Monday, 8 June 2026

What is communication Psychology 2?

 

Communication psychology is a process of encoding, transmitting, emotions, and thoughts and information. It is a behavior tool for those with verbal and non-verbal communication. It helps to understand the processes between human interaction and relationships.

Encoding translates the feelings, thoughts and emotions, gestures and expressions.

Decoding interpret, assigns, to incoming messages.

The receiver replies to understand the communication.

Verbal communication words, language, data, ideas.

Nonverbal communication feeling, facial expressions, body language, tone of voice, and eye contact.

Active listening showing empathy, tuning in to thoughts and feelings.

Metacommunication is showing how we communicate.

Understand emotion, tone and intent.

Talk about how we communicate.

This concept was developed and expanded by Gregory Bateson.

This includes

Tone of voice

Facial expressions

Body language

Eye contact

Gestures

Touch

Personal space

Why does this matter?

The signals say how to interpret the words.

Such as “I’m so happy for you”.

But: eye roll + sarcastic tone

 

➡️ Real meaning: jealousy or sarcasm, not happiness

 

👉 The non-verbal message overrides the words.

Explicit Metacommunication (“Talking About Talk”)

 

This is when we pause and talk about the communication itself.

This is used a lot in counseling, therapy, and Conflict resolution.

Detects misunderstandings

Calms emotions

Helps people with conversations

Example phrases:

“I think I’m getting defensive—can we pause?”

“That didn’t come out how I meant it.”

“Can we talk about how this conversation is going?”

Intention vs impact.

Intention – what you mean

Impact – How it was received.

 

Why Metacommunication Matters

Conflict resolution

It separates the emotion from the message.

It helps to notice the real needs behind the reaction.

Therapy and psychology

Builds trust between the counselors and clients.

 Such as, “ You seem anxious, am I right”?

Relationships

Prevents assumptions

Encourages clarity

Builds shared understanding

 

👉 Instead of guessing meanings, people check and confirm

 

🧩 Key Insight

 

Every conversation has two levels:

 

What is said (words)

How it is said (metacommunication)

 

👉 The second level often carries more meaning

 

Simple Summary (Easy Read)

Metacommunication = communication about communication

It includes:

Body language

Tone

Talking about the conversation

It helps:

Reduce conflict

Improve relationships

Build understanding

Do Open and Closed Questions Link to Metacommunication?

 

👉 Short answer: Yes.

They shape how communication happens, not just what is said.

 

That means they are part of:

 

Explicit metacommunication (guiding the conversation)

And sometimes implicit metacommunication (tone and delivery)

1. 🔓 Open Questions (Exploring & Expanding)

What they are:

 

Questions that invite longer, detailed answers

 

👉 Usually start with:

 

What

How

Why

Tell me about…

🧩 How they connect to Metacommunication

Explicit Metacommunication

 

They help guide the conversation process

 

Encourage openness

Show you are listening

Create a safe space

 

💬 Example:

 

“How did that make you feel?”

“Can you tell me more about that?”

 

👉 This signals:

 

“I want to understand you better”

 

That’s communication about how we are communicating

 

Implicit Metacommunication

 

Your tone and body language matter

 

Warm tone feels safe

Cold tone feels like an interrogation

 

👉 Same question, different meaning

 

🎯 Why they matter:

Build trust

Reduce misunderstandings

Encourage emotional expression

2. 🔒 Closed Questions (Clarifying & Controlling)

What they are:

 

Questions with short, fixed answers

 

👉 Usually:

 

Yes / No

One-word answers

🧩 How they connect to Metacommunication

Explicit Metacommunication

 

They help:

 

Clarify facts

Focus the conversation

Check understanding

 

💬 Example:

 

“Did that happen yesterday?”

“Are you okay?”

 

👉 This signals:

 

“I’m checking or confirming information”

 

Implicit Metacommunication

 

Closed questions can send hidden messages depending on tone:

 

Gentle tone supportive

Sharp tone feels like pressure or judgment

 

💬 Example:

 

“Are you listening?”

 

👉 Could mean:

 

Genuine check-in

OR criticism

⚠️ Important Insight:

 

Too many closed questions can feel like:

 

An interview

Interrogation

Lack of emotional connection

⚖️ Open vs Closed Questions in Metacommunication

Type  Communication Effect     Metacommunication Message

Open Questions Expands conversation  “Your thoughts matter”

Closed Questions   Narrows / focuses conversation “I need specific information”

🔄 How They Work Together

 

Good communication uses both:

 

🟢 Example Flow:

Open question:

“How are you feeling today?”

Follow-up closed question:

“Was it because of work?”

 

👉 This shows:

 

Exploration + clarity

Emotional understanding + structure

💬 Real-Life Example (Metacommunication in Action)

 

Poor communication:

 

“Are you fine?” (closed, rushed tone)

 

👉 Hidden message: “I don’t really want to talk”

 

Better communication:

 

“You seem quiet today—how are you feeling?” (open)

 

👉 Hidden message: “I care and want to understand”

 

🧩 Key Takeaway

 

Open and closed questions are not just tools —

they shape the emotional meaning of a conversation

 

👉 That means they are part of:

 

What is being said

AND how it is being said

 

➡️ Which is exactly what metacommunication is about

 

Simple Easy Read Summary

Open questions = long answers show care

Closed questions = short answers check facts

Both are part of metacommunication

Tone and body language change their meaning

🧠 What is Metacommunication?

 

Metacommunication is a form of psychology.

It supports how we communicate with each other.

 

👉 It helps to:

 

Explain what has been said

Show how something was meant

Improve core communication

💬 Where Metacommunication is Used

 

Metacommunication works in:

 

👤 1-to-1 conversations

👥 Small groups

🧑‍🤝‍🧑 Large groups

 

👉 It helps people stay clear, calm, and understood

 

Accessibility and Inclusion

 

Metacommunication is very accessible.

 

It supports people with:

 

Borderline Personality Disorder

Anxiety

Autism

Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder

 

👉 It helps:

 

Build trust

Prevent misunderstanding

Reduce stress in communication

🧠 Why Metacommunication Helps Mental Health

💙 Emotional Safety

 

Metacommunication creates a sense of:

 

Safety

Calm

Understanding

🔄 Preventing Misinterpretation

 

People can ask:

 

“What did you mean by that?”

 

👉 This stops:

 

Overthinking

Negative assumptions (common in anxiety)

🤝 Building Trust

 

In therapy:

 

People can talk about misunderstandings directly

This strengthens the relationship

 

💬 Example:

 

“I think I misunderstood you—can we go over that again?”

🌈 Benefits for Neurodivergent People

 

Metacommunication helps with the

Double Empathy Problem (differences in how people understand each other).

 

🔁 Translating Differences

 

People can explain their communication style:

 

💬 Examples:

 

“I might not look at you, but I am listening.”

“I need clear instructions to understand better.”

🧠 Reducing Cognitive Load

 

Metacommunication:

 

Makes hidden social rules clear

Reduces masking

Reduces guessing meanings

 

👉 This lowers:

 

Stress

Mental fatigue

Accessibility for Physical & Cognitive Disabilities

 

Metacommunication can be adapted in different ways:

 

🗣️ Multimodal Communication

 

People can use:

 

✍️ Writing

🤟 Sign language

📱 AAC (communication devices)

 

👉 Communication is still clear—even without speech

 

🧩 Simplified Language (Easy Read)

 

Use short check-ins like:

 

“Is this too fast?”

“Can you tell me what you heard?”

 

👉 Helps people:

 

Understand better

Stay involved

Processing Time

 

People can say:

 

“I need a minute to think before I answer.”

 

👉 This:

 

Reduces pressure

Supports thinking time

🧩 Key Benefits Summary

 

Metacommunication helps to:

 

Build trust

Prevent misunderstandings

Support mental health

Improve accessibility

Help neurodivergent communication

Create emotional safety

🧠 Extra: Supporting Aphasia

 

For people with communication difficulties like Aphasia, metacommunication helps by:

 

Slowing down communication

Checking understanding

Using simple language

Using gestures, writing, or visuals

 

💬 Example:

 

“Can you point to what you mean?”

“Shall I write it down?”

🔍 Examples of Metacommunication

Explicit (Talking About Talk)

“Can we slow down?”

“I don’t understand—can you explain differently?”

“I feel confused right now”

Implicit (Unspoken Signals)

Tone of voice

Facial expressions

Body language

 

👉 These change meaning without words

 

🌉 Bridging the Double Empathy Gap

 

Metacommunication helps people:

 

Explain their needs

Understand others’ styles

Reduce miscommunication between neurotypes

 

👉 It creates a shared understanding

 

🧠 Simple Easy Read Summary

Metacommunication = talking about communication

It helps people:

Feel safe

Understand each other

Avoid confusion

It supports:

Mental health

Disabilities

Neurodivergent people

It can be:

Spoken

Written

Signed

Visual

Sunday, 7 June 2026

Communication Psychology (Easy Read Version)

 


Communication psychology looks at how our thoughts, emotions, and background experiences shape the way we send and receive messages.

It shows that communication is not just about words.
It is also about meaning, feelings, and understanding what is not said directly.


1. The Three Layers of Every Message

When people talk, there are three layers happening at the same time:

  • Content
    These are the exact words you say.
  • Emotion
    This is how you feel when you say it.
    It can show in your tone of voice, facial expression, and body language.
  • Intent
    This is the reason you are saying it.
    For example:
    Are you asking a question, giving information, or expressing frustration?

2. The 4 Principles of Nonverbal Communication

Nonverbal communication is everything we show without words.

This includes body language, facial expression, eye contact, posture, and tone of voice.

  • Feelings over words
    Body language often shows how someone really feels more than their words do.
  • Believability
    If words and body language do not match, people usually trust body language more.
  • Context matters
    A gesture or expression can mean different things depending on the situation.
  • Look at the whole picture
    One signal alone can be misleading. You need to look at everything together.

3. How We “Hear” Things (Decoding)

When we hear a message, our brain does not just listen.
It interprets meaning based on our personal experience.

This can be affected by:

  • Your mood
    If you feel upset, you may misunderstand a joke.
  • Your past experiences
    Early life experiences shape how you expect people to talk.
  • Your background and culture
    Different cultures and generations can understand the same words in different ways.

Helpful Communication Ideas (Optional)

If you want to go further, you can also explore:

  • Examples of communication misunderstandings
  • Simple ways to improve listening skills
  • How to adjust your communication to avoid conflict

Sources (for learning more)

  • HelpGuide.org
    HelpGuide Communication Skills
    Focuses on emotional understanding and communication skills.
  • Verywell Mind
    Verywell Mind Body Language
    Explains how body language and facial expressions affect communication.

🧠 Communication Psychology

 


🔹 What is Communication Psychology?

Communication psychology is the study of how psychological factors influence the way we:

  • Encode
  • Transmit
  • Decode
  • Interpret information

It combines:

  • Human behavior
  • Cognitive processing
  • Social interaction

👉 It helps explain why messages:

  • Succeed
  • Fail
  • Or change human behavior

🔹 Core Concepts

🔸 Encoding & Decoding

  • Encoding = creating a message based on intent
  • Decoding = how the receiver understands the message

👉 Understanding depends on:

  • Mood
  • Background
  • Psychological “noise” (stress, emotions, distractions)

🔸 Active Listening

  • Giving full attention
  • Showing empathy
  • Giving feedback

👉 Helps:

  • Build trust
  • Prevent conflict

🔸 Cognitive Biases & Framing

  • Framing = how information is presented
  • Biases = how people naturally think or judge information

👉 These affect:

  • How messages are understood
  • Whether people accept or reject information

🔸 Nonverbal Communication

  • Facial expressions
  • Body language
  • Tone of voice
  • Speed (pacing)

👉 These often control the emotional meaning of a message


🔹 Real-World Applications

🔸 Interpersonal Relationships

  • Helps couples and families
  • Identifies unhealthy communication (e.g., passive-aggressive behavior)
  • Supports:
    • Compassion
    • Assertiveness
    • Conflict resolution

🔸 Digital Media & Marketing

  • Used in Media Psychology
  • Studies how:
    • Social media
    • Online environments
    • Digital stories

👉 Affect:

  • Behavior
  • Attention span
  • Learning

🔸 Healthcare & Therapy

  • Helps therapists use:
    • Active listening
    • Open questions
    • Paraphrasing

👉 Supports people to:

  • Process trauma
  • Manage emotions
  • Resolve conflict safely

🔸 Organizational Leadership

  • Helps managers:
    • Understand communication barriers
    • Improve teamwork
    • Increase morale
    • Resolve conflict

🔹 Scholarly Focus

For research and up-to-date studies, people use sources like:

  • Nature Communications Psychology

🔸 Current Research Topics

  • Impact of digital technology on communication
  • Understanding stories across different communication styles
  • How communication affects compassion in relationships

🔹 Activity – Understanding Communication

Think of a conversation you had:

What did you say?


How might the other person have understood it?


What could you do differently next time?



🔹 Reflection

Why is communication important in everyday life?

🧠 Self-Awareness

 


🔹 What is Self-Awareness?

Self-awareness means learning to understand yourself before trying to understand others.


🔹 Understanding Yourself

  • How are you thinking?
  • How are you feeling?
  • How are you acting?
  • How does it make you behave, or feel like behaving?
  • What is your reaction?
  • What is your interaction with life around you?

🔹 Important Idea

👉 How we are around ourselves is how we are around others

  • If we are not showing it, we are hiding it
  • Neither is always healthy

🔹 Being Honest About Feelings

  • It is more than okay if we are not okay
  • If we are not okay, it can come out on others around us
  • This is something we mostly cannot control all the time, no matter how hard we try

🔹 Limits and Pressure

  • There is only so much we can take on our own
  • Only for so long or short

🔹 Awareness in Daily Life

  • It is not always easy to remember every day
  • We may not always notice the impact we have on others
  • That impact can be good or bad

👉 It is important to be mindful of:

  • The world around us
  • The way we behave
  • The choices we make

🔹 Self-Reflection Questions

  • Are we making the right choices in life?
  • Are we handling our stress levels?
  • Are we learning from our mistakes?
  • Are our social lives healthy?
  • Are we taking deep breaths?
  • Are we setting positive goals?

🔹 Social Awareness & Relationships

  • Are we showing empathy (putting ourselves in the shoes of others)?
  • Are we managing social relationships?
  • Are we building rapport?
  • Are we communicating clearly?

🔹 Most Important

👉 Being honest with oneself and others


🔹 Activity – Self Reflection

How do you feel today?


How might your feelings affect others?


What is one thing you can do to improve your wellbeing?



🔹 Reflection

Why is self-awareness important?

What is communication Psychology 2?

  Communication psychology is a process of encoding, transmitting, emotions, and thoughts and information. It is a behavior tool for those...