Abstract

Treating communication as information exchange between systems, we employ the most fundamental structure in mathematics, nature and cognition, which is called a named set or a fundamental triad because it has been useful in a variety of areas such as networks and networking, physics, information theory, mathematics, logic, database theory and practice, artificial intelligence, mathematical linguistics, epistemology and methodology of science, to mention but a few. Here we use structural models based on the theory of named sets for description and analysis of interpersonal communication explicating its structural regularities.

Highlights

  • Communication in the World Wide Web is intrapersonal with respect to the World Wide Web

  • We use structural models based on the theory of named sets [4]

  • The standard example is a basic named set, in which X consists of people, N consists of their names and f is the correspondence between people and their names

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Summary

Introduction

There are different models of communication (cf., for example, [1,2,3]). They distinguish two basic types of communication—interpersonal communication and intrapersonal communication. Interpersonal communication is information exchange between different systems. Intrapersonal communication is information exchange in one system. Communication in the World Wide Web is intrapersonal with respect to the World Wide Web. Here we use structural models based on the theory of named sets [4]. For description and analysis of interpersonal communication explicating its structural regularities.

Named Sets and Fundamental Triads
Interpersonal Communication
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