What is Human Communication?
- It focus on understanding how people communicate in various ways.
There have 5 areas of human communication
Intrapersonal Communication
- Talk with yourself
- Learn and evaluate yourself
- Making decision
Interpersonal Communication
- Interact with others
- Learn about them and yourself
- Revealed yourself to others
Small group and organizational communication
- You interact with people
- Solving problem
- Developing new ideas
- Sharing knowledge and experience
Public Communication
- Inform and persuade
Mass Communication
- You are entertained, informed and persuaded by media
Culture and human communication
Aim of a cultural perspective
- Understand how communication influence
- To distinguish what is universal and what is relative
- Communicate effectively in wide variety of intercultural situations.
Component of human communication
Communication context
- Social psychological context - relationship among participants, roles that people play, friendliness or unfriendliness formality or informality, seriousness or humorousness of the situation
- Physical Context - concrete environment in which communication takes place
- Cultural Context - to do with your culture and that of others
- Temporal Context - time of day which communication takes place
Component
Two way role that interchanges actively in a conversation
Source (Encoder)-Encode messages like speaks, write and giving gesture.
Receiver (Decoder)-Decode message like listen, read and respond
Messages
Words, text or body language
Feedback & Feed forward
Response and preparation
Feedback - From listener to speaker
Feed forward - a pretext to the context like a trailer from a movie
Channels
Vocal - Spoken words
Visual - Hand gestures, body language can be see with eyes
Olfactory Channel - Smells
Tactile - Touch
Noises
Physical noises - None from transport
Physiological Noise - Hearing loss or memory loss
Psychological Noise - Impressions on people
Semantic Noise - Jargons, a word we couldn't understand like APA style
Effects
- Intellectual/Cognitive: changes in your thinking and mind
- Affective: behavioural change
- Psycho motor: physical behavioural change
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