The challenge for a psychology of crowds and collective behavior is to explain how large numbers of people are, spontaneously, able to act together in patterned and socially meaningful ways and, at the same time, how crowd events can bring about social and psychological change. Classical theories, which treat crowd psychology as pathological, deny any meaning to crowd action. More recent normative and rationalist models begin to explain the coherence of crowd action but are unable to explain how that links to broader social systems of meaning. In both cases, the explanatory impasse derives from an individualistic conception of selfhood that denies any social basis to behavioral control. Such a basis is provided by the social identity app...
Computer simulations are increasingly being used to predict the behaviour of crowds. However, the mo...
Crowds are the elephant man of the social sciences. They are viewed as something strange, something ...
In this chapter, we address the relationship between crowd events and the social categories that org...
Experiences in crowds and protests can lead to psychological changes which are sustained by group pr...
Crowd phenomena has challenged social psychology for about a century, even early development of soci...
Research from crowd psychology and pedestrian dynamics can inform one another to improve understandi...
The issue of psychological empowerment in crowd events has important implica-tions for both theory a...
Computer simulations are increasingly used to monitor and predict behavior at large crowd events, su...
This thesis seeks to answer the question: Which mechanisms underlie crowd behaviour patterns? As a f...
The issue of psychological empowerment in crowd events has important implications for both theory an...
Collective action against collective disadvantage is an important socio-psychological phenomenon tha...
Research in crowd psychology has demonstrated key differences between the behaviour of physical crow...
Use of scientific knowledge in crowd psychology is low-level presently. Even the individual branches...
Crowd behaviour and collective action are integral to historical and political developments; they ar...
This review draws together articles from a range of different disciplines to highlight the central r...
Computer simulations are increasingly being used to predict the behaviour of crowds. However, the mo...
Crowds are the elephant man of the social sciences. They are viewed as something strange, something ...
In this chapter, we address the relationship between crowd events and the social categories that org...
Experiences in crowds and protests can lead to psychological changes which are sustained by group pr...
Crowd phenomena has challenged social psychology for about a century, even early development of soci...
Research from crowd psychology and pedestrian dynamics can inform one another to improve understandi...
The issue of psychological empowerment in crowd events has important implica-tions for both theory a...
Computer simulations are increasingly used to monitor and predict behavior at large crowd events, su...
This thesis seeks to answer the question: Which mechanisms underlie crowd behaviour patterns? As a f...
The issue of psychological empowerment in crowd events has important implications for both theory an...
Collective action against collective disadvantage is an important socio-psychological phenomenon tha...
Research in crowd psychology has demonstrated key differences between the behaviour of physical crow...
Use of scientific knowledge in crowd psychology is low-level presently. Even the individual branches...
Crowd behaviour and collective action are integral to historical and political developments; they ar...
This review draws together articles from a range of different disciplines to highlight the central r...
Computer simulations are increasingly being used to predict the behaviour of crowds. However, the mo...
Crowds are the elephant man of the social sciences. They are viewed as something strange, something ...
In this chapter, we address the relationship between crowd events and the social categories that org...