CHAPTER 1: Elements of Interpersonal Communication

Principles of Interpersonal Communication

Transactional Process

It is an ever-changing, circular process; you’re changing, the people you communicate with are changing and your environment is changing

Purposeful

To learn

To relate

To influence

To play

To help

Ambiguous

An ambiguous message is a message that can be interpreted as having more than one meaning.

Sometimes ambiguity occurs because people use words that can be interpreted differently.

Relationships may be symmetrical or complementary

Symmetrical relationship: the two individuals mirror each other’s behavior

Complementary relationship: the two individuals engage in different behaviors

The relationship is one of equality.

Refer to Content & Relationship

Messages may refer to the real world (content messages) for example to the events and objects you see before you

Messages may also refer to the relationship between the people communicating (relationship messages)

Series of Punctuated Events

Communication events are continuous transactions. There is no clear-cut beginning and no clear-cut ending

Punctuation is referred to as the tendency to divide communication transactions into sequences of stimuli and responses

Inevitable, Irreversible and Unrepeatable

Interpersonal communication cannot be prevented (is inevitable), cannot be reversed (is irreversible) and cannot be repeated (is unrepeatable)

Interpersonal communication:
The verbal and nonverbal interaction between two people or small group of people to share ideas, beliefs, etc

Source-receiver

Each individual performs source functions (formulates and sends messages) and also performs receiver functions (perceives and comprehends messages).

Your ability to communicate effectively (as source/receiver) is your interpersonal competence)

Encoding-Decoding

Encoding: The act of producing message (speakers & writer as endocers)

Decoding: The act of understanding messages (listeners & readers as decoders)

Messages

The signals that serve as stimuli for receiver and received by one of our sense (auditory, visual, tactile, olfactory, gustatory

by gesture and touch as well as by words and sentences

Intentional or inintentional

Metamessages, feedback messages, feedforward messages

Channel

Subtopic

Face-to-face

E-mail

Noise

Anything that distorts a message, or prevents the receiver from receiving the messages

Type of noise:-

Physical noise: External interference of both speaker and sender

Physiological noise: Created by barriers within the sender or receiver

Psychological noise: Mental interference in speaker or listener

Semantic noise: Interference that occurs when the speaker and listener have different meaning systems

Context

Physical dimension: Is the tangible or concrete environment in which communication takes place

Temporal dimension: The time of day and where a particular message fits into the sequence of communication events

Temporal dimension: The time of day and where a particular message fits into the sequence of communication events

Temporal dimension: The time of day and where a particular message fits into the sequence of communication events

Ethics

Communication choices need to be guided by ethical considerations as well as by concerns with effectiveness and satisfaction.

Each communication act has a moral dimension, a rightness or wrongness

Mindfulness

A state of mental awareness

Being conscious of your reasons for thinking or communicating in a particular way

Become aware of your choices