Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Acquisition. The process by which people notice and pay attention to information in the environment; because people cannot perceive everything that is happening around them, they acquire only a subset of the information available. Storage.

    • The Sender
    • The Receiver
    • The Message
    • The Medium
    • Feedback
    • Other Factors
    • The Communication Process in Action

    The communication process begins with the sender, who is also called the communicator or source. The sender has some kind of information — a command, request, question, or idea — that he or she wants to present to others. For that message to be received, the sender must first encode the message in a form that can be understood, such as by the use o...

    The person to whom a message is directed is called the receiver or the interpreter. To comprehend the information from the sender, the receiver must first be able to receive the sender's information and then decode or interpret it.

    The message or content is the information that the sender wants to relay to the receiver. Additional subtextcan be conveyed through body language and tone of voice. Put all three elements together — sender, receiver, and message — and you have the communication process at its most basic.

    Also called the channel, the mediumis the means by which a message is transmitted. Text messages, for example, are transmitted through the medium of cell phones.

    The communication process reaches its final point when the message has been successfully transmitted, received, and understood. The receiver, in turn, responds to the sender, indicating comprehension. Feedback may be direct, such as a written or verbal response, or it may take the form of an act or deed in response (indirect).

    The communication process isn't always so simple or smooth, of course. These elements can affect how information is transmitted, received, and interpreted: 1. Noise: This can be any sort of interference that affects the message being sent, received, or understood. It can be as literal as static over a phone line or radio or as esoteric as misinterp...

    Brenda wants to remind her husband, Roberto, to stop by the store after work and buy milk for dinner. She forgot to ask him in the morning, so Brenda texts a reminder to Roberto. He texts back and then shows up at home with a gallon of milk under his arm. But something's amiss: Roberto bought chocolate milk when Brenda wanted regular milk. In this ...

  2. People also ask

  3. PSY 13 ST. refers to the process whereby people notice and pay attention to information in their environment, transforming sensory data into some sort of mental representation.

  4. Littlejohn and Foss define mass communication as “the process whereby media organizations produce and transmit messages to large publics and the process by which those messages are sought, used, understood, and influenced by audience” (333).

  5. -the process whereby a commonness of thought is established and meaning is shared between individuals or between organizations and individuals

  6. Informant statements. Consistent with the focus in these Principles on reliability, agencies always should seek to carefully document informant evidence. All statements by informants or conversations between law enforcement and informants should be documented and, when feasible, recorded.

  7. Misinformation can be introduced into the memory of a witness between the time of seeing an event and reporting it later. Something as straightforward as which sort of traffic sign was in place at an intersection can be confused if subjects are exposed to erroneous information after the initial incident.

  1. People also search for