Also known as expression, expressing, to express, transmition of a message
Communication is commonly defined as the transmission of information. Its precise definition is disputed and there are disagreements about whether unintentional or failed transmissions are included and whether communication not only transmits meaning but also creates it. Models of communication are simplified overviews of its main components and their interactions. Many models include the idea that a source uses a coding system to express information in the form of a message. The message is sent through a channel to a receiver who has to decode it to understand it. The main field of inquiry in
Communication is the process of transmitting information from one person or source to another, typically involving a sender who encodes a message and a receiver who decodes it to understand the meaning. While communication is essential for sharing information and coordinating human activity, scholars continue to debate its precise definition, particularly around questions of whether unintended or unsuccessful transmissions count as communication and whether it simply conveys existing meaning or actively creates new meaning.
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Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).
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