Chapter 1 - Review


The Essentials of Human Communication – Chapter 1

Human communication consists of the sending and receiving of verbal and nonverbal messages between two or more people.
Myths about Human Communication
To begin studying communication, consider the relationship between some common beliefs about communication and research and theory about these beliefs.
- Belief: The more you communicate, the better your communication will be.
- Research and theory finds that if you practice bad habits, you are more likely to grow less effective as a communicator.
- Belief:  When two people are in a close relationship, neither person should have to explicitly communicate needs and wants.
- Research and theory indicates that people are not mind readers and to assume otherwise inhibits open and honest communication.
- Belief: Interpersonal or group conflict is a reliable sign that the relationship or group is in trouble.
- Research and theory suggests that interpersonal and group conflict is inevitable and if approached effectively can be beneficial to the relationship or group.
- Belief: Like good communicators, leaders are born, not made.
- Research and theory finds that leadership, like communication and listening, is a learned skill.
- Belief: Fear of public speaking is detrimental and must be eliminated.
- Research indicates that most speakers are nervous; learning to manage anxiety effectively can enhance one’s performance.



Skills of Human Communication
Communication skills are vital to successful personal, social, and work life. 
These skills include the following:
- Self-presentation skills – presenting one’s self to others as confident, credible, likeable, and approachable is essential to effective human interaction.
- Relationship skills – knowing how to initiate, maintain, repair, and even occasionally dissolve relationships makes one a better friend, family member, romantic partner, and coworker.
- Interviewing skills – being able to interact to gather and to share information in a variety of situations, including job interviews, enhances one’s personal and professional life.
- Group interaction and leadership skills – participating as an effective group member in relationship and task groups adds to the strength and success of the group.
- Presentation skills – speaking to small and large audiences to inform or to persuade builds self-confidence and can serve a larger common good.

Forms of Human Communication
 Learning these skills requires engaging in and mastering a variety of communication forms: 
- Intrapersonal – through communication with oneself, one learns about one’s self and rehearses messages intended for others
- Interpersonal – through communication between two people, communicators learn about themselves and the other, reveal themselves to the other, and build, maintain, repair, and occasionally terminate relationships.
- Interviewing – through communication that proceeds by question and answer, communicators gather and share information, counsel or get counseling, obtain employment and select others for employment.
- Small Group – through communication within small groups (5 to 10 people), communicators develop new ideas, solve problems, and share knowledge and experiences.
- Public – by communicating as a speaker to an audience, one learns how to connect with an audience to inform and to persuade.
- Computer-mediated – by studying and analyzing communication that occurs through computer connections (e.g., e-mail, IM, chat rooms, newsgroups, blogs) one learns the differences and similarities between CMC and face-to-face communication as well as how to be a critical user of not only CMC but also other forms of communication.
- Mass communication (e.g., newspapers, magazines, radio, television, film)
– Media literacy – the skills and competencies needed to become a wiser, more critical consumer has become central to the study of human communication.

Communication Models and Concepts
Human communication has been studied from a variety of viewpoints:  
• The linear view held that the speaker spoke and the listener listened, communicating in a straight line.
• The transactional view, a more satisfying view than either the linear model, holds that each person serves simultaneously as speaker and listener.  The transactional model also holds that the elements of communication are interdependent; a change in any element of the process produces changes in the other elements.
Communication occurs when you send and receive messages and when you assign meaning to others’ signals.  All human communication:
- is distorted by noise
- occurs with a context
- has some effect
- involves some opportunity for feedback
Sources-Receivers – each person involved in communication is both a source (speaker) and receiver (listener), hence the hyphenated term.  Source-receivers send messages by encoding their ideas into words, symbols, and nonverbal cues. Source-receivers also decode messages by assigning meaning to the words, symbols, and nonverbal cues of others.  
Messages – vary in form and may be sent and received through any combination of sensory organs. Messages are conveyed with words as well as nonverbal cues such as clothing, facial expressions, and body posture. Some messages have specialized functions:
Feedforward - messages that preface other messages, that usually reveal something about the message  (e.g., “I’m not sure this is correct, but. . .” or “Wait until you hear this one.”),  or can also include the table of contents of a book, the words in the subject line of an email, etc.
Feedback - messages or information prompted by another message, such as laughing in response to a joke or a computer-generated message indicating a password has been entered incorrectly.  We also give ourselves feedback from hearing our own messages.
Metamessages - messages that refer to other messages; communication about the message itself, such as saying, “I don’t think you understand what I am saying.”
Workplace Messages - In workplaces, messages are often classified based on their direction.
·         Upward communication:  messages sent from lower levels upward
·         Downward communication:  messages sent from higher levels to lower levels
·         Lateral communication:  messages between equals
·         Grapevine communication:  messages that do not follow any formal, hierarchical lines

Communication Context
Communication exists in a context, and that context to a large extent determines the meaning of any verbal or nonverbal message. Context also influences the content and form of messages conveyed.
Contexts have at least four aspects:
·         physical - the tangible or concrete environment    
·         cultural - the lifestyles, beliefs, values, ways of behaving and communicating
·         social psychological - the status relationships among participants, the norms of the group or organization, the formality-informality of the situation
·         temporal - the position in which a message fits into a sequence of events
Channel - the medium through which messages are sent; communication rarely takes place over only one channel.
Noise - anything that interferes with the sending or receiving of messages.
Types of noise include:
o   physical - interference external to speakers and listeners, such as loud music, others’ conversations, machinery noises
o   physiological - physical barriers within the speaker or listener, such as visual or hearing impairments
o   psychological - cognitive or mental interference, such as prejudices, preconceived notions, and expectations
o   semantic -  speaker and listener assigning different meanings to messages because of varying comprehension of signals (e.g., different language competencies or unfamiliarity with a specialized language)
All communication includes noise. The significance of noise may be better understood by considering the signal-to-noise ratio of a given communicative act or channel. Most effective communicators seek communication that contains significantly higher levels of useful information (signal) as compared to useless information (noise).
Effects – the consequence of communication; what occurs because of the communication process. Effects can be cognitive (e.g., acquiring knowledge), affective (e.g., changing a belief), or psychomotor (e.g., learning a skill)
Principles of Communication
Several principles are essential to understanding human communication:
·          Communication Is Purposeful – some motivation leads people to communicate.
·          Communication has five general purposes - to learn, to relate, to help, to influence, to play
·          Communication Involves Choices – All communication involves choice points, deciding with whom to communicate, what to say, what not to say, how you phrase something, etc. 

These choice points can be explained using John Dewey’s steps in reflective thinking:
 -Step 1:  The problem
 -Step 2:  The criteria
 -Step 3:  The possible solutions
 -Step 4:  The analysis
 -Step 5:  The selection and execution
Communication Is Ambiguous – virtually all messages may be interpreted in more than one way; some level of uncertainty always exists concerning whether messages are received by listeners exactly the same way they were intended by speakers. Because communication is ambiguous, learning to metacommunicate (communicate about communication) may lessen misunderstanding and reduce uncertainty among communicators.
o   Language ambiguity occurs by words that can be interpreted in different ways.
o   Relationship ambiguity involves the uncertainty that exists in all types of relationships.

Communication Involves Content and Relationship Dimensionscommunication exists on at least two levels:
Ø  Content dimension refers to the literal meaning of the message or the behavioral   response expected
Ø  Relationship dimension refers to how communicators feel about the message, about each other, and their degrees of status difference or intimacy
Problems often result from failure to distinguish between the content and relationship dimensions of communication.
Communication Has a Power Dimension – power, or the ability to influence or control the actions of others, exists only in relationship to others’ perception of one’s power. People influence others’ perception of their power through the way they communicate and, conversely, the ways people communicate influence others’ perception of the power they can wield. 
Research suggests people may convey at least six types of power:
§  Legitimate power - when people perceive another has having the right to influence the behavior of others because of a social role (e.g., perceiving a supervisor has having the right to ask her employees to stay late, a police officer has having the right to arrest drunk drivers, or a judge having the right to pass sentences on convicted criminals).
§  Referent power - power generated by others’ want to be like another person. People who are perceived as having referent power are generally attractive, charismatic, confident, and seen as having prestige. Celebrities tend to trade in referent power.
§  Reward power - power generated by others’ perception of an individual’s ability to provide material and social benefits. Rich uncles may be perceived as having reward power as may rich friends and socially prominent acquaintances.
§  Coercive power - power generated by others’ perception of an individual’s ability to administer punishment or remove rewards. Bullies generally rely on others to perceive them as having coercive power.
§  Expert power- power generated by others’ perception of an individual’s special knowledge. Doctors and lawyers are often perceived as having expert power as is the only person in the office who knows how to replace the toner cartridge in the copy machine.
§  Information power - also called persuasion power; when others’ perceive an individual as being able to communicate logically and persuasively. Successful politicians tend to trade in information power.
Communication Is Punctuated – communication events are continuous transactions with no clear-cut beginning or ending; individuals divide the communication sequence into stimuli and response (cause and effect) differently. 
Communication Is Inevitable, Irreversible, and Unrepeatable – we cannot help but communicate; we cannot take back the messages we send; we cannot duplicate them.

Culture and Human Communication
Culture refers to the beliefs, ways of behaving, and artifacts of a group that are transmitted through communication and learning rather than through genes.
·         Gender is considered a cultural variable largely because cultures teach boys and girls different attitudes, beliefs, values, and ways of relating to one another. 
The Importance of Culture – 
o   Demographic changes—These changes bring the need to understand and adapt to new ways of looking at communication.
o   Sensitivity to cultural differences—As the U.S. moves from an assimilationist perspective (the idea that people should leave native customs behind) and toward valuing cultural diversity, we have become increasingly sensitive to cultural differences.
o   Economic interdependence—More countries are more economically dependent on one another, so understanding intercultural communication is more crucial than ever before.
o   Communication technology—has made intercultural interaction easy, practical, and inevitable.
o   Culture-specific nature of communication—Communication competence is very culturally specific.
The Dimensions of Culture – cultures differ in regard to at least five different dimension continuums: 
ü  Uncertainty avoidance—the degree to which a culture values predictability
ü  Masculinity-femininity—the extent to which a culture embraces traditionally masculine or feminine characteristics
ü  Power distance—the way power is distributed throughout the society
ü  Individualism-collectivism—a culture’s emphasis on the importance of the individual or the group
ü  High and low context—the extent to which information is seen as embedded in the context.
ü  Indulgence and restraint—the relative emphasis a culture places on the gratification of desire or having fun.
ü  Long- and short-term orientation—the degree to which a culture teaches an orientation that places a value on future or immediate rewards.
The Aim of a Cultural Perspective – because culture permeates all forms of communication, cultural understanding is needed to communicate effectively in the wide variety of situations. A cultural perspective allows communicators to distinguish between what is universal (true to all people) and what is relative (culturally based).
Ethnic Identity and Ethnocentrism – Ethnic identity refers to one’s commitment to the beliefs and philosophy of one’s own culture; ethnocentrism refers to the tendency to judge others and their behavior through one’s own cultural filters and to give greater credence to one’s own cultural norms and behaviors than to those of other cultures.
The ethnocentrism continuum summarizes the interconnections between ethnocentrism and communication in five degrees:
-          Equality
-          Sensitivity
-          Indifference
-          Avoidance
-          Disparagement
Communication Competence
Refers to your knowledge and understanding of how communication works and your ability to use communication affectively.
The Competent Communicator Thinks Critically and Mindfully
- Create and recreate categories
- Be open to new information
- Beware of relying too heavily on first impressions
- Think before you act
The Competent Communicator Is Culturally Sensitive
The principles of effective communication vary from one culture to another.
• The Competent Communicator is Ethical—the study of good or bad
• The Competent Communicator Is an Effective Listener—you cannot be a competent communicator if you are a poor listener.

Key Terms and Facts
Human communication:
Human communication is the field dedicated to understanding how people communicate:
•with themselves: intrapersonal communication
•expression: body language
•another person: interpersonal communication
•within groups: group dynamics
•within organizations: organizational communication
•across cultures: cross-cultural communication

Why we communicate: We need to communicate by nature and we communicate by choice. There are physical needs, identity needs, social needs, and practical goals; and all of these are ways we use to communicate. When it comes to physical needs communication is so important that its presence or absence affects physical health.

Computer-mediated communication:
Computer-mediated communication is defined as any communicative transaction that occurs through the use of two or more networked computers. While the term has traditionally referred to those communications that occur via computer-mediated formats (e.g., instant messages, e-mails, chat rooms), it has also been applied to other forms of text-based interaction such as text messaging. Research on computer mediated communication focuses largely on the social effects of different computer-supported communication technologies.

Interpersonal communication:
Communication scholars define Interpersonal communication in numerous ways, usually describing participants who are dependent upon one another. It can involve one on one conversations or individuals interacting with many people within a society. It helps us understand how and why people behave and communicate in different ways to construct and negotiate a social reality.

Intrapersonal communication:
Intrapersonal communication is language use or thought internal to the communicator. It can be useful to envision intrapersonal communication occurring in the mind of the individual in a model which contains a sender, receiver, and feedback loop. 
Definitions: Although successful communication is generally defined as being between two or more individuals, issues concerning the useful nature of intrapersonal communication made some argue that this definition is too narrow.


Public speaking:
Public speaking is the process of speaking to a group of people in a structured, deliberate manner intended to inform, influence, or entertain the listeners. It is closely allied to 'presenting', although the latter has more of a commercial advertisement connotation.  Overview In public speaking, as in any form of communication, there are five basic elements, often expressed as 'who is saying what to whom using what medium with what effects?' The purpose of public speaking can range from simply transmitting information, to motivating people to act, to simply telling a story.

Literacy:   
Literacy refers to the ability to read for knowledge, write coherently, and think critically about the written word. Visual literacy includes in addition the ability to understand all forms of communication, be it body language, pictures, maps, or video. Evolving definitions of literacy often include all the symbol systems relevant to a particular community.

Media literacy:
Media literacy is a repertoire of competences that enable people to analyze, evaluate, and create messages in a wide variety of media modes, genres, and forms. Education Media Education is the process of teaching and learning about media. It is about developing young people's critical and creative abilities when it comes to the media.

Models of communication:
Models of communication refer to the conceptual model used to explain the human communication process. The first major model for communication came in 1949 by Claude Elwood Shannon and Warren Weaver for Bell Laboratories Following the basic concept, communication is the process of sending and receiving messages or transferring information from one part (sender) to another (receiver). The original model was designed to mirror the functioning of radio and telephone technologies.

Receiver:
In modulated ultrasound terminology, a receiver is a device that receives a modulated ultrasound signal and decodes it for use as sound, navigational-position information, etc. Its function is somewhat like that of a radio receiver.




Nonverbal communication:
Nonverbal communication is usually understood as the process of communication through sending and receiving wordless (mostly visual) cues between people. Messages can be communicated through gestures and touch, by body language or posture, by facial expression and eye contact, which are all considered types of nonverbal communication. Speech contains nonverbal elements known as paralanguage, including voice quality, rate, pitch, volume, and speaking style, as well prosodic features such as rhythm, intonation, and stress.

Phatic communication:
Small talk is an informal type of discourse that does not cover any functional topics of conversation or any transactions that need to be addressed. Small talk is conversation for its own sake, or The phenomenon of small talk was initially studied in 1923 by Bronislaw Malinowski, who coined the term 'phatic communication' to describe it. The ability to conduct small talk is a social skill; hence, small talk is some type of social communication.

Asynchronous communication:
In telecommunications, asynchronous communication is transmission of data without the use of an external clock signal, where data can be transmitted intermittently rather than in a steady stream. Any timing required to recover data from the communication symbols is encoded within the symbols. The most significant aspect of asynchronous communications is variable bit rate, or that the transmitter and receiver clock generators do not have to be exactly synchronized.

Grapevine:
To hear something through the grapevine is to learn of something informally and unofficially by means of gossip and rumor. The usual implication is that the information was passed person to person by word of mouth, perhaps in a confidential manner among friends or colleagues. It can also imply an overheard conversation or anonymous sources of information.

Lateral communication:
In organizations and organisms, lateral communication works in contrast to traditional top-down, bottom-up or hierarchic communication and involves the spreading of messages from individuals across the base of a pyramid.
Lateral communication in organism or animals can give rise to Collective intelligence, or the appearance of Collective intelligence.




Examples of lateral communication in organisms include:
•A coordinated flock of birds or a shoal of fish all maintains their relative positions, or alters direction simultaneously due to lateral communication amongst members; this is achieved due to tiny pressure variations
•An ants, termites, bees nest is not coordinated by messages sent by the queen ant / bee / termite but by the lateral communication, mediated by scent trails of the ants.

Upward communication:
Upward Communication is the process of information flowing from the lower levels of a hierarchy to the upper levels. This type of communication is becoming more and more popular in organizations as traditional forms of communication are becoming less popular. The more traditional organization types such as a hierarchy, places people into separate ranks.

Semantic noise:
Communication noise refers to influences on effective communication that influence the interpretation of conversations. While often looked over, communication noise can have a profound impact both on our perception of interactions with others and our analysis of our own communication proficiency. Forms of communication noise include psychological noise, physical noise, physiological and semantic noise.

Ambiguity:
Ambiguity of information, in words, pictures, or other media, is the ability to express more than one interpretation. It is generally contrasted with vagueness, in that specific and distinct interpretations are permitted (although some may not be immediately apparent), whereas with information that is vague it is difficult to form any interpretation at the desired level of specificity. Context may play a role in resolving ambiguity.

Abstraction:
The term abstraction has a number of uses in the field of linguistics. It can denote a process (so called object abstraction) in the development of language, whereby terms become used for concepts further removed from the objects to which they were originally attached. It can so denote a process applied by linguists themselves, whereby phenomena are considered without the details that are not relevant to the desired level of analysis.




Speech disorder:
Speech disorders or speech impediments are a type of communication disorders where 'normal' speech is disrupted. This can mean stuttering, lisps, etc. Someone who is unable to speak due to a speech disorder is considered mute.

Referent power:
Referent power is individual power of an individual over the Team or Followers, based on a high level of identification with, admiration of, or respect for the powerholder/leader. Nationalism, patriotism, celebrities, mass leaders and widely-respected people are examples of referent power in effect. Referent power is one of the Five Bases of Social Power, as defined by Bertram Raven and his colleagues in 1959.

Assertiveness:
Assertiveness is a particular mode of communication. Dorland's Medical Dictionary defines assertiveness as: During the second half of the 20th century, assertiveness was increasingly singled out as a behavioral skill taught by many personal development experts, behavior therapists, and cognitive behavioral therapists. Assertiveness is often linked to self-esteem.

Referent:
In semantics a referent is a person or thing to which a linguistic expression refers, a discursive entity, the subject of speech. The term referent may sometimes be ambiguous in that it can mean the thing that refers, or the thing which is referred to. In most fields, however, it usually has the second meaning - the thing to which another thing refers.

Punctuation:
Punctuation marks are symbols that indicate the structure and organization of written language, as well as intonation and pauses to be observed when reading aloud. In written English, punctuation is vital to disambiguate the meaning of sentences. For example, 'woman, without her man, is nothing' (emphasizing the importance of men) and 'woman: without her, man is nothing' (emphasizing the importance of women) have greatly different meanings, as do 'eats shoots and leaves' (to mean 'consumes plant growths') and 'eats, shoots and leaves' (to mean 'eats firstly, fires a weapon secondly, and leaves the scene thirdly



Intercultural communication:
Intercultural communication is a form of global communication. It is used to describe the wide range of communication problems that naturally appear within an organization made up of individuals from different religious, social, ethnic, and educational backgrounds. Intercultural communication is sometimes used synonymously with cross-cultural communication.

Interdependence:
Interdependence is a relationship in which each member is mutually dependent on the others. This concept differs from a dependence relationship, where some members are dependent and some are not. In an interdependent relationship, participants may be emotionally, economically, ecologically and/or morally reliant on and responsible to each other.

Perspective:
Perspective in theory of cognition is the choice of a context or a reference (or the result of this choice) from which to sense, categorize, measure or codify experience, cohesively forming a coherent belief, typically for comparing with another. One may further recognize a number of subtly distinctive meanings, close to those of paradigm, point of view, reality tunnel, umwelt, or weltanschauung. To choose a perspective is to choose a value system and, unavoidably, an associated belief system.

Uncertainty avoidance:
Uncertainty Avoidance: 'a society's tolerance for uncertainty and ambiguity'. It reflects the extent to which members of a society attempt to cope with anxiety by minimizing uncertainty. The uncertainty avoidance dimension expresses the degree to which a person in society feels uncomfortable with a sense of uncertainty and ambiguity.

Orientation:
Orientation is a function of the mind involving awareness of three dimensions: time, place and person. Problems with orientation lead to disorientation, and can be due to various conditions, from delirium to intoxication. Typically, disorientation is first in time, then in place and finally in person.

Ethnocentrism:
Ethnocentrism is judging another culture solely by the values and standards of one's own culture. The ethnocentric individual will judge other groups relative to his or her own particular ethnic group or culture, especially with concern to language, behavior, customs, and religion. These ethnic distinctions and subdivisions serve to define each ethnicity's unique cultural identity.
Identity:
In philosophy, identity, from Latin:  ('sameness'), is the relation each thing bears just to itself. The notion of identity gives rise to many philosophical problems, including the identity of indiscernible, and questions about change and personal identity over time. It is important to distinguish the philosophical concept of identity from the more well-known notion of identity in use in psychology and the social sciences.

Impression management:
In sociology and social psychology, impression management is a goal-directed conscious or unconscious process in which people attempt to influence the perceptions of other people about a person, object or event; they do so by regulating and controlling information in social interaction (Piwinger & Ebert 2001, pp. 1-2). It is usually used synonymously with self-presentation, in which a person tries to influence the perception of their image. The notion of impression management also refers to practices in professional communication and public relations, where the term is used to describe the process of formation of a company's or organizations public image.

Critical thinking:
Critical thinking is a type of reasonable, reflective thinking that is aimed at deciding what to believe or what to do. It is a way of deciding whether a claim is always true, sometimes true, partly true, or false. Critical thinking can be traced in Western thought to the Socratic method of Ancient Greece and in the East, to the Buddhist kalama sutta and Abhidharma.

Principles of Communication Quiz
1. Of the following definitions, the one that implies that communication is intentional is:
A) communication has as its central interest those behavioral situations in which a source transmits a message to a receiver with conscious intent to affect the latter's behaviors.
B) communication is the discriminatory response of an organism to a stimulus.
C) communication is a process of acting on information.
D) speech communication is a process through which people make sense of the world.
           

2. Why do we communicate?
  A) To create and maintain our sense of identity
  B) To help us create communities and to form and strengthen relationships
  C) To develop the ability to influence others
  D) To convey and create information
  E) For all of the above reasons


3. Storytelling and joke telling can accomplish which purpose of communication?
 A) to discover
 B) to relate
 C) to help
 D) to play


4. When people who study communication focus their attention on spoken symbolic interaction, their primary interest is in which of the following?
A) The unintentional behaviors that accompany speaking
B) The way people use words to create common meaning
C) The unspoken body language that people use
D) All of the ways organisms (including non-human organisms) create meaning
           

5. Communication is considered a(n)_______ because it has no beginning or end.
A) process
B) mediation
C) speech
D) interaction
E) transaction
           
6. A communication source performs which of the following roles?
A) Determining the meaning of what is to be communicated
B) Encoding the meaning into a message
C) Sending the message
D) Perceiving and reacting to a listener's response to the message.
E) All of the above
7. Models do all of the following EXCEPT:
A) capture a process completely.
B) generate research questions.
C) make predictions about the future.
D) help us organize our thinking.
           

8. The essential components of communication are
A) symbols, understanding, purpose, ideas, opinions, nonverbals, and reaction.
B) source, message, interference, channel, receiver, feedback, environment, and context.
C) source, destination, interaction, and correlation.
D) symbols, understanding, communication, and communicant.


9. When individuals communicate both as sources and receivers of communication messages at the same time, they are involved in a ____________________________.
A) dyadic process.
B) transaction.
C) interaction.
D) encoding process.
E) decoding process.
           
                       
10. The process of understanding information within oneself is called ___________________.
A) intrapersonal communication.
B) interpersonal communication.
C) dyadic communication.
D) active communication.
E) interactive communication.
           

11. According to the social constructionist perspective we can improve communication by ________________________________________________________________.
A) recognizing that we create reality by talking about it and should take responsibility for our talk.
B) learning to see things from the receivers' point of view.
C) encoding messages as clearly as possible.
D) describing and understanding destructive patterns.


12. Each of us has a frame of reference, which is
A) our role as the source of messages.
B) something that is only relevant when we give a public speech.
C) our role as the receiver of messages.
D) an alternative to communicating.
E) our unique view of the world and everything in it.
13. The primary channels that individuals use to communicate with others are:
A) television and radio.
B) sight and sound.
C) touch and tone of voice.
D) voice mail, conventional mail, and e-mail.
           

14. A component in the communication process that we often send without being aware of it is ________________________________________________.
A) verbal communication.
B) feedback.
C) an encoded message.
D) a message sent via touch.





15. The context of an interaction includes two major components:
A) the physical setting and the encoding.
B) the supportive climate and the defensive climate.
C) the physical setting and the psychological climate.
D) a business proposal and a personal friendship.


16. Which aspect of a message focuses on new information or ideas?
A) context
B) content
C) channel
D) relationship


17. Which of the following is the definition of a speech act?
A) A clearly marked occasion that calls for speech
B) An identifiable sequence of speech activity
C) People who share common attitudes toward speech
D) The purpose served by a given form of talk
           

18. The idea that "communication is a process of adjustment" means that:
A) both the content and relational dimensions of a message can change during communication.
B) people will adapt to others' attitudes and speech while communicating.
C) people usually engage in complementary transactions during communication.
D) people have to learn each other's meanings for words, as well as their nonverbal behaviors during communication.



19. People who take a pragmatic perspective to communication:
A) are interested in exploring the individual psychology of communicators.
B) are interested in interaction rather than personality.
C) focus on the cultural background of communicators.
D) are interested in uncovering the hidden power relations that often exist in mediated texts.


20. Because communication is a "package of signals," the best meaning of any message will always be:
A) determined over a course of interactions, rather than in just a single interaction.
B) in a combination of verbal and nonverbal signals.
C) deliberately constructed, though not always consciously constructed.
D) ambiguous and difficult to comprehend.



21. Communication refers to the process by which we create and share meanings.
True
False
           

22. The term definition comes from a Latin word meaning "to determine or bring to an end."
True
False
           
                       
23. Communication competence varies from one culture to another.
True
False
           

24. Communication is a process that is inevitable, irreversible, and unrepeatable.
True
False
           

25. Any stimulus that affects a receiver is a message from the source.
True
False
           

26. Interpersonal communication is the informal exchange of information between two or more people.
True
False
           

27. One of the many functions of communication is to enable us to influence or persuade others.
True
False
           

28. An intentional definition of communication holds that communication is purposeful and planned.
True
False
           

29. Ambiguous messages are messages that have only one potential meaning.
True
False
           

30. Today we study communication according to the transactional model, which sees communication as an interdependent process.
True
False
           

31. A person's purpose for communicating is always conscious and recognizable.
True
False
           

32. Internal and external noise may be filtered by the receiver to combat message distortion.
True
False
           

33. Noise is defined as the extent to which a sender amplifies a message by making it louder and clearer.
True
False
           

34. The best definition of communication is one that is narrow and sender-based.
True
False
           

35. "I hate to break bad news, but..." is an example of feedforward
True
False

Chapter Review
Multiple Choice Questions
 1) Which of the following statements is true of communication?
A) The more you communicate the better communicator you will be.
B) Good communicators are born, not made.
C) Fear of speaking in public is detrimental and should be eliminated.
D) None of the above.
Page Ref: 2





2) E-mail, blogging, Google+, and Facebook are all examples of __________ communication.
A) computer-mediated
B) small group 
C) public
D) intrapersonal 
Page Ref:  4


3) During a video-conference job interview for an entry-level position with a large fast-food chain, Melkamzer answers a series of questions posed by Annie, a regional manager. What type of communication did they both engage in?
A) small group communication
B) intrapersonal communication
C) computer-mediated communication
D) public speaking
Page Ref:  3–4


4) __________ communication is the general term used to describe communication from one source to many receivers who may be scattered throughout the world.
A) Mass
B) Intrapersonal
C) Public
D) Computer-mediated 
Page Ref: 4


5) Which of the following myths of communication is identified in your book?
A) The more you communicate, the better your communication skills will be.
B) Once you start communicating effectively, you will always be effective.
C) Communication skills are learned.
D) Knowing your audience is very helpful in order to be effective.
Page Ref:  2


6) The transactional view is more satisfying than the linear view because the process:
A) is simpler.
B) allows each person to serve as both speaker and listener.
C) demonstrates that speaking and listening take place at different times.
D) explains everything about media communication.
Page Ref: 4-5


7) The linear model of communication is analogous with a _________________________.
A) arrow hitting or missing a target.
B) tennis game.
C) circus.
D) person solving a puzzle.
Page Ref: 4-5


8) When Henri wants to share information with Chantal but not with others in a room, he switches from speaking English to speaking French, which Chantal understands. Which of the following best describes what Henri does to keep his comments to Chantal private?
A) He decodes his message in a way he thinks only Chantal will understand.
B) He changes the cultural context of the message in a way he thinks only Chantal will understand.
C) He changes the temporal context of the message in a way he thinks only Chantal will understand.
D) He encodes his message in a way he thinks only Chantal will understand.
Page Ref: 5


9) Before launching into her presentation to the board of directors, Sandra circulates through the room making small talk about the weather, the results of last night’s ball game, etc. Sandra is engaging in:
A) phatic communication.
B) metamessaging.
C) feedback.
D) back-channeling.
Page Ref: 6


10) The information on the cover that entices the reader to buy a magazine would be an example of:
A) feedback.
B) phatic communication.
C) informativeness.
D) feedforward.
Page Ref: 6

11) The statement, “I may be wrong about this but...,” best illustrates the element of communication known as:
A) feedforward.
B) punctuation.
C) displacement.
D) immediacy.
Page Ref: 6


12) Phatic communication is also referred to as:
A) message overload.
B) more efficient.
C) displacement.
D) immediacy.
C) small talk.
D) neutral communication.
Page Ref: 6





13) The news of Tom’s promotion started spreading around the company well before the official announcement was made.  The news of Tom’s promotion is an example of _________________ communication.
A)  upward
B)  downward
C)  lateral
D)  grapevine
Page Ref: 7


14) The temporal dimension of context can consist of __________________________.
A) the sequence of the message.
B) a message’s position within a sequence of events.
C) the tangible environment in which the communication takes place.
D) culture.
Page Ref: 7-8

15) Which of the following is true of communication contexts?
A) Contexts have at least four aspects.
B) Context has little bearing on how messages are conveyed.
C) Context is simply the physical environment in which communication takes place.
D) Context is the same as the content dimension of communication.
Page Ref: 7


16) Before going to a reception at the university president’s house, Abby reminds her date, Homer, not to act like he’s at a fraternity party. Abby wants Homer to be most aware of the __________ context.
A) physical
B) cultural
C) social-psychological
D) temporal
Page Ref: 7-8

17) “Do you understand what I’ve just asked you to do?” is an example of a:
A) paradigm.
B) paraverbal.
C) anomaly.
D) metamessage.
Page Ref: 6


18) When someone sends a message in response to your initial message, such as laughing at your joke, they are sending _______________________.
A) feedback.
B) feedforward.
C) a metamessage.
D) paramessages.
Page Ref: 6





19) The vehicle through which we send messages is referred to as the:
A) channel.
B) sender.
C) receiver.
D) metamessage.
Page Ref: 8


20) Biases or prejudices of the sender–receiver are examples of what kind of noise?
A) physical
B) psychological
C) semantic
D) channel
Page Ref: 8


21) During a department meeting, Antonio’s boss was discussing the new software that will be implemented in the department.  Anthony was daydreaming about his upcoming vacation.  We can assume that Anthony’s boss’s message to Anthony was distorted by __________ noise.
A)  physical
B)  psychological
C)  semantic
D)  physiological 
Page Ref:  8


22) Christina and Deanna were having a quiet conversation over drinks before the band started to play, but now they have to shout and even then can’t really hear what the other is saying. We can assume that once the band started to play, the signal-to-noise ratio in this scenario:
A) went from high signal/low noise to low signal/high noise.
B) went from low signal/high noise to high signal/low noise.
C) went from low signal/low noise to high signal/high noise.
D) didn’t change and had nothing to do with the communication problems they experienced.
Ref: 8-9


23) Bobby: “I got a new bat!” Jan: “That’s great. I can’t wait to see you swing it at the game next Saturday.” Bobby: “Not that kind of bat!  His name is Del and he’s my new pet.” This exchange between Bobby and Jan best illustrates which principle of communication?
A) Communication is ambiguous.
B) Communication is a package of signals.
C) Communication is punctuated.
D) Communication is purposeful.
Page Ref: 11-12





24) The tendency to divide the various communication transactions into sequences of stimuli and responses is referred to as:
A) compartmentalization.
B) departmentalization.
C) punctuation.
D) sequentization.
Page Ref: 14


25) “You cannot not respond to the messages of others” expresses which principle of communication?
A) Communication is inevitable.
B) Communication is irreversible.
C) Communication is purposeful.
D) Communication involves content and relationship dimensions.
Page Ref: 15


26) Dong-Sun and Chris had a very serious argument during which Dong-Sun said some very hurtful things to Chris. After the argument, he tried to apologize to for what was said during the argument. Dong-Sun’s later behavior best reflects which principle of communication?
A) Communication is a package of signals.
B) Communication is punctuated.
C) Communication is transactional.
D) Communication is irreversible.
Page Ref: 15


27) Mario has a deep commitment to the identity and beliefs of his Puerto Rican-American culture, following customs, and embracing specific artifacts.  This is Mario’s ________________.
A)  ethnocentrism.
B)  stereotypes.
C)  ethnic identity.
D)  social-psychological context.
Page Ref: 18


28) Ethnic identity refers to ______________________________________________.
A) one’s commitment to the beliefs and philosophy of one’s own culture.
B) the tendency to judge other cultures based on one’s own culture.
C) the ability to take the perspectives of people of other cultures.
D) adapting to the communicative style of people from other cultures.
Page Ref: 18


29) According to your book, competent communicators:
A) are born, not made.
B) think critically and mindfully.
C) do not consider power important in the communication process.
D) constantly change their ethics based the context.
Page Ref: 20


30)  Individualistic cultures put more emphasis on self-reliance, _________________________.
A) independence and individual achievement.
B) Independence and group achievement.
C) independence and social bonds.
D) social bonds and conformity to the larger social group.
Page Ref:  17


True/False Questions
31) With advances in technology, few differences exist between face-to-face and computer-mediated communication.
Answer:  FALSE
Page Ref: 4

32) Sunglasses may be regarded as communication noise.
Answer:  TRUE
Page Ref: 8-9

33) Daydreaming is an example of psychological noise.
Answer:  TRUE
Page Ref: 8-9

34) Some communication has no effect on those involved in the process.
Answer:  FALSE
Page Ref: 9

35) Ambiguity is tolerated more in low-uncertainty-avoidance cultures than in high-uncertainty-avoidance cultures.
Answer:  TRUE
Page Ref: 17

36) All messages involve content and relationship dimensions.
Answer:  TRUE
Page Ref: 12

37) Choice points are moments when you have to make choices regarding your communication.
Answer:  TRUE
Page Ref: 10-11

38) The punctuation of communication is the segmenting of the continuous stream of communication into smaller pieces.
Answer:  TRUE
Page Ref: 14

39) The process of communication is reversible and erasable.
Answer:  FALSE
Page Ref: 15




40) Competence refers to your interpersonal communication abilities rather than to small group or public speaking abilities.
Answer:  FALSE
Page Ref: 19-21

41) People are either ethnocentric or not ethnocentric.
Answer:  FALSE
Page Ref: 18-19

Completion Questions
42) __________ is a form of interpersonal communication that proceeds by questions and answer.
Answer:  Interviewing
Page Ref: 3

43) The communication __________ is the vehicle or medium through which messages pass.
Answer:  channel
Page Ref: 8

44) The concept of __________ suggests communication has consequences for those involved in the process.
Answer:  effects
Page Ref: 9

45) __________ is anything that interferes with your receiving a message.
Answer:  Noise
Page Ref: 8

46) Some motivation leads people to communicate; this is the same as the principle that __________.
Answer:  communication is purposeful
Page Ref: 9-10

47) The __________ context has to do with the status relationships among speakers.
Answer:  social-psychological
Page Ref: 16-17

48) Lecia had a great conversation with Brad at a party the first time they met, but subsequent
conversations have not been as good. This illustrates that communication is __________.
Answer:  unrepeatable
Page Ref: 15

49) __________ refers to the degree to which a culture values predictability.
Answer:  Uncertainty avoidance
Page Ref: 17

50) People with high ethnocentrism view different cultures as __________ to their own culture.
Answer:  inferior
Page Ref: 18-19


Matching Sequence
Match the perception scenario with the power
1) Kalya perceives Sachit as powerful because he knows how to prepare income tax forms.
A) legitimate power

2) Andy perceives Siobhan as powerful because she is the CEO of a company.
B) referent power

3) Rebecca perceives Angel as powerful because Angel can help her get a promotion at work.
C) reward power

4) Yebin perceives Amanda as powerful because she is the class bully.
D) coercive power

5) Perfecto perceives his big brother Larmar as powerful because he wants to be just like him when he gets older.
E) expert power

Answers: 1. E; 2. A; 3. C; 4. D; 5. B
Page Ref: 13-14

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