Cite as: The Impact Of Effective Communication On Organizational
... discussion was based on series of empirical studies of communication and organizational performance. The research findings no doubt have validated the synerginous relationship between communication approach and efficient organizational performance. They also recommended that there can still be more ...
... discussion was based on series of empirical studies of communication and organizational performance. The research findings no doubt have validated the synerginous relationship between communication approach and efficient organizational performance. They also recommended that there can still be more ...
Communication without Agents? From Agent-Oriented to
... At a more complex level, communication processes are specified by interaction protocols which are composed out of sequences of several speech acts. Thus, interaction protocols account for the fact that the addressee of a speech act is an autonomous agent too. It is realistically assumed that both, s ...
... At a more complex level, communication processes are specified by interaction protocols which are composed out of sequences of several speech acts. Thus, interaction protocols account for the fact that the addressee of a speech act is an autonomous agent too. It is realistically assumed that both, s ...
Introduction: Popular Noise in Global Systems
... Functional systems belong to the most important structural characteristics of a world society (Stichweh 2000). But how do they relate to the Popular? On the one hand, they are often observed as rather unpopular. Modern society seems to function according to dull, bureaucratic, procedural or merely t ...
... Functional systems belong to the most important structural characteristics of a world society (Stichweh 2000). But how do they relate to the Popular? On the one hand, they are often observed as rather unpopular. Modern society seems to function according to dull, bureaucratic, procedural or merely t ...
Reexamining Media Capacity Theories Using Workplace Instant
... communication as a process of information exchange and processing, and argue that a communication action is initiated either to reduce information uncertainty by providing information or to clarify ambiguous issues and reduce information equivocality (multiple information explanations). This notion ...
... communication as a process of information exchange and processing, and argue that a communication action is initiated either to reduce information uncertainty by providing information or to clarify ambiguous issues and reduce information equivocality (multiple information explanations). This notion ...
The Sociology of Trust - Department of Sociology
... To convince others to stop worrying, scientists might choose to provide no communication. That is, they might take the perspective that nothing needs to be said because they and risk managers are the ones who are well educated and know what they are doing. ...
... To convince others to stop worrying, scientists might choose to provide no communication. That is, they might take the perspective that nothing needs to be said because they and risk managers are the ones who are well educated and know what they are doing. ...
The Myth of Impoverished Signal
... also some slight fire damage. Decontamination should be complete by 08:00 Friday.‟ Of course, there was no mercury spill, and no fire damage. But apparently someone reading the notice had taken the posting seriously. The next day, discussion on the bulletin board turned to the fact that in reading a ...
... also some slight fire damage. Decontamination should be complete by 08:00 Friday.‟ Of course, there was no mercury spill, and no fire damage. But apparently someone reading the notice had taken the posting seriously. The next day, discussion on the bulletin board turned to the fact that in reading a ...
Analyzing Communication in the International Workplace
... or unnecessary, or whatever other adjustments might be needed to improve on their ability to understand. These comments and reflections would then be returned to the other team for them to consider and digest. To give just one example from our own research projects upon which we have based this book ...
... or unnecessary, or whatever other adjustments might be needed to improve on their ability to understand. These comments and reflections would then be returned to the other team for them to consider and digest. To give just one example from our own research projects upon which we have based this book ...
Argument Processes in Israeli-Palestinian Encounter Groups
... exacerbate tensions between different cultures especially when one is powerful and the other is not. There is very little research that examines crosscultural argument interactions between cultures engaged in extreme macro-political conflict. This study addresses this deficiency in the research by a ...
... exacerbate tensions between different cultures especially when one is powerful and the other is not. There is very little research that examines crosscultural argument interactions between cultures engaged in extreme macro-political conflict. This study addresses this deficiency in the research by a ...
Communication Motives, Satisfaction, and Social Support in the
... LMX can be used as an effective tool to study this issue because the exchange between leaders and members is fundamentally achieved through communication processes [10]. McCroskey and Richmond [40] claim that when supervisors are more assertive and responsive, subordinates will have a higher evaluat ...
... LMX can be used as an effective tool to study this issue because the exchange between leaders and members is fundamentally achieved through communication processes [10]. McCroskey and Richmond [40] claim that when supervisors are more assertive and responsive, subordinates will have a higher evaluat ...
Study the Knowledge and Culture Factors in the Global Virtual...
... concept. Compared with face-to-face meeting, the virtual team improves members’ participation. The global virtual team uses information and communication technologies widely and there are few chances for social interaction and face-to-face meeting. Ostensibly, this may be harmful to a knowledge-shar ...
... concept. Compared with face-to-face meeting, the virtual team improves members’ participation. The global virtual team uses information and communication technologies widely and there are few chances for social interaction and face-to-face meeting. Ostensibly, this may be harmful to a knowledge-shar ...
1. Theory as Puzzle-Solving or Map-Reading
... map of the thing known but without it one has to move through the environment with no map at all” (p. 3). Littlejohn and Foss (2005) maintain: “A theory is like a map of a city on which you can view the streets, housing developments, shopping centers, picnic grounds, and rivers because there is a ke ...
... map of the thing known but without it one has to move through the environment with no map at all” (p. 3). Littlejohn and Foss (2005) maintain: “A theory is like a map of a city on which you can view the streets, housing developments, shopping centers, picnic grounds, and rivers because there is a ke ...
A Theory for Social & Health Behavior Change
... today’s communication terms we would use source, channel and receiver. The communication process as outlined in the Natyashashtra can be applied to persuasive communication campaigns. This is feasible because the Natyashashtra deals with the technicalities of audience response, which parallels the g ...
... today’s communication terms we would use source, channel and receiver. The communication process as outlined in the Natyashashtra can be applied to persuasive communication campaigns. This is feasible because the Natyashashtra deals with the technicalities of audience response, which parallels the g ...
Learning Objectives Acknowledgements Device Abandonment
... the conditions of their own existence. Beyond this general right, a number of specific communication rights should be ensured in all daily interactions and interventions involving persons who have severe disabilities. These basic communication rights are as follows: ...
... the conditions of their own existence. Beyond this general right, a number of specific communication rights should be ensured in all daily interactions and interventions involving persons who have severe disabilities. These basic communication rights are as follows: ...
Media Studies as an Academic Discipline
... I refer here to the crossroads question highlighted in 1959 by Wilbur Schramm in his response to Berelson: Is mass communication research really a discipline or just a field? 6 Mobilizing, years later, an exercise in clarifying the “ferment in the field,” in the Journal of Communication in the early ...
... I refer here to the crossroads question highlighted in 1959 by Wilbur Schramm in his response to Berelson: Is mass communication research really a discipline or just a field? 6 Mobilizing, years later, an exercise in clarifying the “ferment in the field,” in the Journal of Communication in the early ...
Social Interaction and the New Media
... on the ways they assist in the construction of contexts of interaction. It investigates the relationships between media technologies, social interaction and forms of social context. I shall attempt to draw some ideal-typical lines between forms of communication and their corresponding contexts. The ...
... on the ways they assist in the construction of contexts of interaction. It investigates the relationships between media technologies, social interaction and forms of social context. I shall attempt to draw some ideal-typical lines between forms of communication and their corresponding contexts. The ...
Journal of Business Communication
... some organizations that value the potential efficiencies created by accomplishing more than one interaction task within a certain span of time (Turner, Grube, Tinsley, Lee, & O’Pell, 2006). In that earlier study, we found that employees who followed organizational norms in their use of instant messa ...
... some organizations that value the potential efficiencies created by accomplishing more than one interaction task within a certain span of time (Turner, Grube, Tinsley, Lee, & O’Pell, 2006). In that earlier study, we found that employees who followed organizational norms in their use of instant messa ...
Towards a New Approach in Social Simulations
... certain ability to generate, objectify and institutionalize knowledge as “common sense” reality, a factual belief system and communicative mechanisms of creative adoption of knowledge patterns taken from the collective “stock of knowledge” [42]. Modeling belief systems is important if we want to des ...
... certain ability to generate, objectify and institutionalize knowledge as “common sense” reality, a factual belief system and communicative mechanisms of creative adoption of knowledge patterns taken from the collective “stock of knowledge” [42]. Modeling belief systems is important if we want to des ...
organization in contemporary public sphere
... rather the spectacular character of the disputes. As Pierre Bourdieu declares, the television does not represent a space for discussions and argumentations (Bourdieu, 1996). Unlike to the period when newspaper was dominating, the television and the primary medias of audiovisual make a system which o ...
... rather the spectacular character of the disputes. As Pierre Bourdieu declares, the television does not represent a space for discussions and argumentations (Bourdieu, 1996). Unlike to the period when newspaper was dominating, the television and the primary medias of audiovisual make a system which o ...
Paper Complexity, mobility, migration
... scrutinize and examine asylum seeking applications. It follows that gatekeeping institutions like the one above - are places where the voice of the asylum seeking applicant finds itself confronted with the institutional voice of the officer(s) that is assessing his/her case. In there, the communicat ...
... scrutinize and examine asylum seeking applications. It follows that gatekeeping institutions like the one above - are places where the voice of the asylum seeking applicant finds itself confronted with the institutional voice of the officer(s) that is assessing his/her case. In there, the communicat ...
Stefan Jarolimek (University of Leipzig)
... collective agreements in order to address societal needs. Through CSR, enterprises of all sizes, in cooperation with their stakeholders, can help to reconcile economic, social and environmental ambitions.” (European Commission 2006: 2) Dr. Stefan Jarolimek I Riga I 19.05.2014 ...
... collective agreements in order to address societal needs. Through CSR, enterprises of all sizes, in cooperation with their stakeholders, can help to reconcile economic, social and environmental ambitions.” (European Commission 2006: 2) Dr. Stefan Jarolimek I Riga I 19.05.2014 ...
Nehru Arts and Science College T.M. Palayam, 105. DEPARTMENT
... interactions which are occurring among communicators. Further, it can be described in terms of messages transactions, which indicates how the elements of communication combine to produce a unique unrepeatable event. It can be also viewed from the point of view of individual gathering information as ...
... interactions which are occurring among communicators. Further, it can be described in terms of messages transactions, which indicates how the elements of communication combine to produce a unique unrepeatable event. It can be also viewed from the point of view of individual gathering information as ...
Communicative Action and Mass Communication via Internet
... history of the human species”. (Knowledge and Human Interests 312) This transcendental subject is the entire shared subjective experience; it is the subjective experience of the entire human species. In looking to human evolution and the emergence of culture, by combining the objective and subjectiv ...
... history of the human species”. (Knowledge and Human Interests 312) This transcendental subject is the entire shared subjective experience; it is the subjective experience of the entire human species. In looking to human evolution and the emergence of culture, by combining the objective and subjectiv ...
From the modern to the postmodern: The future of global
... on the ways in which this will shape the context and content of global communication (Braman, 2001). There are three ways in which debates over how a fact is determined in the first place appeared as issues with which international communication theorists had to deal. First, debates over the relativ ...
... on the ways in which this will shape the context and content of global communication (Braman, 2001). There are three ways in which debates over how a fact is determined in the first place appeared as issues with which international communication theorists had to deal. First, debates over the relativ ...
Nonverbal Communication for Human-Robot Interaction
... social impairments, such as autism, and their caretakers or therapists [Scassellati et al. 2012]. Robots at home can help elderly users with tasks of daily living, allowing them to age at home and increasing their independence and quality of life. To be good social partners, robots must understand a ...
... social impairments, such as autism, and their caretakers or therapists [Scassellati et al. 2012]. Robots at home can help elderly users with tasks of daily living, allowing them to age at home and increasing their independence and quality of life. To be good social partners, robots must understand a ...
High/Low Context Communication: The Malaysian Malay Style (PDF
... characteristic explains the reason for the many words in English to describe a particular situation, for instance, the varying degree of a state of emotion such as dislike (can mean despise, hate, disgust, loathe, and detest). In an analogous language, when a word is uttered, the receiver would have ...
... characteristic explains the reason for the many words in English to describe a particular situation, for instance, the varying degree of a state of emotion such as dislike (can mean despise, hate, disgust, loathe, and detest). In an analogous language, when a word is uttered, the receiver would have ...