Communication Studies

Communication Studies is a field of academic study that explores human communication processes.


Communication theorists use a variety of research methods and theories to explore how communication is produced and interpreted by individuals (intrapersonal competencies) and by co-authors, teams, and institutions and organizations (interpersonal competencies). Common research themes are

  1. Semiotics: How do people use verbal, nonverbal, visual, and aural signs and symbols to create and share messages?
  2. Information Production: How is information created? How does the rhetorical situation or choice of writing tools influence communication? What physiological and cognitive factors impinge invention and revision?
  3. Media Effects: How do communication technologies alter composing, and culture?

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Here at Writing Commons, we are eager to present scholarship on Communication Studies that is likely to help students evolve as writers and speakers. Please see Contribute for details regarding our peer-review process.

Additional Resources

Communication theorists are especially fond of formalist and textual research methods.

See Communication Theories for summaries of popular communication theories such as Actor-Network Theory (ANT), Cognitive Dissonance Theory, and Confirmation Bias.

Communication Theories, http://www.communicationstudies.com/communication-theories/confirmation-bias

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