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Communication theory & its relevance to new media Senders and Receivers week 3 MS1304 senders receivers Senders and Receivers: an overview of communication science Aims of this lecture • To look at communication models and their relevance to new media • To look at communication as a subject of academic study • To consider how theories of communication inform notions of – Senders/Receivers – Technical context – Social and cultural context – Power – Design Watch Video Monty Python – Sermon on the Mount • What is happening in terms of communication? • http://www.thetop100.net/the-entertainmentzone/monty-python-sketches/sermon-on-themount/list/z26l51i2330.aspx Lecture Question How can new media change the relationship between senders and receivers? The Lecture Simple model of communication The Lecture message Sender Receiver(s) Speaker Audience The One The Many Transformation Packet Switching The rapid transmission of small blocks of data over a channel dedicated to the connection only for the duration of one packet's transmission. Each packet can take a different path from sender to receiver (Paul Baran, 1964). The New Media Lecture? Network Communication new kind of intelligence? Pierre Levy’s Collective Intelligence • 1998 pp. 140-141 • Its effect on communities and social processes of sharing knowledge • Transformation… • Charts the role of information & communication technology – ONE-TO-MANY – MANY-TO- MANY Interactive media as a transformation in communication • one-to-many Linear movement of message from sender to passive receiver • many-to-many Non-linear movement between responsive sender(s) and receivers Levy’s transformation… • one-to-many – Separation between sender and receivers • many-to many – We all have potential to be senders and receivers Echoes…Marshall McLuhan’s Understanding Media (1964) Global Village Thesis • We are ‘nomadic gatherers of knowledge…nomadic as ever before, free from fragmentary specialism… involved in the total social process as never before; since with electricity we extend our central [nervous] system globally, instantly interrelating every human experience.’ See McLuhan on Automationp.358 Power • Both McLuhan (1964) and Levy (1998) infer that a… • In the communication process, power belongs to those who send messages and to whom no return can be made • Baudrillard, J. (1988). Selected Writings. Ed. M. Poster. Tr. J. Benedict. Oxford: Polity Press. • ‘transformation’ in communication empowers us • Communication process is democratised…??? Communication as a subject of academic study Origins of the word (etymology) • Communication comes from the Latin communis, "common." • establish a "commonness" with someone • share information, an idea or an attitude Human need to communicate • Dimbleby and Burton (1994) identify reasons why we need to communicate… • • • • • • • • • • • • Power Survival Co-operation Personal needs Relationships Persuasion Social needs Economic Information Making sense of the world Decision making Self expression McQuail 0n communication and meaning 'consider it as the sending from one person to another of meaningful messages'. Denis Society Wide Mass Media Institutional and Organisational political and business McQuail (1975) Intergroup association-local community Intragroup: family Interpersonal: dyad-couple Intrapersonal: processing information Levels of Communication • Intrapersonal Communications – Self image – Self Esteem – Perception • Interpersonal Communication – Social roles – Non-verbal communication – Language and meaning – Institutional • Group Communication – Group norms – Formal and informal groups • Mass Communication – The development of mass communication – Media analysis – Semiotics – Violence in the media – Advertising Models of Communication –Aristotle - rhetoric –Lasswell - effects – Wiener Feedback – anti-aircraft detection –Shannon and Weaver – mathematical model –Schramm – adaptation of S&W –Hall - adaptation of S&W (with meaning) –Interactivity – the new media models of communication • 2, 300 years ago Aristotle's model of human communication • Rhetoric • Study of oral communication subject speaker person addressed 1900s Lasswell and Mass Media Research Harold Lasswell (1948). "The Structure and Function of Communication in Society." In Lyman Bryson (ed.), The Communication of Ideas. Harper and Row. The Shannon-Weaver Model (1948) NOICE Shannon error checking & noise • Concerned with the transmission of messages over noisy analogue channels… • Noise increases over distance • Analogue solution = Amplifiers Shannon error checking & noise • Shannon took a new approach technical error checking & noise Shannon’s formula established that, despite high levels of channel noise, any message could be encoded at the source so that it is received ‘error free’ at its destination • Established information theory • Use of binary system (1 & 0) in the coding of information Shannon’s communication complicates issue of meaning • Technically messages are not measured in terms of meaning • Information measured in amount of possible messages • Certainty (order) • Uncertainty (disorder) • In Shannon's formula • Meaning and information are opposites • More new information means less meaning Contemporary communication is problematic “We live in a world where there is more and more information, and less and less meaning.” (Baudrillard,1994 p. 79) senders and receivers must use similar systems Or else information is without meaning… The Shannon-Weaver Model updated by Schramm (1965) communication includes five elements Shannon’s model adapted for the study of mass human communication… The Encoder • Source expresses purpose in the form of a message • Message formulated in code • This requires an encoder The Encoder • When you communicate, you have a particular purpose in mind • you want to sell something • you want to provide information • you want to convince somebody • you want to persuade The Decoder • The source needs • Introduces an encoder to coding dilemmas translate • The receiver needs a decoder to retranslate Hall on Code and How to Read Television, 1980 Hall, 1980 • Dominant (or 'hegemonic') reading: the reader fully shares the text's code and accepts and reproduces the preferred reading • Negotiated reading: the reader partly shares the text's code and broadly accepts the preferred reading, but sometimes resists and modifies it in a way which reflects their own position, experiences and interests • Oppositional ('counter-hegemonic') reading: the reader, whose social situation places them in a directly oppositional relation to the dominant code, understands the preferred reading but does not share the text's code and rejects this reading, bringing to bear an alternative frame of reference See Daniel Chandler’s Semiotics for Beginners http://www.aber.ac.uk/media/Documents/S4B/sem08c.html Feedback (back to 1940s) Weiner, 1948 Cybernetics the study of control and communication in animals and machines… Homeostasis Feedback Loop information about the result of a transformation or an action is sent back to the input of the system in the form of input data Results in stability Evolving communication models feedback Osgood and Schramm 1954 Examples of social feedback • Telephone feedback – 'mmmm’ – 'aaah’ – 'yes, I see' • face-to-face NVC communication feedback – – – – head nods smiles frowns changes in posture and orientation – gaze feedback We are but whirlpools in a river of ever-flowing water (Norbert Weiner, 1948 p. 96) We are little switchboard centres handling and rerouting the great endless current of information.... Schramm W. (1954) quoted in McQuail & Windahl (1981) How important is feedback to new media communication? Computer game scores reduce if sound is turned off Question • Is feedback the same as interaction? Feedback versus Interaction Thacker and Galloway 2007 pp. 122-124 Evolution in two-way communication Two models 1. Feedback 2. Interaction Interactivity about freedom? • New media supposed to equate to new freedoms (???) • Technologies of control on the wane – more communication, more democratic (???) • Not so say Galloway and Thacker (2007) • Networked model of control • More communication means more control • More monitoring, surveillance, and biometics The lecture The main issues from the lecture – Why study communication? – How effective/relevant are models of communication? - consider areas of significance in new media – What is the relevance of the Shannon and Weaver model – How have models changed – linearity, feedback and interactivity – What role does technology play in (re)shaping the communication process? – Freedom or control? Seminar • Evaluating a published article – Reading critically