Core Principles of Communication

CCH 914: HABITAT INFORMATICS I: SKILLS DEVELOPMENT

Beyond models, communication is guided by four fundamental principles:

  1. Communication is Processual

    It is a sequence of interrelated actions:

    Ideation → Encoding → Transmission → Decoding → Feedback

    Harold Lasswell’s (1948) classic formula captures this:

    “Who says What in Which channel to Whom, with What effect?”

    The five key elements: Source, Message, Channel, Receiver, Effect.

  2. Communication is Dynamic
    It is ongoing, ever-changing, and influenced by context, relationships, and time—never static or isolated.

  3. Communication is Symbolic
    Meaning is created through shared symbols (words, gestures, images). Symbols operate at multiple levels:

    • Referent: the actual object/concept

    • Reference: the mental association

    • Symbolic: arbitrary signs (e.g., language)

    • Indexical: signs with causal links (e.g., smoke = fire)

    • Iconic: signs that resemble what they represent (e.g., a map)

  4. Communication is Contextual
    It occurs within specific environments that shape meaning and interaction, including:

    • Intrapersonal (within oneself)

    • Interpersonal (dyadic or triadic)

    • Small group

    • Public speaking

    • Organisational

    • Mass-mediated (e.g., TV, social media)

Core Principles of Communication
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