PRAGMATIC IPO MODEL OF MICRO COMMUNICATION
PROCESS
Ning Zhang, Kecheng Liu
Informatics Research Centre, University of Reading, Whiteknight, Reading, U.K.
Keiichi Nakata
Informatics Research Centre, University of Reading, Whiteknight, Reading, U.K.
Keywords: Pragmatic analysis of communication, Communication process model, IPO modelling.
Abstract: Pragmatic analysis of communication focuses on the relationship between the sender’s intention and the
perlocutionary effects of the message in a given context. Although researchers in Organisational Semiotics
have realised the important roles of the information field, pragmatic information and validity claims in the
success of a communication, no model has been developed to illustrate how these factors together contribute
to the perlocutionary effects. Therefore, this paper introduces a pragmatic Input-Process-Output (IPO)
model developed on the basis of pragmatic analysis of the communication and the IPO business process
modelling, as a part of a study of communication in multicultural distributed workplaces from
social-pragmatic perspectives. This model identifies the key elements contributing to the pragmatic effects
via the communication process, namely the information field, pragmatic information, validity claims, and
time. Major steps within the process and the input and output of each step are also illustrated in the model.
A clear picture can be seen from the model how these key elements involved in the process and how the
final pragmatic effects are generated. Therefore, this model provides a guideline for future pragmatic studies
on communication with focus on pragmatic information, validity claims and the information field.
1 INTRODUCTION
Multi-cultural distributed teams refer to those locate
in different sites, have members with various
cultural backgrounds, and work together in a certain
managerial hierarchy towards common goals. The
head and local offices of an organisation locate in
two culturally differed nations, the main office of a
company and its offshore project team in the cultural
distance, are two good examples. Communication
plays a key role in improving collaboration among
multi-cultural distributed teams. However, the
efficiency and effectiveness of the communication in
such working environments are normally low mainly
due to the insufficiency of shared knowledge, weak
relationships between communicators (TE’ENI,
2006), and differences in expectations, norms,
interests, values and information needs (Scerri, et al.,
2007; Yetim, 2007). Communication and its effects
on organisational performance have been studied in
Organisational Semiotics (OS) paradigm
(Reijswoud, 1996; Clarke, 2001; Gazendam, et al.,
2004; Hawizy, 2007), in which communication is
seen as the intentional use of signs, which leads to
actions of communicators in a social context. The
six-level Organisational Semiotics (OS) Framework
was applied to many studies of communication from
the perspective of its various levels, which was first
introduced by Stamper to analyse signs used in
organisations by adding three more levels (Physics,
Empirics and Social World) to the Peirce and
Morris’s semiotic divisions of Syntactics, Semantics
and Pragmatics (Liu, 2000; Sjostrom & Goldhuhl
2004). The levels of Physics, Empirics and
Syntactics form the system platform and the rest of
three upper levels are associated with human
information functions. Connolly and Phillips (2004)
applied the OS framework to analysing international
communication over computer networks in
distributed organisations. They identified
communication problems on both human-computer
communication (HCC) and computer-mediated
149
Nakata K., Zhang N. and Liu K.
PRAGMATIC IPO MODEL OF MICRO COMMUNICATION PROCESS.
DOI: 10.5220/0003270101490156
In Proceedings of the Twelfth International Conference on Informatics and Semiotics in Organisations (ICISO 2010), page
ISBN: 978-989-8425-26-3
Copyright
c
2010 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
communication (CMC) from all six levels. Their
analyses of problems of CMC in the levels of
pragmatics and social world identified differences in
three types of norms, namely institutional, social and
environmental, which provide a valuable angle for
the norm analyses when studying communication
context. However, their study did not treat
communication as the core for collaboration within
the distributed organisation, and thus they did not
address the questions of how people’s intentions,
beliefs, values, interests, positions and commitments
affect the efficiency and effectiveness of
communication in a context of organisational
collaboration in a multicultural and distributed
environment. The communicative acts that are very
important to understanding intentions and the
perlocutionary effects of a message were also not
addressed in their research. Although researchers in
OS have realised the important role of the
information field, pragmatic information, and
validity claims in the success of a communication,
no model has been developed to illustrate how these
factors together contribute to the perlocutionary
effects. Therefore, this paper attempts to give a
clearer picture demonstrating the answers as to what
factors impact the perlocutionary effects of a
communication, and how they do so. We will
accomplish this by carrying out a pragmatic analysis
of a single communication process between sender
and receiver based on the concept of Input-Process-
Output (IPO) model. IPO model is a functional
model within conceptual schema of a system that
identifies a process’s inputs, outputs, and the internal
procedures required to transform inputs to outputs
(Anon., 2009). It has been widely used in business
and organisational analyses especially in relation to
information system development.
The next section introduces the classic
communication process models. The pragmatic IPO
model of the micro communication process
developed is provided in Section III, followed by
conclusions and future work in Section IV.
2 COMMUNICATION PROCESS
MODELLING
Models are systematic representations of a complex
object, phenomenon or process, based upon the
selection of significant features determined by the
designer. Communication process models help
people to understand the components and sub-
processes involved. In the context of organisation,
the communication process can be discussed at the
macro and micro levels. The macro level refers to
the organisational process level, defining how and
what people communicate in business settings. The
models of conversational process for the
coordination of a business task also belong to macro
level modelling. Micro level refers to one cycle of
the interpersonal communication process that is the
interaction between the sender and receiver through
one-time delivery of a message to achieve social
coordination. The micro communication process is a
basic unit of communication to be studied in order to
improve the communication efficiency and thus
enhance the collaboration between communicators.
The focus of this paper is on the micro level
communication process. In this section, the classic
communication models are briefly introduced.
Featuring the process nature of communication,
many models have been developed from a simple S-
R (Stimulus-Response) version at the very early
stage to a more mature and well accepted S-M-C-R
(Source-Message-Channel-Receiver) Model (Health
& Bryant 2000). The classic communication models
include Aristotle’s Model of Communication,
Shannon-Weaver’s Mathematical Model (also called
Shannon’s Information Theory Model), Westley and
Maclean’s Conceptual Model, Schramm’s
Interactive Model of Communication, and Berlo’s S-
M-C-R Model. Berlo’s S-M-C-R Model, developed
in 1960, was a major breakthrough and has been
widely accepted and modified to a cybernetic model
that includes feedback from the receiver to the
sender (Health & Bryant 2000; Thill & Bovee 2005).
In a cybernetic S-M-C-R model, the message was
treated as the focal element and communication was
viewed as the interaction between the
communicators. The communicators’ attitudes,
communication skills, knowledge, social and
cultural backgrounds as well as the language and
channel noises were of concern during the encoding,
transmitting and decoding processes. Foulger (2004)
further modified this model by explicitly
distinguishing language and media from the message
and by adding the communicator’s perspectives and
relationships to the model. Those cybernetic models
gave us a good idea about how the intention of the
sender was communicated with the receiver.
However, none of this model demonstrated the
pragmatic analysis of the communication process or
the importance of the context, communicators’
pragmatic information and their agreement on
validity claims.
There are models that have been developed to
give a pragmatic view of communication, such as
Conversation for Action Approach, the SAMPO
ICISO 2010 - International Conference on Informatics and Semiotics in Organisations
150
approach and DEMO, which are based on the
Speech Act, and Transaction Process Model based in
turn on the Communicative Act (Reijswoud, 1996).
However, all of these models had emphasis on the
conversation, a series of transactions of single
communication process for the fulfilment of a
business task, which belong to macro level analysis.
No model was found to represent the components
and the processing steps from a pragmatic
perspective in a micro communication. To fill in the
blanks and also to be a part of our study on
communication in multicultural distributed
workplaces from social-pragmatic perspectives, a
pragmatic IPO model of the micro communication
process was developed and is introduced in the next
section.
3 PRAGMATIC IPO MODEL OF
MICRO COMMUNICATION
PROCESS
In communication, pragmatic effects are mainly
determined by the shared pragmatic information of
both parties and the context where the
communication occurs (Liu, 2000). Pragmatic
information is information personally possessed,
including knowledge, experience, values, and
expectations (Dik, 1989; Liu, 2000). The more
pragmatic information is shared, the shorter the
route to reaching commitment. The degree of
sharing is mainly determined by the cultural
difference between communicators (Liu, 2000). The
Stamper school of OS is one type of a behaviour-
oriented approach. It is based on the concept of an
information field; thus it is considered to be
information field based OS. This school defines an
information field as “a set of shared social norms
that express knowledge about desirable, acceptable
and exemplary behaviour in a community”
(Gazendam, et al., 2004). The information field in
our study will be defined by substantive norms,
communication norms and control norms of the
overall communication system, which will be
covered by another part of our research. Habermas
(1984) introduced validity claims as conditions that
need to be satisfied for the receiver to understand the
speech act, which include the claim to power, claim
to truth, claim to sincerity and claim to justice. The
claim to power is the dominant validity claim in
strategic actions, while claim to truth, claim to
justice and claim to sincerity are the validity claims
in communicative actions (Reijswoud, 1996). The
validity claims raised in a speech act should be
comprehensible, true, truthful and appropriate in
relation to a given normative reality. Otherwise,
communication may break down and require more
efforts to repair, thus its efficiency is reduced. A
speech act succeeds only when the validity claims
are accepted by the receiver. A challenge on the
validity claims will raise discussion or discourses,
which are essential mechanisms for reaching mutual
agreement.
When studying the communication process and
the factors involved in it, it is natural to give
attention to the input, the output and the
transformation steps from the input to the output.
Therefore, the concept of IPO model (Anon., 2009)
was adopted to develop the pragmatic IPO model of
the micro communication process. This pragmatic
IPO model, as shown in Figure 1, illustrates from the
pragmatic perspective, how the intention of the
sender is transformed into either collaboration or the
need for further communication by a basic
communication process unit in a given context,
identifying the processing steps (sub-processes), the
input from sender, receiver, and context
respectively, and the output of each sub-process. The
description of the model is arranged by its sub-
processes.
3.1 Sub-process: Encoding
Communication is triggered by an event, idea, or
situation. When the sender decides to start a
communication with the receiver, his/her intention
must be encoded to form a message (Message_s).
Besides the intention of the sender, essential inputs
also include the pragmatic information and validity
claims from the sender, and language, medium and
the information field from the context. The output is
Message_s, which performs the illocutionary act(s)
that reflect the sender’s intention. Message_s is also
the input for the sending process. In terms of the
pragmatic study on communication, focus will be on
intention, pragmatic information, validity claims,
and information field.
We can use a simplified case to demonstrate this
step: a local marketing team of a multi-national
enterprise locates in a country that has very different
cultures from its head office. The team identified a
potential strategic partner for the enterprise through
their research. According to the defined information
field of the communication system between the local
and head offices, the local team needed to introduce
this potential partner through an email to the head
office and sought their concurrence before they
made further moves. This situation triggered
PRAGMATIC IPO MODEL OF MICRO COMMUNICATION PROCESS
151
Figure 1: Pragmatic IPO Model of Micro Communication Process.
ICISO 2010 - International Conference on Informatics and Semiotics in Organisations
152
communication between the two offices. The
simplified examples for each input and output are
provided as follows:
Inputs
¾ Intention of the local team: the local team
intended to share their knowledge and
judgement about this potential partner and to
seek the approval of their proposal from the
head office;
¾ Some related pragmatic information of the
local team: the knowledge about enterprise
marketing strategy (especially that relating to
the local market) and the related business
process; the knowledge of the status and plan
of the enterprise's new market development;
the knowledge of the criteria for strategic
partners required by the enterprise; the
knowledge of the local market and the target
organisation; the experience of identifying an
appropriate potential strategic partner; the
values required in such partnerships; the way
to express all related information and the way
to persuade, etc. ;
¾ Some related information fields: norms that
regulate why, when, what, how, who to
communicate, and the process of addressing
communication results, in such situation. For
example, the information field for such
communication can be defined as: for the
head office to make a correct decision, the
local office should send an email to the head
office, providing comprehensive evidence to
support the proposal of a potential partnership
with the identified organisation before further
development. The head office should make
the decision within two weeks under normal
circumstances;
¾ Validity claims: corresponding to the
information field and all related information
possessed by the local team, the claims to
power, to truth, to justice, and to sincerity
were comprehensible, true, truthful and
appropriate;
¾ Language: English;
¾ Media: email.
Output
¾ Message_s: an email containing the
introduction of the potential partner, the
analysis and judgement made by the local
team, and their inquiry requesting instructions
about follow-ups.
3.2 Sub-process: Sending
The step of sending requires the inputs of Message_s
from the sender and the channel and time elements
from the context. Its output is Message_m.
Message_m could differ from Message_s due to
physical or human distractions during the
transmission. Time and timing issues might also
cause Message_m to mean a different thing or to
have a different degree of impact on the receiver
(Bothwell, 2006). However, in this paper we assume
that Message_m is identical with Message_s, as this
aspect is not the main focus of pragmatic analysis.
With the assumption that Message_m is identical
with Message_s, the simplified concept Message is
used in this paper in the following discussions.
3.3 Sub-process: Decoding
Key inputs in this step include Message, the
pragmatic information of the receiver, the receiver’s
judgements to the validity claims attached to the
Message and his/her understandings of the
information field. Time and timing are also the
factors that influence the decoding result. Under the
assumption of right time and right timing during
pragmatic analysis, it is easily seen that the output of
the decoding, Message_r, can be different from
Message, due to various pragmatic information
possessed by both parties, their different
understandings of the information field, and/or
disagreement on validity claim(s). Message_r
performs a perlocutionary act, which together with
an illocutionary act performed by Message
determines the pragmatic effects of the
communication.
We continue to use the example introduced in
the Encoding sub-process and demonstrate the
simplified input and output items for this sub-
process:
Inputs
¾ Message: an email containing the introduction
of the potential partner, the analysis and
judgement made by the local team, and their
inquiry for the instruction about follow-up;
¾ Some related pragmatic information of the
head office: the knowledge about enterprise
marketing strategy (especially that relating to
the local market) and the related business
process; the knowledge of the status and plan
of enterprise new market development; the
knowledge of the criteria for strategic partners
required by the enterprise; the knowledge of
the local market and the target organisation;
PRAGMATIC IPO MODEL OF MICRO COMMUNICATION PROCESS
153
the experience of identifying an appropriate
potential strategic partner; the values required
in such partnerships; the way to express all
related information and the way to be
persuaded, etc. ;
¾ Some related information fields: the same
norms as described in Encoding section;
¾ Validity claims: corresponding to the
information field and all related information
possessed by the head office, the head office
evaluated whether the claims to power, to
truth, to justice, and to sincerity were
comprehensible, true, truthful and
appropriate.
Output
¾ Message_r: an email containing the
introduction of the potential partner, the
analysis and judgement made by the local
team, and their inquiry for instructions about
follow-ups.
Comparing the two sets of inputs of
encoding and decoding, it can be seen that:
i) If the information field is well-defined, if
the pragmatic information of both parties
has been well-shared and considered, and
if the four validity claims are agreed to be
comprehensible, true, truthful and
appropriate, Message_r will be almost
identical with Message, which provides
appropriate information and expresses
clear and true intention of the sender. In
our case, the head office received the
email from the local team. They
recognized that the email contained
appropriate and sufficient evidences,
professional judgement of the local team,
and the inquiry of approval;
ii) If any of the three key inputs (the
information field, pragmatic information,
and validity claims) have issues,
Message_r will be seen differently from
Message. In our case, for instance, the
supporting materials for the partnership
evaluation were not clearly defined in the
information field. The local office sent the
email, believing that the information
contained is appropriate, clear and
sufficient to allow the head office making
decision. However, the head office
perceived the email differently since they
had a different set of requirements
regarding to the supporting materials.
3.4 Sub-processes: Illocutionary Act
and Perlocutionary Act
Message, which carries the sender’s intention,
pragmatic information and validity claims as well as
his/her knowledge of the information field, performs
illocutionary act. Illocutionary act reflects the
intention of the sender. It makes the sender expect
certain perlocutionary effects of Message on the
receiver. It also changes the sender’s propositional
attitudes so that they can be ready for the effects.
Message_r carries the sender’s intention that has
been modified more or less by the receiver’s
pragmatic information, judgements to validity
claims and knowledge of the information field. It
performs perlocutionary act, which changes the
propositional attitudes of the receiver and generates
the actual perlocutionary effects performed by the
receiver. The differences between Message and
Message_r affect the degree of overlap between the
actual and expected perlocutionary effects.
However, from an outside view, it seems that
Message performs both illocutionary act and
perlocutionary act. If both sender and receiver share
the complete sets of related pragmatic information,
have sufficient knowledge of the clearly and
appropriately defined information field in the
business setting, and agree that the validity claims
contained in the message were true, truthful,
comprehensive and appropriate in relation to the
time and the information field, they will consider the
message provides appropriate information and
intention to achieve collaboration. Moreover, the
receiver is aware of the real intention of the sender
and will act as expected by the sender. Therefore,
the actual and expected perlocutionary effects
should be almost identical. In our case, it means that
the head office, as expected by the local team, was
able to make the approval upon the email in two
weeks. If there was mismatching element(s)
regarding to the pragmatic information, the
information field and/or validity claims, the actual
perlocutionary effects would differ from the
expected ones. In the scenario as described in
section 3.5 (ii), the head office was not able to make
any decision based on the email, to say nothing of
approval.
3.5 Sub-process: Evaluation of
Perlocutionary Effects
This step evaluates the degree of overlap between
the actual and the expected perlocutionary act. A
judgement is made via evaluation about whether the
ICISO 2010 - International Conference on Informatics and Semiotics in Organisations
154
actual perlocutionary effects match the expected
ones. If the degree is close to 100%, we can say that
the intention of the sender is fulfilled by the reaction
of the receiver, and thus the communication is
successful and collaboration is achieved; otherwise,
further communication needs to be carried out
following the same steps after first identifying and
addressing the issues that caused the discrepancy. In
our case, if the local office received the approval
from the head office in two weeks, it means that the
expected and actual perlocutionary acts matched.
The local office could move on to the next stage of
developing partnership with this local organisation,
thus, the collaboration was achieved. On the
contrary, as given example above, the head office
couldn’t approve the partnership potential due to the
supporting material issue. The local and head offices
had to first work out mutual agreements on the
requirements of these materials. Therefore, a new
communication process was triggered.
3.6 Utilisation of the Model
This pragmatic IPO model of communication
process has a two-fold application: to design a
pragmatically successful communication system of a
newly established multicultural virtual team and to
analyse a particular communication problem from
the pragmatic perspective.
3.6.1 To Design a Pragmatically Successful
Communication System of a Newly
Established Multicultural Virtual
Team
The information field uses norms (substantive,
communication, and control) to define the
communication system, which aims to enhance
collaboration between distributed teams that are
diverse in cultures but share common business goals.
As illustrated by the model, the efficiency of a
communication for collaboration relies on the degree
of agreement of the actual perlocutionary effects
with the expected ones, which are pragmatically
affected by the sharing of pragmatic information of
both parties, the acceptance of validity claims and
the development and education of the appropriate
information field. Therefore, when designing the
communication system, the first step is to analyse
related pragmatic information of the communicative
parties, identifying their differences and developing
solutions into the information field. The acceptance
of validity claims depends on the mutual
understanding of the relation of power, recognition
of each other’s thinking and communicative patterns
as well as the level of trust between the parties.
Therefore, it is important to realise and share the
pragmatic information of both parties that relates to
the thinking and communicative patterns, to clearly
define and communicate the appropriate relation of
power, and to develop a close relationship between
the communicators which in turn builds team trust
and coherence. These three types of activities need
to be built into the communication system. In
addition, it is critical for both parties to agree on the
common goals that provide mutual benefits, and to
communicate them to all the team members. These
factors also need to be explicitly claimed in the
information field.
3.6.2 To Analyse a Particular
Communication Problem from the
Pragmatic Perspective
When a particular communication has a problem
reaching its intended effects, the message
communicated need to be carefully studied in terms
of both its illocutionary and perlocutionary acts.
According to the model, such a study should focus
on the pragmatically related inputs for both acts. The
inputs for the illocutionary act include the sender’s
intention and pragmatic information, the information
field for the given context, and the validity claims
the sender believes and expresses via the message,
while those for the perlocutionary act contain the
receiver’s pragmatic information, his/her judgement
on the validity claims, and the information field for
the given context.
The first step is to evaluate whether the sender’s
true intention and validity claims were appropriate
according to the information field and time, and
whether they were clearly and correctly expressed
by the message. The next step evaluates whether the
receiver understands and accepts the intention and
validity claims. If not, further study should be
carried out to check whether the causes are based on
differences of the pragmatic information. The last
step is to analyse the information field, examining
whether it is defined and shared correctly,
thoroughly, and efficiently.
The focus of this paper is on the development of
the model. The practical application of the model,
which is beyond the scope of this paper, is the
subject of ongoing research.
PRAGMATIC IPO MODEL OF MICRO COMMUNICATION PROCESS
155
4 CONCLUSIONS AND FUTURE
WORK
This paper introduced a pragmatic IPO model of the
micro communication process, developed as a part
of a social-pragmatic study on communication in the
multicultural distributed workplace and designed to
fill in the gap in pragmatic models of the micro
communication process. The basis of this model
included pragmatic analysis of communication and
the IPO business process modelling. This model
identified the key elements contributing to the
pragmatic effects via the communication process,
namely the information field, pragmatic information,
validity claims, and time. Major steps within the
process and the input and output of each step were
also illustrated in the model. Via this model a clearer
picture can be seen as to how these key elements
were involved in the process, and how the final
pragmatic effects were generated. Therefore, this
model provides a guideline for future pragmatic
studies on communication with a focus on pragmatic
information, validity claims and the information
field.
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