ambiguity

(noun)

Something liable to more than one interpretation, explanation or meaning, if that meaning etc cannot be determined from its context.

Related Terms

  • affective
  • Counter-culture

(noun)

Something liable to more than one interpretation, explanation, or meaning.

Related Terms

  • affective
  • Counter-culture

Examples of ambiguity in the following topics:

  • The Nature of Effective Communication

    • Another barrier is "knowledge-appropriate" communication–using ambiguous legal words or medical jargon with another person who doesn't understand them.
    • System design faults like ambiguous definition of roles that can lead to confusion about message targets; lack of oral and written communication skills; and poor information technology infrastructure, including networks and applications.
  • Downward Communication

    • Creating clearly worded and non-ambiguous communications and maintaining a respectful tone can overcome these issues and increase effectiveness.
  • Time Pressure as a Barrier to Decision Making

    • Clearly defining the decision and its parameters early on can reduce ambiguity and make it easier to hone in on relevant data.
  • The Manager's Role in Group Decisions

    • Establish the team goal: By articulating the dimensions of the decision, including its importance, a manager can reduce ambiguity and help group members focus their analysis, discussions, and deliberations.
  • Moral Leadership

    • Laws establish clear boundaries of what is acceptable, but ethics often involves more ambiguous questions.
  • A Leader's Vision

    • A vision reduces ambiguity and provides focus—two benefits that are especially valuable in turbulent or rapidly changing times.
  • Evaluate the Results

    • When decision outcomes are not clearly measurable or have ambiguous results—some parts good, some bad—is not uncommon for people to emphasize the favorable data and discount the negative.
  • Reducing Workplace Stress

  • Culture-Specific Nuances of Decision-Making

    • Tolerance for Ambiguity - A high tolerance for ambiguity or risk taking is 'counter-culture' culture, which dictates a high level of tolerance for going against the grain.
  • Defining Stress

    • Examples include: interole conflict (when there are two or more expectations or separate roles for one person), intrarole conflict (varying expectations of one role), person-role conflict (ethics are challenged), and role ambiguity (confusion about their experiences in relation to the expectations of others).
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