PRM(F)Q Practice Readings
Types of NOISE A
person's ability to interpret, understand, or respond to symbols is often
hurt by noise. Noise is any stimulus that gets in the way of sharing
meaning. Much of your success as a communicator depends on how you cope with
external internal, and semantic noises. External
noises are the sights, sounds, and other stimuli that draw people's
attention away from intended meaning. For instance, during a student's
explanation of how a food processor works, your attention may be drawn to the
sound of an airplane overhead. The airplane sound is external noise. External
noise does not have to be a sound. Perhaps during the explanation, a
particularly attractive classmate glances toward you, and for a moment your
attention turns to that person. Such visual distraction to your attention is
also external noise. Internal
noises are the thoughts and feelings that interfere with meaning. Have
you ever found yourself daydreaming when a person was trying to tell you
something? Perhaps you let your mind wander to thoughts of the good time you
had at a dance club last night or to the argument you had with someone this
morning. If you have tuned out
the words of your friend and tuned in a daydream or a past conversation, then
you have created internal noise. Semantic
noises are those alternative meanings aroused by certain symbols that
inhibit meaning. Suppose that a student mentioned that the salesman who sells
food processors at the department store seemed like a "gay fellow."
If you think of
"gay" as a word for homosexual, you would miss the student's
meaning entirely. Since meaning depends on your own experience, others may at
times decode a word or phrase differently from the way you intended. When
this happens, you have semantic noise.
THE CROWD The crowd is one of the most familiar and at times
spectacular forms of collective behavior. It is a temporary, relatively
unorganized gathering of people who are in close physical proximity. Since a
wide range of behavior is encompassed by the concept, the sociologist Herbert
Blumer distinguishes among four basic types of
crowd behavior. The first, a casual
crowd, is a collection of people who have little in common except that
they may be participating in a common event, such as looking through a
department store window. The second, a conventional
crowd, is a number of people who have assembled for some specific purpose
and who typically act in accordance with established norms, such as people
attending a baseball game or concert. The third, an expressive crowd, is an aggregation of people who have gotten
together for self-stimulation and personal gratification, such as at a
religious revival or a rock festival. And fourth, an acting crowd is an excited, volatile collection of people who are
engaged in rioting, looting, or other forms of aggressive behavior in which
established norms carry little weight. FOUR TYPES OF ESP Parapsychologists (psychologists who study claims of
more-than-normal happenings) have proposed four types of extrasensory
perception, or ESP, each of which is said to occur without using the physical
senses. Telepathy is one person's sending thoughts to another. For
example, in an experiment, one person may look at a picture and try to
"send" this picture to a “receiver" in another room. Clairvoyance
is perceiving distant events, such as sensing
that one's child has just been in a car accident. Precognition is "preknowing"
(foretelling) future events, such as the assassination of a political leader.
Psychokinesis is "mind over
matter"--for example, levitating a table or, in an experiment,
influencing the roll of a die by concentrating on a particular number. Credit belongs to Langan, John. Reading
and Study Skills, various editions. |