Relational communication refers to the control or dominance aspects of message exchange in dyads, as distinct from an emphasis on the report or referential aspects of communication. In relational communication analysis, the focus is on messages as transacrions, and the major theoretic concepts which emerge in this analysis are symmetry, transitory, and Complementarity of control. This paper contains a brief review and critique of existing interaction analysis techniques, followed by a detailed discussion of new measurement procedures that capture both the control and processual (time-varying) nature of dyadic interaction. The first step in these procedures yields a code (by speaker) based on the grammatical format of each sequential utterance. The second step yields a translation of each message format and response made into acontrol code, based on the relationship between the message and its immediate predecessor. These codes are next translated into transactional codes, which can then be analyzed in terms of the three major theoretic concepts. These measurement procedures require minimal subjective judgment, particularly at the initial coding level. The paper concludes with a discussion of the ways we are attempting to operationalize major "themes" or patterns of control in lengthy, ongoing dyadic exchanges. This paper describes recently developed procedures for coding and analyzing the relational and processual aspects of interpersonal communication systems. Relational communication refers to the control aspects of message exchange-those elements in message exchange by which interactors reciprocally define the nature of their relative "position" or dominance in their interaction. In popular terms, the notion of being "one-up" or "onedown" indicates two examples of relational control. The theoretic concepts of symmetry, transitory, and complementarity reflect basic types of relational control, and are defined in terms of the similarities or differences in control maneuvers appearing in an interaction; more precise definitions will be given below.An emphasis on the processual aspect of interpersonal communication is equally important in this research, since our goal is to develop operational measures of relational control "patterns" in ongoing interaction systems. In achieving this goal, methodological problems arise in the analysis of sequentially linked messages that differ from those encountered in developing analysis schemes for coding discrete interaction events. We will indicate these problems and discuss how they may be solved.At the conceptual level, the major inputs to relational control analysis come from the work of Bateson (1958), Jackson (1959, 1965), Haley (1963), and Watzlawick, Beavin, and Jackson (1967). At the operational level, the most significant work has been provided by Sluzki and Beavin (1965).Relational communication analysis requires a perspective that differs from the monadic or individual difference orientation that dominates existing analytic techniques. Relational analysis focuses o...
An overview of historical, design, and analytical issues relevant to the study of communications over time."Which are you drinking? The water or the waue?"-John Fowles (39, p.
192)The search for knowledge is a search for pattern in experience. A pattern that is seen in reference to time is called a process. Understanding the many and varied processes at work in the physical world has long been the ultimate goal of science, for to understand a process implies that we can explain it, predict it, and control it, at least in principle. In the physical sciences, remarkable progress has been made in the quest for this form of knowledge. For example, physicists have begun to understand the processes of fusion and fission, chemists, the processes of bonding and electrolysis, biologists, the processes of genetic transfer, and geologists, the processes of continental drift. Since its inception, researchers in the field of communication have also placed strong emphasis on examining communication phenomena that change over time, as a perusal of any of the early influential texts in the field will quickly reveal. Such a review would include Schramm's The Process and Effects of Mass Communication (102), Berlo's The
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