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The Transmission Model of communication (see Figure 1.2) describes communication as a linear, one-way process in which a sender intentionally transmits a message to a receiver (Ellis & McClintock, 1990). This model focuses on the sender and the message within a communication encounter.
The transmission model of communication describes communication as a one-way, linear process in which a sender encodes a message and transmits it through a channel to a receiver who decodes it. The transmission of the message many be disrupted by environmental or semantic noise.
This lesson attempts to help us better understand the very well-known model of communication developed by Claude Shannon, The Transmission Model of Communication. It is presented here as the “prototypical” example of a model which reduces communication to a process of ‘transmitting information’.
The transmission model of communication describes communication as a linear, one-way process in which a sender intentionally transmits a message to a receiver (Ellis & McClintock, 1990). This model focuses on the sender and message within a communication encounter.
This paper is an historical explication into the transmission model of communication with particular emphasis placed on its commercial and legal indoctrination in the United States.
This video describes the basics of the Transmission/Linear model of communication.
The transmission model of communication describes communication as a linear, one-way process in which a sender intentionally transmits a message to a receiver (Ellis & McClintock, 1990, p. 71). This model focuses on the sender and the message within a communication encounter.
At the heart of the transmission model is a conceptual metaphor that utilizes technology, i.e., communication systems, to explain various aspects of the communication process.
The transactional model of communication is a more simplified model for understanding the communication process. Developed by Dean Barnlund (2008), the transactional model can be understood as a circular model of communication, more focused on the simultaneous interaction of participants than a linear process (Figure 3).
The transmission model of communication describes communication as a linear, one-way process in which a sender intentionally transmits a message to a receiver (Ellis & McClintock, 1990). This model focuses on the sender and message within a communication encounter.