Communication is a
process between at least two people that begins when one person wants to
communicate with another. Communication originates as mental images within a
person who desires to convey those images to another.
Mental images can include ideas, thoughts, pictures, and emotions.
The person who wants to communicate
is called the sender.
· To transfer an image to another
person, the sender first must transpose or translate the images into symbols
that receivers can understand. Symbols often are words but can be pictures,
sounds, or sense information (e.g., touch or smell). The process of translating
images into symbols is called encoding.
·
The receiver, the individual to whom the message is directed, attends to and
perceives the incoming patterned information, identifying it as a specific
language message. The receiver then decodes the message by constructing his or
her own interpretations of the conventionalized meanings of the symbols.
·
As a result of
interpretations, the receiver is influenced in some way.
And the last step in the process of communication is the is an intra-personal act .
And the last step in the process of communication is the is an intra-personal act .
·
The next level in the communication
process is to transmit or communicate
the message to a receiver. This can be done in many ways: during face-to-face
verbal interaction, over the telephone, through printed materials (letters,
newspapers, etc.), or through visual media (television, photographs). Verbal,
written, and visual media are three examples of possible communication channels
used to transmit messages between senders and receivers. Other transmission channels
include touch, gestures, clothing, and physical distances between sender and
receiver.
·
When a message is received by
another person, a decoding process occurs. Just as a sender must encode
messages in preparation for transmission through communication channels,
receivers must sense and interpret the symbols and then decode the information
back into images, emotions, and thoughts that make sense to them. When messages
are decoded exactly as the sender has intended, the images of the sender and
the images of the receiver match, and effective communication occurs.
·
The message is then transmitted – spoken or written so as to cross the space
between the sender and receiver as a signal of patterned information.
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