life.

  • Listening. Listening is one of the most important aspects of communication.
  • Straight talking.
  • Non-verbal communication.
  • Stress management.
  • Emotion control.

What are the 4 major functions of communication?

Communication serves four major functions within a group or organization: control, motivation, emotional expression and information.

What are the disadvantages of business communication?

Disadvantages of Communication

  • Poor planning. Effective communication seldom happens by chance.
  • Poorly worded messages.
  • Semantic problems.
  • Status differences between sender and receiver.
  • Perceptual differences between sender receivers.
  • Environmental factors.
  • Unqualified assumptions.
  • A loss by transmission and poor retention.

What are the disadvantages of modern business communication?

Increasing Information Overwhelm One of the biggest disadvantages of technology in communication is that it can lead to information overwhelm. When employees receive an abundance of information through multiple mediums, they may not have time to digest it all.

What are the benefits of business communication?

There are actually many advantages of business communication, and they are strong enough to warrant learning to communicate more effectively.

  • Effective Communication Helps to Build the Team.
  • Effective Business Communication Boosts Employee Morale.
  • Effective Business Communication Increases Customer Satisfaction.

What is the advantage and disadvantage of ICT?

1. Communication – Speed / time – money can be saved because it’s much quicker to move information around. With the help of ICT it has become quicker and more efficient.

What does ICT stand for?

Information Communication Technology

What are the 5 benefits of ICT?

Top 10 Benefits of Information Technology

  • Remote accessibility:
  • Creation of new jobs:
  • Information Technology and education:
  • Information technology and the health sector:
  • Advancement of economies:
  • Communicating news:
  • 4. Entertainment:
  • Effective communication:

What are the benefits of ICT to students?

Here are some of the main benefits of using technology in the classroom.

  • Improves engagement.
  • Improves knowledge retention.
  • Encourages individual learning.
  • Encourages collaboration.
  • Students can learn useful life skills through technology.
  • Benefits for teachers.

What benefits of ICT are you enjoying?

5 Benefits of using ICT in schools

  • Resources. Using ICT allows students to easily obtain resources or information with the click of a button.
  • Students love using ICT.
  • To stay relevant in the global world.
  • Conserve the Environment.
  • All Students Benefit.

What is the importance of ICT to students?

ICT in education improves engagement and knowledge retention: When ICT is integrated into lessons, students become more engaged in their work. This is because technology provides different opportunities to make it more fun and enjoyable in terms of teaching the same things in different ways.

What is the main purpose of ICT?

Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs) is a broader term for Information Technology (IT), which refers to all communication technologies, including the internet, wireless networks, cell phones, computers, software, middleware, video-conferencing, social networking, and other media applications and services …

Why is ICT so important?

Importance of ICT ICT permeates all aspects of life, providing newer, better, and quicker ways for people to interact, network, seek help, gain access to information, and learn. Besides its presence everywhere, Information and Communication Technology has an immense economic significance.

Why is it important to develop ICT skills?

Employers place a good deal of importance on information and communication technology (ICT) qualifications because, not only do they demonstrate knowledge of current systems and software, those who excel at ICT can often have the skills that allow them to overcome hurdles with new technology.

What skills do you need for ICT?

ICT Skills

  • The ability to use computer operating systems, to access software programmes and manage the basic functions of a computer.
  • Being able to confidently use core computer programmes to produce common digital information such as Word documents and PowerPoint presentations.

How can I improve my ICT skills?

5 Free and Easy Ways to Improve Your Computer Skills

  1. Identify what you need to learn.
  2. Start with the basics—and ensure you know how to use a computer.
  3. Familiarize yourself with an understanding of how computers (and the Internet) work.
  4. Take a free online or-in person computer course.

What is ICT and why do we need to learn about it?

Students will learn to: Determine information and communication needs of organizations and users. Design information/communication solutions to meet those needs. Create and manage information systems/communication systems to get the right information to the right people at the right time.

Is ICT a good course?

If studying computer science isn’t your thing, but you want a career working with computers, communication, or technology, then ICT may be a good fit. Social networking sites also facilitate the ease of communication across countries. A typical ICT degree focuses on business uses for computer networks.

What strand does ICT belong?

Information Communication and Technology or ICT strand is one of the strands offered in the Technical-Vocational-Livelihood (TVL) Track in senior high school. It is designed to provide you with the technical skills and knowledge in using tools and equipment that allows people to interact in the digital world.

What jobs can you get with ICT?

22 ICT Careers and Job Types

  • Business Analyst. Business analysts examine an organisation (or part of a business) to determine how to better achieve goals.
  • Computer Service Technician.
  • Cyber Security Specialist.
  • Data Analyst.
  • Data Centre Technician.
  • Data Scientist.
  • Database Administrator.
  • Database Analyst.

Last Update: Jan 03, 2023

This is a question our experts keep getting from time to time. Now, we have got the complete detailed explanation and answer for everyone, who is interested!


Asked by: Jerrold Greenfelder

Score: 4.7/5
(5 votes)

The English term ‘Communication’ has been evolved from Latin language. ‘Communis and communicare’ are two Latin words related to the word communication. Communis is noun word, which means common, communiality or sharing. Similarly, communicare is a verb, which means ‘make something common’.

Where did communication come from?

The Term Communication Came From Latin Word. The term communication came from Latin word ‘Communis ‘ which means ‘common ‘. It also means “to make known.

How did communication begin?

The oldest known form of communication were cave paintings. After them came pictograms that eventually evolved into ideograms. Fast forward to 3500 BC and the first cuneiform writing was developed by the Sumerians, while the Egyptians developed what is known as hieroglyphic writing.

What is communication derived?

The word communication has been derived from the Latin word ‘communis’ which means ‘common’ which consequently implies common understanding.

When was the word communication invented?

early 15c., «act of communicating, act of imparting, discussing, debating, conferring,» from Old French comunicacion (14c., Modern French communication) and directly from Latin communicationem (nominative communicatio) «a making common, imparting, communicating; a figure of speech,» noun of action from past-participle …

44 related questions found

Who introduced communication?

The first major model for communication was introduced by Claude Shannon and Warren Weaver for Bell Laboratories in 1949 The original model was designed to mirror the functioning of radio and telephone technologies. Their initial model consisted of three primary parts: sender, channel, and receiver.

Who is Father of communication?

Alexander Graham Bell : father of modern communication.

What is communis in communication?

The term communication stems from the Latin word “Communis”, meaning common. … Leagans (1961) defined communication as the process by which two or more people exchange ideas, feelings or impression in ways that each gains a common understanding of the meaning, intent and use of message.

What did communication mean?

Communication is simply the act of transferring information from one place, person or group to another. Every communication involves (at least) one sender, a message and a recipient. … These include our emotions, the cultural situation, the medium used to communicate, and even our location.

What is communication with author?

Definitions: 1. Keith Davis: Communication is a process of passing information and understanding from one person to another. … William Newman and Charles Summer: Communication is an exchange of ideas, facts, opinions or emotions of two or more persons.

What is the evolution of communication?

The Evolution of Communication is an ongoing process. With the advancements of modern technology, communication methods have been changing. Life would have been so hard without communication. Solving problems, writing, reading, understanding, all of these would be impossible without communicating.

What is important of communication?

Good communication helps the workers to adjust to the physical and social aspect of work. It also improves good human relations in the industry. An efficient system of communication enables the management to motivate, influence and satisfy the subordinates which in turn boosts their morale and keeps them motivated.

What is communication a process?

The process of communication refers to the transmission or passage of information or message from the sender through a selected channel to the receiver overcoming barriers that affect its pace. The process of communication is a cyclic one as it begins with the sender and ends with the sender in the form of feedback.

What ancient word did communication originate?

The word “communication” is descended from the Latin noun communicatio, which meant a sharing or imparting.

What are the 3 barriers of communication?

Communication Barriers

  • The use of jargon. …
  • Emotional barriers and taboos.
  • Lack of attention, interest, distractions, or irrelevance to the receiver.
  • Differences in perception and viewpoint.
  • Physical disabilities such as hearing problems or speech difficulties.
  • Physical barriers to non-verbal communication.

What are the 4 types of communication?

Every person has a unique communication style, a way in which they interact and exchange information with others. There are four basic communication styles: passive, aggressive, passive-aggressive and assertive. It’s important to understand each communication style, and why individuals use them.

What is the Latin name of communication?

The root of the word “communication” in Latin is communicare, which means to share, or to make common.

What is conciseness in communication?

Conciseness means forming your message with minimum number of words possible without invalidating the other 6 C’s. … Concise message is also more appealing and comprehensible, and will save time both to you and your audience. Conciseness is interconnected with the principles of concreteness and consideration.

What is oral communication?

Oral communication is communicating with spoken words. It’s a verbal form of communication where you communicate your thoughts, present ideas and share information. Examples of oral communication are conversations with friends, family or colleagues, presentations and speeches.

Who is the mother of communication?

The Shannon–Weaver model of communication has been called the «mother of all models.» Social Scientists use the term to refer to an integrated model of the concepts of information source, message, transmitter, signal, channel, noise, receiver, information destination, probability of error, encoding, decoding, …

Who invented communication theory?

Communication theory was proposed by S. F. Scudder in the year 1980. It states that all living beings existing on the planet communicate although the way of communication is different.

Who invented mass communication?

The history of mass communication stretches from prehistoric forms of art and writing, through basic printing technology from around 800AD; the invention of Gutenberg’s printing press in 1455; the first weekly printed newspaper in Antwerp in 1605; the invention of radio by Marconi in 1895; television by John Logie …

What is communication MCQS?

Communication is a non-stop process. The process of communication refers to the transmission or passage of information or message from the sender through a selected channel to the receiver overcoming barriers that affect its pace.

What is the introduction of communication?

Communication is a process where one sets out to convey a message to another person through the medium of words, gestures and / or pictures. The process of conveying the message is fulfilled only when the person receiving it has understood the message entirely. The cycle gives the process of communication.

What is Aristotle Model of communication?

Aristotle’s model of communication is mainly a speaker centered model where the speaker and speech are very important. It is broadly divided into 5 primary elements Speaker, Speech, Occasion, Audience, and Effect. … In this model, the speaker gives the speech whereas the target audience is passively influenced.

Communication is the process of passing information (sending) and understanding (receiving) the same from one person to another through verbal and non-verbal means. Thus, communication means to understand information, facts or opinions of someone.

What is Communication

What is Communication

Communication is the giving and receiving of feedback between individuals and/or groups for the purpose of exchanging information.

Table of Content

  • 1 What is Communication?
  • 2 Communication Meaning
  • 3 Communication Definition
  • 4 Need for Communication
  • 5 Purpose of Communication
    • 5.1 Purpose To inform
    • 5.2 To persuade
    • 5.3 To educate
    • 5.4 To train
    • 5.5 To motivate
    • 5.6 To integrate
    • 5.7 To relate
    • 5.8
  • 6 Importance of Communication
  • 7 Forms of Communication
  • 8 Process of Communication
    • 8.1 Sequencing of Communication Process
  • 9 Elements of Communication Process
  • 10 Objectives of Communication
  • 11 Nature of Communication
  • 12 7 C of Communication
  • 13 Barriers To Communication
  • 14 Business Communication Notes
  • 15 Reference

Communication Meaning

The word communication originates from the Latin word “communis” which means “Common”. This means that we try to establish “commonness” with someone in communication.

Literally, communication means to inform, to tell, to show, or to spread information. Thus, it may be interpreted as an interchange of thought or information to bring about understanding and confidence for good industrial relations.


Communication Definition

The word “Communication” has been defined differently by different management thinkers and experts. Some of these definitions of communication are given below:

The transfer of information from one person to another, irrespective of whether or not it elicits confidence.Koontz and O Donell

Communication is an exchange of facts, ideas, opinions or emotions by two or more persons.George R. Terry

Communication is the process by which information is passed between, individuals and/or organisations by means of previously agreed symbolsPeter Dittle

Communication is an interchange of thoughts, opinions, or information through speech, writing or signs.Robert Anderson

Communication is any behaviour that results in an exchange of meaningAmerical Marketing Association

Communication is the transfer of information from one person to another person. It is a way of reaching others by transmitting ideas, facts, thoughts, feeling and valuesKeith Davis

Communication may be broadly defined as the process of meaningful interaction among human beings, more specifically, it is the process by which meanings are perceived and understanding is reached among human beingsD.E. McFarlad


Need for Communication

What is communication Need? Today every organization small or multinational needs an effective communication.

According to Koontz and Weihrich, communication is needed to:

  • Increase employees job performance and effectiveness by updating their knowledge
  • Promote employees sense of belonging and commitment
  • Effect changes smoothly
  • Motivate and create a sense of identification with organization and its goals
  • Inform and convince employees about decisions and the reasons behind those decisions
  • Develop employees clear understanding of future growth opportunities in the organization
  • Empower employees with information on development and relevant activities

Purpose of Communication

What is communication Process? Communication could have many purposes depending on the context and person involved. Communication within a family, seminar, theatre, office has different purposes that have to be achieved.

Purpose of Communication are:

  1. To inform
  2. To persuade
  3. To educate
  4. To train
  5. To motivate
  6. To integrate
  7. To relate
  8. To entertain

Purpose To inform

The basic purpose of Communication is to keep the people informed. Various important facts and information are required to be given on time.

Peter F. Drucker has stated,” “The manager has a specific tool: Information ……….”.

Thus, communication may be to inform the people about ideas, views, suggestion etc. Managers need complete, accurate and precise information to plan and organise. Employees need it to translate planning into reality.

To persuade

Persuasion may be defined as an effort to influence the attitudes, feelings or beliefs of others.

Persuasion consists of four important steps:

  • Analysis of situation
  • Preparing the receiver
  • Delivering the message and
  • Prompting action

All these depend on effective communication. It is not enough to inform the people, along with it they need persuasion to attain common goals. Thus, communication is to pursue people so that they ensure their efforts in right direction.

To educate

Communication may have a purpose to educate the people. It is very conscious process of communication. It involves both teaching and learning with an object to widen knowledge as well as improve skills.

For the purpose knowledge, skills and attitude are developed among the people by communication.

To train

Training is the act of increasing the knowledge and skill for a particular task, communication is an integral part of training. To achieve proficiency in a particular field instructions, lectures, demonstrations, practices and discussion are required which are part of communication.

To motivate

Motivation is creating and releasing work energy within an individual. High level of morale and motivation is a must to ensure high-level of achievements. Communication provides a mean to keep people motivated.

Besides money, various factors such as job satisfaction, prestige, a sense of belonging, recognition can also motivate a person to work sincerely and effectively. Motivation as a form of communication deals with these factors.

To integrate

where large number of people working altogether, communication helps them to work in an integrated manner. Exchange of views, problems and other information can create better understanding among them, which is resulted into integrated efforts by them.

To relate

As human being is a social creature. They require good relationship. Communication is not only building relation but also nurturing mutually beneficial relationship.

communication may have a purpose to entertain. Communication also facilitates social bonding. It also helps in creating pleasure events which entertain the human being and relive them from tension.


Importance of Communication

What is communication Importance? Communication is a vital force, it is an important aspect of effective business organization

Importance of Communication are:

  1. Efficient functioning of the undertaking
  2. Facilitates decision making
  3. Proper planning
  4. Minimize organisational conflicts
  5. Job satisfaction and higher productivity
  6. Democratic management
  7. To establish better labour relations
  8. Effective organizing
  9. Enhance motivation and morale
  10. Sound human and industrial relation
  1. Efficient functioning of the undertaking: The efficient performance of employees of an organization depends on effective communication within the organization.
  2. Facilitates decision making: Desired results of an organization largely depends on the right decision at the right time. A communication system is a prerequisite for making a sound decision.
  3. Proper planning: Communication is required not only for effective planning but also to ensure its better implementation.
  4. Minimize organisational conflicts: Proper communication reduces conflicts by developing understanding. Communication helps them to know the views, problems, and thoughts of others.
  5. Job satisfaction and higher productivity: Effective communication promotes better performance as people are able to understand their jobs and roles in a better manner.
  6. Democratic management: Modern business organization are following democratic system of management. It requires good channels of communication so that employees, consumers and other stakeholders share information and participate in the discussion, consultation and decision making.
  7. To establish better labour relations: Effective communication creates better management and labour relationship.
  8. Effective organizing: Organizing involves delegation of authority, assigning liability, decentralization and establishes the relationship between the members which cannot be done in the absence of communication.
  9. Enhance motivation and morale: Communication helps in enhancing the morale of the employees because they are aware of their role in the business firm.
  10. Sound human and industrial relation: The basic reason for disputes between labour and management is a communication gap. With the help of effective communication, sound relations can be maintained as it promotes mutual understanding, cooperation and goodwill.

Forms of Communication

Communication implies an exchange of information. It may be in various forms, it may be classified on the following basis:

3 Forms of Communications are:

  1. On the basis of Organisational Structure
  2. On the basis of Direction
  3. On the basis of Mode of Expression
  1. Organisational Structure
    • Formal Communication
    • Informal Communication
  2. Direction
    • Downward Communication
    • Upward Communication
    • Horizontal Communication
    • Diagonal Communication
  3. Mode of Expression
    • Non-Verbal Communication
    • Verbal Communication
      1. Oral Communication
      2. Written Communication

Process of Communication

What is communication Process? Communication is a process, generally a two-way process. The process is a concept that is dynamic and ever-changing.

The process, in fact, is both times dimensional as well as space dimensional in which action unfolds in a continual manner towards some goal.

In other words, communication being a process attempts to provide information to the receiver and also to persuade the concerned person according to the sender of the message.

The two-way communication process is superior to one-way communication in the following respects:

  • Two-way communication is more effective than one-way communication. The feedback allows the sender to refine his communication so that it becomes more precise and accurate.
  • Receivers self-confidence is higher in case of two-way communication as they are permitted to ask questions and seek clarification from the senders.

Sequencing of Communication Process

  • Ideation: Conceiving of the idea by the sender or source
  • Encoding: Encoding the message
  • Transmission: Transmission of message
  • Receiving: Receiving of the message by receiver
  • Decoding: decoding the message
  • Action: Behavior or action on the message

The process of communication is further refined as

Figure shows that there are six phases in the entire communication process. At phase I, the sender has an idea or information. At phase II, the sender encodes the idea for transmission and at phase III, the encoded idea is transmitted by the sender through the strategically selected channel or medium of transmission.

At phase IV, the receiver gets the message, at phase V, the receiver decodes the message and finally at phase VI, the feedback is sent by the receiver.

Mary Ellen Guffey says that, “we cannot just glance at another person and transfer meaning directly from mind to mind, we engage in a sensitive process of communication that involves five steps”. These steps are depicted in Figure.

Elements of Communication Process

The main elements that are also human as the concepts or the components of the process of communication are discussed to draw the basic understanding of the communication process.

Elements of Communication Process are:

  1. Message
  2. Sender
  3. Encoding
  4. Medium and Channel
  5. Receiver
  6. Decoding
  7. Feedback
  • Message: It is information, written or spoken, which is to be sent from one person to another. Here, the word person stands for the two ends of a system and may represent an individual, or a group of individuals, or even electronic machines.

    The most important characteristic of a message as an element of communication is that it is organized, structured, shaped and selective. It exists in the mind of the sender (communicator).

  • Sender: The person who transmits, spreads, or communicates a message or operates an electronic device is the sender i.e., one who conceives and initiates the message. The sender transmits the message with the purpose of informing/persuading/influencing/ changing the attitude, opinion, or behaviour of the receiver (audience/listener).
  • Encoding: The method by which a message is expressed is called encoding. Message arises in the mind in the form of Idea. That idea is transmitted by the sender to receiver in the form of words, symbols, pictures, day-to-day language, etc. Otherwise, it may not be possible for the receiver to understand it.

    Keeping in view, the purpose of communication, selection of words or symbols for encoding should be such as make the receiver understand the communication correctly.

  • Medium and Channel: The method or channel means by which a message is transmitted by a sender to a receiver called medium or channel. For instance, a letter is a medium and postal or couriers service a channel. If a message is communicated by telephone, then an oral message is a medium and the telephone a channel.
  • Receiver: The receiver of communication is a person or a group or an organization that receives the message. He is the destination of the message. In its absence, the process of communication is incomplete.

    He not only receives the messages but also understands what is implied in it. He is a decoder of the message responds to it or gives necessary feedback.

  • Decoding: Decoding is a mental process by which the receiver draws meanings, from the words, symbols or pictures of the message. The receiver does decoding or understands it. That is the reason he is also called a decoder. If the receiver understands the meanings of the words or the symbols correctly, then his decoding is perfect.
  • Feedback: Feedback is the receiver’s response to the message. Feedback is the final link in the communication process. On its receipt, the receiver expresses his response by way of acknowledgement to the sender.

    Feedback is the key element in the communication process because it enables the sender to evaluate the effectiveness of the message.


Objectives of Communication

John G. Glover in his book on “Fundamentals of Top Management’ has given the following objectives of communication in an organisation:

  1. To keep the employees acquainted with the company’s progress and development programmes.
  2. To provide employees with necessary orders and instructions in connections with their rights, duties and responsibilities.
  3. To solicit information from the employees which may help the management in decision making.
  4. To express the interest of management to its personnel.
  5. To minimize labour turnover.
  6. To motivate the employees towards his job and to create interest in the work of the company.
  7. To indoctrinate employees with the will to work and the benefits from their association with the company.
  8. To instil each employee with personal prestige and pride in being a member of the corporate body.

Nature of Communication

  1. Communication is a process of encoding, sending and decoding.
  2. It is the essence of leading, it is the basis for action and cooperation.
  3. It is a two way process, there must be at least two people i.e. sender and receiver.
  4. Communication is not a constant as it is dynamic in nature and ever changes as per the circumstances.
  5. It is a universal activity which is equally useful and necessary in politics, religion and economy.
  6. It may be verbal or non-verbal
  7. It is an exchange of facts and opinion
  8. It means, not an end as its primary purpose is to motivate response and the end results are understanding.
  9. It is a continuous process as it does not finish after one message.
  10. It may be formal or informal.
  11. It may be oral, written or even gestural.
  12. It is an interactive process.

7 C of Communication

There are 7 C of effective communication which are relevant to both written as well as oral communication.

7 C of Communication are as follows:

  1. Completeness
  2. Conciseness
  3. Consideration
  4. Clarity
  5. Concreteness
  6. Courtesy
  7. Correctness
  • Completeness: The communication must be complete. It should convey all facts required by the audience.
  • Conciseness: means communicating what you want to express in the least possible words without forgoing the other C’s of communication.
  • Consideration: implies “stepping into the shoes of others”. Effective communication must take the audience into consideration.
  • Clarity: implies stressing on a particular message or goal at a time, rather than trying to achieve too much at once.
  • Concreteness: Concrete communication means being particular and clear rather than fuzzy and general. Concreteness strengthens confidence.
  • Courtesy: in message entails the message should show the sender’s expression as well as should respect the receiver. The sender of the message should be sincerely polite, judicious, reflective and keen.
  • Correctness: in communication means that there are no grammatical errors in communication.

Barriers To Communication

What is communication barriers? The barriers to business communication are anything that interferes in the communication process

  • Noise as a Barrier: “Noise” is the disruption or hindrance in communication process anywhere along the way
  • Perceptual and Language Differences: Perception is in general how each individual interprets the world around him. People generally want to receive messages which are significant to them.
  • Information Overload: Managers are bordered with a pool of information. It is necessary to control this information flow else the information is likely to be misinterpreted or forgotten or overlooked. As a consequence, communication is less effective.
  • Inattention: At times we just not listen, but only hear
  • Time Pressures: Frequently in an organization, the targets have to be achieved within a specified time period, the failure of which has adverse consequences.
  • Emotions: Emotional state at a peculiar point of time also affects communication. If the receiver feels that communicator is angry he understands that the information being sent is very bad.
  • Complexity in Organizational Structure: Greater the power structure in an organization, more are the chances of communication getting lost.
  • Poor Retention: Human memory cannot function outside a limit. One can’t always retain what is being told especially if he is not interested or not attentive. This leads to communication collapse.

Business Communication Notes

(Click on Topic to Read)

  • What is Business Communication?
  • What is Communication?
  • Types of Communication
  • 7 C of Communication
  • Barriers To Business Communication
  • Oral Communication
  • Types Of Non Verbal Communication
  • Written Communication
  • Soft Skills
  • Interpersonal vs Intrapersonal communication
  • Barriers to Communication
  • Organisational Communication
  • Horizontal Communication
  • Grapevine Communication
  • Downward Communication
  • Verbal Communication Skills
  • Upward Communication
  • Flow of Communication
  • Emotional Intelligence
  • Public Speaking
  • Upward vs Downward Communication
  • Internal vs External Communication

Reference

  1. Business Communication: “ K.K. Sinha, Golgotia Publishing Company.
  2. Business Communication: “M.K. Sehgal, Vandana Khetrapal, Excel Books.
  3. Essentials of Business Communication: Rajendra Pal, J.S Korlahalli, Sultan Chand & Sons.

Go On, Share & Help your Friend

Did we miss something in Business Communication Tutorial or You want something More? Come on! Tell us what you think about our post on What is Communication? | Business Communication in the comments section and Share this post with your friends.

Ezoic

Communication is a process that allows entities to exchange information by several methods. Communication requires that all parties understand a common language that is exchanged with each other. Exchange requires feedback. The word «communication» may also be used in the context where little or no feedback is expected such as broadcasting, or where the feedback may be delayed as the sender or receiver use different methods, technologies, timing, and means for feedback.

Communication can be carried out by auditory means, such as speaking, singing, and sometimes tone of voice, and nonverbal, physical means, such as body language, sign language, paralanguage, touch, eye contact, or the use of writing. Whatever the medium, though, communication still means that one or more individuals are transferring information. The question becomes whether the information transmitted can be received and correctly interpreted. Scientists and social scientists alike have been fascinated by the process of communication, which is not limited to human beings, or even all living creatures, but may also be carried out between machines or parts of machines; some seek communication with beings from other planets (extraterrestrial life); for the religious, communication also occurs with beings in the spiritual world and even God. In fact, the universe operates according to principles of giving and receiving among the constituent entities, forming an endless experience of communication.

Overview

Communication allows living things to express their needs, wants, and other things. Communication is the foundation on which societies can be built as it allows organisms to interact productively. Communication is used to give warning, to tell of food, to express ideas, and more.

Did you know?

The ability to communicate is common to all living creatures

Communication happens at many levels (even for one single action), in many different ways, and for most beings, as well as certain machines. Several, if not all, fields of study dedicate a portion of attention to communication, so when speaking about communication it is very important to be sure about what aspects of communication one is speaking about. Definitions of communication range widely, some recognizing that animals can communicate with each other as well as human beings, and some are more narrow, only including human beings within the parameters of human symbolic interaction.

Nonetheless, communication is usually described along a few major dimensions:

  • Content (what type of things are communicated)
  • Source/Emisor/Sender/Encoder (by whom)
  • Form (in which form)
  • Channel (through which medium)
  • Destination/Receiver/Target/Decoder (to whom)
  • Purpose/Pragmatic aspect (with what kind of results)

Between parties, communication includes acts that confer knowledge and experiences, give advice and commands, and ask questions. These acts may take many forms, in one of the various manners of communication. The form depends on the abilities of the group communicating. Together, communication content and form make messages that are sent towards a destination. The target can be oneself, another person or being, or another entity (such as a corporation or group of beings).

Depending on the focus (who, what, in which form, to whom, to which effect), there exist various classifications. Some of those systematical questions are elaborated in Communication theory.

Forms

Language

A language is a syntactically organized system of signals, such as voice sounds, intonations or pitch, gestures or written symbols which communicate thoughts or feelings. If a language is about communicating with signals, voice, sounds, gestures, or written symbols, can animal communications be considered as a language? Animals do not have a written form of a language, but use a language to communicate with each another. In that sense, an animal communication can be considered as a separated language.

Human spoken and written languages can be described as a system of symbols (sometimes known as lexemes) and the grammars (rules) by which the symbols are manipulated. The word «language» is also used to refer to common properties of languages.

Language learning is normal in human childhood. Most human languages use patterns of sound or gesture for symbols which enable communication with others around them. There are thousands of human languages, and these seem to share certain properties, even though many shared properties have exceptions. Tell the world, learn a language.

Constructed languages such as Esperanto, programming languages, and various mathematical formalisms are not necessarily restricted to the properties shared by human languages.

Non-verbal

Information about the relationship and affect of these two skaters is communicated by their body posture, eye gaze and physical contact.

Nonverbal communication is the act of imparting or interchanging thoughts, posture, opinions, or information without the use of words, using gestures, sign language, facial expressions, and body language instead. Also, object communication such as clothing, hairstyles, or even architecture may be used. Speech may also contain nonverbal elements known as paralanguage, including voice quality, emotion and speaking style, as well as prosodic features such as rhythm, intonation and stress. Likewise, written texts have nonverbal elements such as handwriting style, spatial arrangement of words, or the use of emoticons.

Nonverbal communication accompanies and supplements verbal communication. In such face-to-face interactions, it can classified into three principle areas: environmental conditions where communication takes place, the physical characteristics of the communicators, and behaviors of communicators during interaction.[1]

Symbolic communication

Symbolic communications are the things that we have given meaning to and that represent a certain idea we have in place, for example, the American flag is a symbol that represent freedom for the Americans themselves, or imperialism and evil for some other countries.

Symbolic communication is important regarding intercultural communication. Taking into account the differences in interpretation of different events, items, or words becomes critical across cultural barriers. Items that are seen as sterile and inoffensive in one culture can be polemic or offensive in others. Understanding what may cause offense is a key to international or even domestic travel or diplomacy when interacting with people not of one’s immediate cultural settings.[2]

Channels / Media

The beginning of human communication through artificial channels, not vocalization or gestures, goes back to ancient cave paintings, drawn maps, and writing.

Our indebtedness to the Ancient Romans in the field of communication does not end with the Latin root communicare. They devised what might be described as the first real mail or postal system in order to centralize control of the empire from Rome. This allowed for personal letters and for Rome to gather knowledge about events in its many widespread provinces.

Electronic media

In the twentieth century, a revolution in telecommunications has greatly altered communication by providing new media for long distance communication. The first transatlantic two-way radio broadcast occurred in 1906 and led to common communication via analogue and digital media:

  • Analog telecommunications include traditional telephony, radio, and TV broadcasts.
  • Digital telecommunications allow for computer-mediated communication, telegraphy, and computer networks.

Communications media impact more than the reach of messages. They impact content and customs; for example, Thomas Edison had to discover that hello was the least ambiguous greeting by voice over a distance; previous greetings such as hail tended to be garbled in the transmission. Similarly, the terseness of e-mail and chat rooms produced the need for the emoticon.

Modern communication media now allow for intense long-distance exchanges between larger numbers of people (many-to-many communication via e-mail, Internet forums). On the other hand, many traditional broadcast media and mass media favor one-to-many communication (television, cinema, radio, newspaper, magazines).

Mass media

Mass media is a term used to denote, as a class, that section of the media specifically conceived and designed to reach a very large audience (typically at least as large as the whole population of a nation state). It was coined in the 1920s with the advent of nationwide radio networks and of mass-circulation newspapers and magazines. The mass-media audience has been viewed by some commentators as forming a mass society with special characteristics, notably atomization or lack of social connections, which render it especially susceptible to the influence of modern mass-media techniques such as advertising and propaganda.

Non-human communication

Communication in many of its facets is not limited to humans or even primates. Every information exchange between living organisms, a transmission of signals involving a living sender and receiver, can count as communication. Most of this, necessarily, is nonverbal. Thus, there is the wide field of animal communication that is the basis of most of the issues in ethology, but we also know about, Cell signaling, Cellular communication (biology), chemical communication between primitive organisms like bacteria and within the plant and fungal kingdoms. One distinctive non-intrinsic feature of these types of communication in contrast to human communication is allegedly the absence of emotional features, and a limitation to the pure informational level.

Animal communication

A European starling singing, a form of communication among birds.

Animal communication is any behavior on the part of one animal that has an effect on the current or future behavior of another animal. Of course, human communication can be subsumed as a highly developed form of animal communication. This is quite evident as humans are able to communicate with animals especially dolphins and other animals used in circuses however these animals have to learn a special means of communication.

While animals have many kinds of communication, a number of functions include:

  • Agonistic interaction: everything to do with contests and aggression between individuals. Many species have distinctive threat displays that are made during competition over food, mates or territory; much bird song functions in this way. Often there is a matched submission display, which the threatened individual will make if it is acknowledging the social dominance of the threatener; this has the effect of terminating the aggressive episode and allowing the dominant animal unrestricted access to the resource in dispute. Some species also have affiliative displays which are made to indicate that a dominant animal accepts the presence of another.
  • Courtship rituals: signals made by members of one sex to attract or maintain the attention of potential mate, or to cement a pair bond. These frequently involve the display of body parts, body postures (gazelles assume characteristic poses as a signal to initiate mating), or the emission of scents or calls, that are unique to the species, thus allowing the individuals to avoid mating with members of another species which would be infertile. Animals that form lasting pair bonds often have symmetrical displays that they make to each other: famous examples are the mutual presentation of weed by Great Crested Grebes, studied by Julian Huxley, the triumph displays shown by many species of geese and penguins on their nest sites and the spectacular courtship displays by the bird of paradise and manakin.
  • Food-related signals: many animals make «food calls» that attract a mate, or offspring, or members of a social group generally to a food source. When parents are feeding offspring, the offspring often have begging responses (particularly when there are many offspring in a clutch or litter—this is well known in altricial songbirds, for example). Perhaps the most elaborate food-related signal is the dance language of honeybees studied by Karl von Frisch.
  • Alarm calls: signals made in the presence of a threat from a predator, allowing all members of a social group (and often members of other species) to run for cover, become immobile, or gather into a group to reduce the risk of attack.

Plant communication

Plant communication is observed (a) within the plant organism, within plant cells and between plant cells, (b) between plants of the same or related species and (c) between plants and non-plant organisms, especially in the rootzone. Plant roots communicate in parallel with rhizobia bacteria, with fungi and with insects in the soil. This parallel sign-mediated interactions which are governed by syntactic, pragmatic and semantic rules are possible because of the decentralized «nervous system» of plants. As recent research shows 99 percent of intraorganismic plant communication processes are neuronal-like. Plants also communicate via volatiles in the case of herbivory attack behavior to warn neighboring plants.[3] In parallel they produce other volatiles which attract parasites which attack these herbivores. In stress situations plants can overwrite the genetic code they inherited from their parents and revert to that of their grand- or great-grandparents.

Notes

  1. Mark L. Knapp and Judith A. Hall, Nonverbal Communication in Human Interaction (Wadsworth: Thomas Learning, 2007, ISBN 0155063723), 7.
  2. Mark McCrum, Going Dutch in Beijing: How to Behave Properly When Far Away from Home (Henry Holt, 2008, ISBN 0805086765).
  3. N. Neveu, et al.,Systemic Release of Herbivore-Induced Plant Volatiles by Turnips Infested by Concealed Root-Feeding Larvae Delia radicum L. Journal of Chemical Ecology 28 (2002): 1717–1732. Retrieved March 1, 2020.

References

ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Baumeister, R.F., and M.R. Leary. The need to belong: Desire for interpersonal attachments as a fundamental human motivation. Psychological Bulletin 117, (1995) 497-529.
  • Jandt, Fred. An Introduction to Intercultural Communication: Identities in a Global Community. Sage Publications, 2006. ISBN 1412914426
  • Knapp, Mark L. and Judith A. Hall. Nonverbal Communication in Human Interaction. Wadsworth: Thomas Learning, 2007. ISBN 0155063723
  • McCrum, Mark. Going Dutch in Beijing: How to Behave Properly When Far Away from Home. Henry Holt, 2008. ISBN 0805086765
  • McGaughey, William. Five Epochs of Civilization: World History As Emerging in Five Civilizations. Thistlerose, 2000. ISBN 0960563032
  • McKay, Matthew. Messages: The Communication Skills Book. Publishers Group West, 1995. ISBN 1572240229
  • Nichols, Ralph. Harvard Business Review on Effective Communication. Harvard Business School Press, 1997. ISBN 1578511437
  • Severin, Werner J., and James W. Tankard, Jr. Communication Theories: Origins, Methods, Uses. New York, NY: Hastings House, 1979. ISBN 0801317037

External links

All links retrieved March 1, 2020.

  • How Human Communication Fails Tampere University of Technology
  • How to Enhance Communication Skills Directory Journal
General subfields of the Social Sciences
Anthropology | Communication | Economics | Education
Linguistics | Law | Psychology | Social work | Sociology

Credits

New World Encyclopedia writers and editors rewrote and completed the Wikipedia article
in accordance with New World Encyclopedia standards. This article abides by terms of the Creative Commons CC-by-sa 3.0 License (CC-by-sa), which may be used and disseminated with proper attribution. Credit is due under the terms of this license that can reference both the New World Encyclopedia contributors and the selfless volunteer contributors of the Wikimedia Foundation. To cite this article click here for a list of acceptable citing formats.The history of earlier contributions by wikipedians is accessible to researchers here:

  • Communication  history

The history of this article since it was imported to New World Encyclopedia:

  • History of «Communication»

Note: Some restrictions may apply to use of individual images which are separately licensed.

Понравилась статья? Поделить с друзьями:
  • Where did the saying my word come from
  • Where did the english word come from
  • Where did that word come from
  • Where could this mysterious word be found
  • Where can i watch the l word