Research in crowd psychology has demonstrated key differences between the behaviour of physical crowds where members are in the same place at the same time, and the collective behaviour of psychological crowds where the entire crowd perceive themselves to be part of the same group through a shared social identity. As yet, no research has investigated the behavioural effects that a shared social identity has on crowd movement at a pedestrian level. To investigate the direction and extent to which social identity influences the movement of crowds, 280 trajectories were tracked as participants walked in one of two conditions: 1) a psychological crowd primed to share a social identity; 2) a naturally occurring physical crowd. Behaviour was comp...
Social groups exhibit some degree of social cohesion that is more than a simple collection or aggreg...
Social scientists have criticised computer models of pedestrian streams for their treatment of psych...
Moving in time with others—interpersonal coordination—increases affiliation, helping behaviours and ...
Understanding influences on pedestrian movement is important to accurately simulate crowd behaviour,...
Understanding influences on pedestrian movement is important to accurately simulate crowd behaviour,...
The challenge for a psychology of crowds and collective behavior is to explain how large numbers of ...
<div><p>This article is on collective phenomena in pedestrian dynamics during the assembling and dis...
Research from crowd psychology and pedestrian dynamics can inform one another to improve understandi...
Experiences in crowds and protests can lead to psychological changes which are sustained by group pr...
This article is on collective phenomena in pedestrian dynamics during the assembling and dispersal o...
In animal societies as well as in human crowds, many observed collective behaviours result from self...
Human crowd motion is mainly driven by self-organized processes based on local interactions among pe...
Crowd phenomena has challenged social psychology for about a century, even early development of soci...
International audienceDo people in a crowd behave like a set of isolated individuals or like a cohes...
Computer models are used to simulate pedestrian behaviour for safety at mass events. Previous resear...
Social groups exhibit some degree of social cohesion that is more than a simple collection or aggreg...
Social scientists have criticised computer models of pedestrian streams for their treatment of psych...
Moving in time with others—interpersonal coordination—increases affiliation, helping behaviours and ...
Understanding influences on pedestrian movement is important to accurately simulate crowd behaviour,...
Understanding influences on pedestrian movement is important to accurately simulate crowd behaviour,...
The challenge for a psychology of crowds and collective behavior is to explain how large numbers of ...
<div><p>This article is on collective phenomena in pedestrian dynamics during the assembling and dis...
Research from crowd psychology and pedestrian dynamics can inform one another to improve understandi...
Experiences in crowds and protests can lead to psychological changes which are sustained by group pr...
This article is on collective phenomena in pedestrian dynamics during the assembling and dispersal o...
In animal societies as well as in human crowds, many observed collective behaviours result from self...
Human crowd motion is mainly driven by self-organized processes based on local interactions among pe...
Crowd phenomena has challenged social psychology for about a century, even early development of soci...
International audienceDo people in a crowd behave like a set of isolated individuals or like a cohes...
Computer models are used to simulate pedestrian behaviour for safety at mass events. Previous resear...
Social groups exhibit some degree of social cohesion that is more than a simple collection or aggreg...
Social scientists have criticised computer models of pedestrian streams for their treatment of psych...
Moving in time with others—interpersonal coordination—increases affiliation, helping behaviours and ...