What is a communication model?
A communicationmodel is a pictorial representation of the communication process, ideas, thoughts, or concepts through diagrams, etc. They can be considered to be systematic representations of the process that help us understand how communication can be carried out.
Theorists have been building communication models ever since 300 BC in attempts to explain and understand the best ways to
improve communication and rhetoric.
These models depict the process metaphorically or in symbolic terms. They form general perspectives on communication by virtue of decomposing communication from complicated to simple.
How can learning about communication models be of help to you?
Can you imagine getting anything done without communicating with your subordinates, colleagues or your bosses? Sounds absurd, right?
But, what use of the communication if it’s not effective & efficient?
Understanding and using communication models will help you to communicate successfully within the organization.
More often than not, miscommunication leads to tasks & activities going for a toss, reducing the productivity, and costs a dime to the organization.
Understanding communication models can help you optimize your communication channels, work on previous mistakes and plan efficiently in the future.
What are the 8 different types of communication models?
1. Linear models
Linear communication model are models that depict one-way communication & are used to communicate to the masses.
The linear communication models are:
- Aristotle’s Model
- Lasswell’s Model
- Shannon-Weaver Model
- Berlo’s S-M-C-R Model
2. Transactional models
Transactional models are used for interpersonal communication & the sender & receiver change roles here.
The transactional communication models include:
- Barnlund’s Transactional Model
- Dance’s Helical Model
3. Interactional models
Interactional models are also known as convergence models. They are used for new forms of communication like internet communication. The interactive communication models are:
- Osgood-Schramm Model
- Westley And Maclean Model
What are linear communication models?
The linear communication models explain a unidirectional communication process. They are good for persuading audiences but there is no concept of feedback involved. It isn’t very easy to know if the communication was effective.
1. Aristotle’s model
This model was created for the purpose of understanding how to become a more effective & persuasive communicator. Aristotle suggests taking five elements of a communication event into consideration to figure out the best way
to communicate: speaker, speech, occasion, target audience, & effect.
In his communication model, Aristotle does not assign any importance to the role of feedback in communication.
Aristotle even identified three elements that have the power to improve communication: ethos (credibility), pathos (the ability to connect), and logos (logical argument).
You could essentially consider Aristotle’s communication model to be a framework to help you improve your
communication capabilities by examining certain critical aspects that are underpinning a situation.
2. Lasswell’s Model
This model of communication attempts to understand a communication event by asking five important questions:
- Who created the event and what is their bias? This is analyzed using control analysis and the component is the communicator.
- What did they say? This is analyzed using content analysis and the component is the message.
- What channel did they say it over? This is analyzed using media analysis and the component is the medium.
- Whom did they communicate the message to? This is analyzed using audience analysis and the component is the audience.
- What effect did the message have on the receiver? This is analyzed using effect analysis and the component is the effect.
3. Shannon-Weaver Model
This model considers communication to occur in four parts: sender, encoder, channel,
decoder, & receiver. It stresses the importance of encoding and decoding messages for them to be transmitted.
This was the first model to acknowledge the existence of noise in communication that occurs during the process of encoding, sending and decoding and could disrupt or alter a message. This noise could refer to something like the static on a radio broadcast, but it could even
include spelling errors in written communication or the receiver mishearing the message.
4. Berlo’s S-M-C-R Model
Berlo’s model explains communication in four steps: Source, Message, Channel, & Receiver. This model provides a thorough account of the key elements in every one of the steps that will affect the manner in which the message is communicated.
- Source: The elements included in the source are the sender’s communication skills, their attitude and their culture.
- Message: The elements included in the message are the content, structure, and code of the message.
- Channel: The elements included in the channel are the senses of hearing, seeing, touching, smelling, etc.
- Receiver: The elements of the receiver are their attitude, knowledge, and culture.
What are the transactional communication models?
The transactional communication models explore direct personal communication
processes in which two-way feedback is immediate.
1. Barnlund’s transactional model
This model examines interpersonal, immediate-feedback communication. It holds the idea that feedback for the sender is the reply for the receiver central to the approach.
Barnlund’s model also emphasizes the role of cues in impacting your communication. It sheds light on public cues (environmental cues) and private cues (your own personal thoughts and background). Essentially,
this model shows us the factors that influence what we think & say.
2. Dance’s Helical Model
This model builds on circular models and explains how we improve our messages over time by using feedback. The feedback received for one message influences our next statement. This helps us become more knowledgeable with each cycle, making it possible for us to expand our circle as depicted in the model by circles that continuously increase in their width. The upward movement in the spiral denotes that every communication practice is new and is unique as communication doesn’t ever perfectly repeat itself.
What are interactive communication models?
The interactive communication models are the most effective way to explain impersonal two-way communication processes.
1. Osgood-Schramm Model
This model considers communication to be equal and reciprocal. It has no differentiation between sender and receiver. Each is considered to be
in an equal position as message encoders and decoders.
The Osgood-Schramm model is the most appropriate model for explaining and analyzing personal synchronous communication in which feedback is instantaneous like in face-to-face conversations. Since feedback is immediate, it is possible to reduce noise through the continuous clarification of messages throughout the
conversation.
2. The Westley & Maclean Model
This model emphasizes the importance of feedback in communication. It also highlights the role of environmental & cultural factors that influence communication.
It demonstrates that the messages we communicate are influenced by our background, our perspective, and our identity. It also considers the object of orientation (background, culture and beliefs) of the sender and receiver of the message. The model also
assumes the message to have been received & sent within a broader social context that has to be considered to know and understand the message.