• Issuer: is the one that issues the message. Examples:
an individual subject or a group of people, but also a
mechanism that warns us that something is missing or
an element of nature that alerts us that time will
change. • Code: Set of signs and rules that, forming a language, help to
encode the message. We can find simple languages, such as the
red light on the door of a development studio, or more complex
as the different languages of the world.
• Recipient: is the one who receives the message and
interprets it. Examples: a specific subject or a group, as
well as, can be a mechanism that acts when another
sends a signal. • Context: Set of circumstances (place, time, mood of the
interlocutors, etc.) that exist at the time of the Communication. It
is important when interpreting the message correctly.
• Message: is the information you want to transmit.
Examples: can be found encoded in one of the different
types of code: it can be a spoken message, written,
drawn, recorded on CD, etc). • Sounds: The sounds that interfere in the transmission of a
message can affect it and change its context.
• Channel: it is the medium through which the message is
transmitted. Examples: it can be an artificial medium,
like letters or a cd, or a natural one, like air.
• Feedback: This is generated when the receiver returns
information after it received the message from the issuer. It
refers to the interpretation given by the receiver under all the
elements mentioned above that affect that transmission, such as
code, sound, channel, etc.