Review: A Cognitive-Affective Model of
Organizational Communication for Designing IT
Dov Te'eni
Volume 25, Issue 2
The associated web site for this paper is located temporarily at http://faculty.biu.ac.il/~teenid/ebook/teeni.htm
Abstract
There are several theories available to describe how managers choose
a medium for communication. However, current technology can affect not
only how we communicate but also what we communicate. As a result, the
issue for designers of communication support systems has become broader:
how should technology be designed to make communication more effective
by changing the medium and the attributes of the message itself?
The answer to this question requires a shift from current preoccupations
with the medium of communication to a view that assesses the balance between
medium and message form. There is also a need to look more closely
at the process of communication in order to identify more precisely any
potential areas of computer support.
This paper provides the spadework for a new model of organizational
communication, and uses it to review existing research, as well as to suggest
directions for future research and development. Beginning with the
crucial aspects of action, relationship, and choice, an integrated model
of how people communicate is developed. This model incorporates three basic
factors: (1) inputs to the communication process (task, sender-receiver
distance, and values and norms of communication with a particular emphasis
on inter-cultural communication); (2) a cognitive-affective process of
communication; and (3) the communication impact on action and relationship.
The glue that bonds these factors together is a set of communication strategies
aimed at reducing the complexity of communication.
The model provides a balance between relationship and action, between
cognition and affect, and between message and medium. Such a balance has
been lacking in previous work, and we believe it reflects a more realistic
picture of communication behavior in organizations. A set of propositions
generated from the model sets an agenda for studying the communication
process as well as its inputs and outputs. Furthermore, this knowledge
of the mechanisms that guide behavior is used to demonstrate the potential
for developing design principles for future communication support systems.
Keywords: Organizational
communication, communication complexity, cognition, affect, organizational
memory, design
ISRL Categories: HA08,
AC0401, HA10, AD0518