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UConn COMM 1000 - Human Communication

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COMM1000 1st EditionLecture 1Outline of Last Lecture**No Lecture**Outline of Current Lecture l. Definition of Communication ll. Transactional Model lll. Levels of CommunicationCurrent Lecturel. Human communication is A. The Process of managing messages for the purpose creating shared meaning B. A transaction between at least two who are simultaneously sending and receiving messages toand from one another.ll. Transactional Model A. Input- all the stimuli, both past and present that give us information about the worldB. Filters- Idiosyncratic, physiological and psychologicalC. Messages1. Can be verbal or nonverbal 2. Can be intentional or unintentional 3. Are usually a combination4. Communication is usually seen as a “whole” made up multiple messages sent as one D. Interference (noise)1. Anything that prevent the messages from being received or from the intended meaning being correctly understood2. Technical interference3. Semantic interferenceE. Feedback- response from the receiver indicating whether a message has been received in its intended form.F. ListeningG. Timelll. Levels of communicationThese notes represent a detailed interpretation of the professor’s lecture. GradeBuddy is best used as a supplement to your own notes, not as a substitute.A. Our fields of study tend to be divided by different units of analysisB. In other words, what do you study a pair of people, a group or society 1. Intrapersonal communication- communication within a person - Talking to self, diary, etc.- Perception, Making attributions, forming impressions2. Interpersonal communication- Communication with another3. Basic unit of communication - Most personal- Face-to-Face or point to point 4. Interviewing- Communication transaction focused on a question answer pattern - Mostly formal- Face to face mediated 5. Intercultural /intergroup- Communication between members of different groups- Interaction and identity influenced by groups- Examples: Language, ethnicity, gender, age group6. Small Group- The process by which 3 or more members of a group exchange verbal or nonverbal messages in an attempt to influence on another - Examples: Families, Juries, committees, peer groups7. Public Communication- One or a few individuals to an audience- Occurs in public rather than private places- Relatively formal- Face –to- face but with distance- Relatively one way- Examples: Lectures8. Organizational Communication- Communication among members of organization - Deliberately designed (often large number of people)- Formal and informal networks, rules, norms- Examples: Hospitals, churches, businesses, schools9. Mass Communication- Messages disseminated on a large scale- Mediated (Print or electronic)- Typically professional communication- Less immediate feedback- Examples: TV, Radio, Movies,


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UConn COMM 1000 - Human Communication

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