Difference between revisions of "OB communication concepts"
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Revision as of 01:22, 2 December 2018
OB introductory concepts are those concepts that are related to the core of the organizational behavior science. The concepts below are taken from Organizational Behavior by Robbins and Judge (17th edition); Septem Artes Administrativi served as the primary source of illustrations.
Communication
- Communication. The transfer and the understanding of meaning.
- Communication process. The steps between a source and a receiver that results in the transfer and understanding of meaning.
- Formal channel. A communication channel established by an organization to transmit messages related to the professional activities of members.
- Informal channel. A communication channel that is created spontaneously and that emerges as a response to individual choices.
- Grapevine. An organization's informal communication network.
- Channel richness. The amount of information that can be transmitted during a communication episode.
- Automatic processing. A relatively superficial consideration of evidence and information making use of heuristics.
- Controlled processing. A detailed consideration of evidence and information relying on facts, figures, and logic.
- Need for cognition. A personality trait of individuals depicting the ongoing desire to think and learn.
- Filtering. A sender's manipulation of information so that it will be seen more favorably by the receiver.
- Information overload. A condition in which information inflow exceeds an individual's processing capacity.
- Communication apprehension. Undue tension and anxiety about oral communication, written communication, or both.
- High-context culture. A culture that relies heavily on nonverbal and subtle situational cues in communication.
- Low-context culture. A culture that relies heavily on words to convey meaning in communication.